Come, you pretty false-eyed wanton, Leave your crafty smiling. Think you to escape me now With slippery words beguiling? No, you mocked me th' other day, When you got loose, you fled away. But since I have caught you now, I'll clip your wings for flying; Smothering kisses fast I'll heap, And keep you so from crying. Sooner may you count the stars, And number hail down-pouring, Tell the osiers of the Thames, Or Goodwin Sands devouring, Than the thick-showered kisses here, Which now thy tired lips must bear. Such a harvest never was, So rich and full of pleasure; But 'tis spent as soon as reaped, So trustless is love's treasure. Would it were dumb midnight now, When all the world lies sleeping. Would this place some desert were, Which no man hath in keeping. My desires should then be safe, And when you cried, then would I laugh. But if aught might breed offence, Love only should be blamed. I would live your servant still, And you my saint unnamed. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE QUALITY OF COURAGE by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET TO KNOW IN REVERIE THE ONLY PHENOMENOLOGY OF THE ABSOLUTE by HAYDEN CARRUTH ON GOING UNNOTICED by ROBERT FROST SYNOPSIS OF A FAILED POEM by JAMES GALVIN |