IF in this Glass of Humours you do find The passions or diseases of your mind, Here without pain, you safely may endure, Though not to suffer, yet to read your cure. But if you nothing meet you can apply, Then, ere you need, you have a remedy. And I do wish you never may have cause To be adjudg'd by these fantastic laws; But that this book's example may be known, By others' Melancholy, not your own. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SALLY IN OUR ALLEY by HENRY CAREY (1687-1743) HYMN TO THE NIGHT by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE HERITAGE by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL CATHOLIC HYMN by EDGAR ALLAN POE AFTER LONG SILENCE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS A NEW PILGRIMAGE: 28 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT TO FLORENCE by GEORGE GORDON BYRON SPECIAL MESSAGE TO THE VERMONT LEGISLATURE by DANIEL LEAVENS CADY |