@3Nymph.@1 WHAT busy cares too timely born (Young Swain!) disturb thy sleep? Thy early sighs awake the Morn, Thy tears teach her to weep. @3Shepherd.@1 Sorrows, fair Nymph, are full alone; Nor counsel can endure. @3Nymph.@1 Yet thine disclose, for until known Sickness admits no cure. @3Shepherd.@1 My griefs are such as but to hear Would poison all thy joys, The pity which thou seem'st to bear My health, thine own destroys. @3Nymph.@1 How can diseased minds infect? Say what thy grief doth move! @3Shepherd.@1 Call up thy virtue to protect Thy heart, and know 'twas love. @3Nymph.@1 Fond Swain! @3Shepherd.@1 By which I have been long Destin'd to meet with hate. @3Nymph.@1 Fy, Shepherd, fy: thou dost love wrong, To call thy crime thy fate. @3Shepherd.@1 Alas what cunning could decline What force can love repel? @3Nymph.@1 Yet, there's a way to unconfine Thy heart. @3Shepherd.@1 For pity tell. @3Nymph.@1 Choose one whose love may be allur'd By thine: who ever knew Inveterate diseases cur'd But by receiving new? @3Shepherd.@1 All will like her my soul perplex. @3Nymph.@1 Yet try. @3Shepherd.@1 Oh could there be, But any softness in that sex, I'd wish it were in thee. @3Nymph.@1 Thy prayer is heard: learn now t' esteem The kindness she hath shown, Who thy lost freedom to redeem Hath forfeited her own. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MOUNTAIN PICTURES: 2. MONADNOCK FROM WACHUSETT by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER HUMAN IGNORANCE by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE HOUREGLASSE by JOSEPH BEAUMONT THE DREAM by MADISON JULIUS CAWEIN |