If there were, oh! an Hellespont of cream Between us, milk-white Mistress, I would swim To you, to show to both my love's extreme, Leander-like, - yea! dive from brim to brim. But met I with a butter'd pippin-pie Floating upon't, that would I make my boat, To waft me to you without jeopardy: Though sea-sick I might be while it did float. Yet if a storm should rise, by night or day, Of sugar snows and hail of care-aways, Then, if I found a pancake in my way, It like a plank should bring me to your kays, Which having found, if they tobacco kept, The smoke should dry me well before I slept. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BRONZE TRUMPETS AND SEA WATER; ON TURNING LATIN VERSE INTO ENGLISH by ELINOR WYLIE ECLOGUE: TWO FARMS IN WOONE by WILLIAM BARNES SONG, FR. THE LOVER'S PROGRESS by FRANCIS BEAUMONT A RHAPSODY by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT THE ELDER WOMAN'S SONG: 1, FR. KING LEAR'S WIFE by GORDON BOTTOMLEY CREOLE SLAVE SONG: THE SONG OF CAYETANO'S CIRCUS by GEORGE WASHINGTON CABLE TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 2. CHILD OF THE LONELY HEART by EDWARD CARPENTER BUGLE SONG OF PEACE; A PROPHECY FOR MEMORIAL DAY by THOMAS CURTIS CLARK |