Let Doctors dissertate about Attraction, And preach long lectures upon Gravitation , Indulging thereanent in speculation For which no human creature cares one fraction, 'Tis all mere twaddle-talk and iteration: Of these mysterious modes of Nature's action There never yet was any explanation To anybody's perfect satisfaction. However, this I stubbornly believe, And for the proof thereof see no great need To take down Isaac Newton from the shelf- That, move whither I will-noon, morn, or eve, I manage to attract with awful speed My Three Half- Crowns' Tormentor tow'rds myself! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IN MEMORIAM (EASTER 1915) by PHILIP EDWARD THOMAS BALLAD OF THE WOMEN OF PARIS by FRANCOIS VILLON COMPARISON OF LOVE TO A STREAM FALLING FROM THE ALPS by THOMAS WYATT THE ACHARNIANS: A PLEA FOR THE ENEMY by ARISTOPHANES THE LEGEND OF GOOD WOMEN: 4. PART 1. THE LEGEND OF HYPSIPYLE by GEOFFREY CHAUCER AN EPISTLE: ADDRESSED TO SIR THOMAS HAMNER (2) (VARIANT TEXT) by WILLIAM COLLINS (1721-1759) |