Poems on Several Occasions | ||
48
Elegy.
Away to th' other world, away,In this I can no longer stay;
I long enough in this have stai'd
To see my self poorly betrai'd,
Forsaken, robb'd, and left alone,
And to all purposes undone.
What then can tempt me to live on,
My Peace and Honour being gone!
O yes! I still am call'd upon
To stay by my affliction.
Oh fair affliction! let me go,
You best can part with me I know;
'Tis an ill natur'd pride you take
To triumph o'er the fool you make,
And you loose time in trampling o'er
One, whilst you might make twenty more.
49
They had in that same dang'rous hour
They laid me at your beauties feet,
Your Roses still as fair and sweet;
And there more hearts are to subdue,
But, oh! not one that's half so true.
Dismiss me then t'eternal rest,
I cannot live but in your Breast;
Where, banish'd by Inconstancy,
The world has no more room for me.
Poems on Several Occasions | ||