Poems on Several Occasions | ||
339
Day-Break.
I
Stay, Phœbus, stay, and cool thy flaming HeadIn the Green bosom of thy liquid Bed:
Betray not, with thine envious Light,
Th' embraces of an happy Night;
For her fair blushes, if thou dar'st to rise,
Will, by Eclipse, hoodwink thy sawcy Eyes.
II
Lest Lovers do upbraid thy beamy Car,With the pale glory of th' inferiour Star,
And henceforth dare to say, in scorn,
Sol's Ray is wain'd to Phæbe's horn,
And, for his Treason to a Lovers bliss,
Suffers Actæons Metamorphosis.
III
Why should we rise t'adore the rising Sun,And leave the Rites to greater Lights undone?
Or quit her warm, and spicy nest,
Because the Morn peeps through the East,
340
When in Loves fire we melt without thy heat?
IV
When from my passionate Embraces sheSprings, as asham'd to be surpriz'd by thee,
The pillows furrow'd brows descry
A wrath for thy discovery,
Swell, and wax pale at thy insulting height,
For rage to be depriv'd of her dear weight.
V
Then stay, or lash thy Pamper'd Horses still,To shew a swift obedience to her Will,
And blushing, bow as low as Night,
Lest I pursue thee, by thy Light,
And lock the Morning Doors to stop thy Race,
Imprisoning so in Clouds thy tell-tale Face.
Poems on Several Occasions | ||