Take hence this tuneful trifler's lays! I'll hear no more the unmeaning strain Of Venus' Loves, and Cupids' darts, And killing eyes, and wounded hearts; All flattery's round of fulsome praise, All falsehood's cant of fabled pain. Bring me the Muse, whose tongue has told Love's genuine plaintive tender tale; Bring me the Muse, whose sounds of woe 'Midst death's dread scenes so sweetly flow, When friendship's faithful breast lies cold, When beauty's blooming cheek is pale: Bring theseI like their grief sincere; It soothes my sympathetic gloom: For, oh! love's genuine pains I've borne, And death's dread rage has made me mourn; I've wept o'er friendship's early bier, And dropped the tear on beauty's tomb. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RED TURTLENECK by KAREN SWENSON BATTLE SONG by EBENEZER ELLIOTT THE SUGAR-PLUM TREE by EUGENE FIELD SONNET: 9. TO A VIRTUOUS YOUNG LADY by JOHN MILTON JACK AND JILL (1) by MOTHER GOOSE A MORNING THOUGHT by EDWARD ROWLAND SILL THE MALLARDS PASS UNHARMED by LAURA FRANCES ALEXANDER KNOW THYSELF by WILLIAM ARBUTHNOT SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 29. CHRIST AND ENGLAND by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |