GRIEVE not, dear Love! although we often part: But know, that Nature gently doth us sever, Thereby to train us up with tender art, To brook the day when we must part for ever. For Nature, doubting we should be surprised By that sad day whose dread doth chiefly fear us, Doth keep us daily schooled and exercised; Lest that the fright thereof should overbear us! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...UNGRATEFULNESS by GEORGE HERBERT DREAM-LOVE by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI INVITATION by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS SWORD AND BUCKLER; OR, SERVING-MAN'S DEFENCE: INTRODUCTION by WILLIAM BASSE ON H----YS FRIENDSHIP by WILLIAM BLAKE VALUES by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE TEN YEARS HAVE PASSED; ON VIEWING WAR GRAVES AT VERDUN, 1928 by DON MAITLAND BUSHBY AN ELEGY ON THE LADY PEN; SENT TO MY MISTRESS OUT OF FRANCE by THOMAS CAREW |