A LOVER I am, and a lover I'll be, And hope from my love I shall never be free: Let wisdom be blamed in the grave woman-hater, Yet never to love is a sin of ill nature; But he who loves well, and whose passion is strong, Shall never be wretched, but ever be young. With hopes and with fears, like a ship in the ocean, Our hearts are kept dancing and ever in motion. When our passion is pallid, and our fancy would fail, A little kind quarrel supplies a fresh gale: But when the doubt's cleared, and the jealousy's gone, How we kiss and embrace, and can never have done! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CAMPUS SONNET: BEFORE AN EXAMINATION by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET DEDICATION IN THESE DAY by HAYDEN CARRUTH TO THE ROCK THAT WILL BE A CORNERSTONE OF THE HOUSE by ROBINSON JEFFERS A BANJO SONG by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON ACROSS THE RED SKY by KATHERINE MANSFIELD JOHN WILKES BOOTH AT THE FARM (JANUARY 12, 1848) by EDGAR LEE MASTERS |