Come, come, I faint: thy heavy stay
Doubles each houre of the day:
The winged hast of nimble love
Makes aged Time not seeme to move:
Did not the light,
And then the night
Instruct my sight
I should believe the Sunne forgot his flight.
Show not the drooping marygold
Whose leaves like grieving amber fold:
My longing nothing can explain
But soule and body rent in twain:
Did I not moane,
And sigh and groane,
And talk alone,
I should believe my soul was gone from home.
She’s gone, she’s gone, away she’s fled,
Within my breast to make her bed,
In me there dwels her tenant woe,
And sighs are all the breath I blow:
Then come to me,
One touch of thee
Will make me see
If loving thee I live or dead I be.
(William Strode)
More Poetry from William Strode:
William Strode Poems based on Topics: Night, Light, Home, Soul- An Eare-Stringe (William Strode Poems)
- O When Will Cupid Shew Such Arte (William Strode Poems)
- On His Lady Marie (William Strode Poems)
- On The Picture Of Two Dolphins In A Fountayne (William Strode Poems)
- With Penne, Inke, And Paper To A Distressed Friend (William Strode Poems)
- A Girdle (William Strode Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Night Poems, Light Poems, Soul Poems, Home PoemsBased on Keywords: houre, doubles, seeme, sunne, soule, moane, dwels, groane