TURN out more ale, turn up the light; I will not go to bed to-night. Of all the foes than man should dread The first and worst one is a bed. Friends I have had both old and young, And ale we drank and songs we sung: Enough you know when this is said, That, one and all, -- they died in bed. In bed they died and I'll not go Where all my friends have perished so. Go you who glad would buried be, But not to-night a bed for me. For me to-night no bed prepare, But set me out my oaken chair. And bid no other guests beside The ghosts that shall around me glide; In curling smoke-wreaths I shall see A fair and gentle company. Though silent all, rare revellers they, Who leave you not till break of day. Go you who would not daylight see, But not to-night a bed for me: For I've been born and I've been wed -- All of man's peril comes of bed. And I'll not seek -- whate'er befall -- Him who unbidden comes to all. A grewsome guest, a lean-jawed wight -- God send he do not come to-night! But if he do, to claim his own, He shall not find me lying prone; But blithely, bravely, sitting up, And raising high the stirrup-cup. Then if you find a pipe unfilled, An empty chair, the brown ale spilled; Well may you know, though naught be said, That I've been borne away to bed. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...APRIL'S LAMBS by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES COUSIN NANCY by THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT OF MAIDENS' PRAISE: AN INVOCATION by SAINT ALDHELM LOST AT SEA by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH PIONEER WOMAN by EVA K. ANGLESBURG PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 48. AL-WADOOD by EDWIN ARNOLD RUSTIC CHILDHOOD by WILLIAM BARNES SONNET TO NICHOLAS BLACKLEECH OF GRAYES INNE by RICHARD BARNFIELD |