Poems on Several Occasions | ||
SONNET.
[Chloris, whil'st thou and I were free]
Chloris
, whil'st thou and I were free,
Wedded to nought but Liberty,
How sweetly happy did we live?
How free to promise, free to give?
Wedded to nought but Liberty,
How sweetly happy did we live?
How free to promise, free to give?
Then Monarch's of our selves, we might
Love here, or there, to change delight,
And ty'd to none, with all dispence,
Paying each love its recompence.
Love here, or there, to change delight,
And ty'd to none, with all dispence,
Paying each love its recompence.
525
But in that happy freedom we
Were so improvidently free,
To give away our Liberties;
Were so improvidently free,
To give away our Liberties;
And now in fruitless Sorrow pine,
At what we are, what might have been,
Had thou, or I, or both been wise.
At what we are, what might have been,
Had thou, or I, or both been wise.
Poems on Several Occasions | ||