I would be thine when morning breaks On my enraptured view; When every star her tow'r forsakes, And every tuneful bird awakes, And bids the night adieu. I would be thine, when Phoebus speeds His chariot up the sky, Or on the heel of night he treads, And thro' the heav'n's refulgence spreads -- Thine would I live or die. I would be thine, thou fairest one, And hold thee as my boon, When full the morning's race is run, And half the fleeting day is gone, Thine let me rest at noon. I would be thine when ev'ning's veil O'er-mantles all the plain, When Cynthia smiles on every dale, And spreads like thee, her nightly sail To dim the starry train. Let me be thine, altho' I take My exit from this world; And when the heavens with thunder shake, And all the wheels of time shall break, With globes to nothing hurl'd, I would be thine. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEDIOCRITY IN LOVE REJECTED by THOMAS CAREW SONG IN THE NIGHT by OTTO JULIUS BIERBAUM THE DOOMED OAK; IN IMITATION OF ANATOLE FRANCE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE SOUL by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE THE ORDER OF NATURE by ANICIUS MANLIUS SEVERINUS BOETHIUS IN MEMORIAM: J. MACMEIKIN; DIED APRIL 1883 by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN |