in time submit;
Love has yet no wrathful fit:
If her patience turns to ire,
Love is then consuming fire.
Love has yet no wrathful fit:
If her patience turns to ire,
Love is then consuming fire.
Robert Herrick
830. HIS LOSS.
All has been plundered from me but my wit:
Fortune herself can lay no claim to it.
831. DRAW AND DRINK.
Milk still your fountains and your springs: for why?
The more th'are drawn, the less they will grow dry.
833. TO OENONE.
Thou say'st Love's dart
Hath pricked thy heart;
And thou dost languish too:
If one poor prick
Can make thee sick,
Say, what would many do?
836. TO ELECTRA.
Shall I go to Love and tell,
Thou art all turned icicle?
Shall I say her altars be
Disadorn'd and scorn'd by thee?
O beware!
in time submit;
Love has yet no wrathful fit:
If her patience turns to ire,
Love is then consuming fire.
837. TO MISTRESS AMY POTTER.
Ay me! I love; give him your hand to kiss
Who both your wooer and your poet is.
Nature has precompos'd us both to love:
Your part's to grant; my scene must be to move.
Dear, can you like, and liking love your poet?
If you say "Aye," blush-guiltiness will show it.
Mine eyes must woo you, though I sigh the while:
_True love is tongueless as a crocodile_.
And you may find in love these different parts--
_Wooers have tongues of ice, but burning hearts_.
838. UPON A MAID.
Here she lies, in bed of spice,
Fair as Eve in Paradise:
For her beauty it was such
Poets could not praise too much.
Virgins, come, and in a ring
Her supremest requiem sing;
Then depart, but see ye tread
Lightly, lightly, o'er the dead.
_Supremest_, last.
839.