Original Poems and Translations | ||
168
THE DANGERS of MATRIMONY.
A.While prudence guides, change not, at any rate,
A life of freedom for the married state:
I ventur'd once to play that desperate game,
And therefore warn you, not to do the same.
B.
The counsel may be sage which you advance;
But I'm resolv'd to take the common chance.
A.
Mild gales attend that voyage of your life,
And waft you safely thro' the sea of strife:
Not the dire Libyan, or Ægæan sea,
Where out of thirty ships scarce perish three;
But that, where daring fools most dearly pay,
Where all that sail are surely cast away.
Original Poems and Translations | ||