[stellar-one/poems/includes/header.htm]
  [stellar-one/poems/includes/left.htm]

 

  Love
George Herbert

Love (I)

Immortal Love, author of this great frame,
    Sprung from that beauty which can never fade,
    How hath man parcel'd out Thy glorious name,
And thrown it on that dust which Thou hast made,
While mortal love doth all the title gain!
    Which siding with Invention, they together
    Bear all the sway, possessing heart and brain,
(Thy workmanship) and give Thee share in neither.
Wit fancies beauty, beauty raiseth wit;
    The world is theirs, they two play out the game,
    Thou standing by: and though Thy glorious name
Wrought our deliverance from th' infernal pit,
Who sings Thy praise? Only a scarf or glove
Doth warm our hands, and make them write of love.

Love (II)

  Immortal Heat, O let Thy greater flame
    Attract the lesser to it; let those fires
    Which shall consume the world first make it tame,
And kindle in our hearts such true desires.
As may consume our lusts, and make Thee way:
    Then shall our hearts pant Thee, then shall our brain
    All her invention on Thine altar lay,
And there in hymns send back Thy fire again.
Our eyes shall see Thee, which before saw dust,
    Dust blown by wit, till that they both were blind:
    Thou shalt recover all Thy goods in kind,
Who wert disseized by usurping lust:
All knees shall bow to Thee; all wits shall rise,
And praise Him Who did make and mend our eyes.

Love (III)

Love bade me welcome, yet my soul drew back,
    Guilty of dust and sin.
But quick-ey'd Love, observing me grow slack
    From my first entrance in,
Drew nearer to me, sweetly questioning
    If I lack'd anything.

"A guest," I answer'd, "worthy to be here";
    Love said, "You shall be he."
"I, the unkind, the ungrateful? ah my dear,
    I cannot look on thee."
Love took my hand and smiling did reply,
    "Who made the eyes but I?"

"Truth, Lord, but I have marr'd them; let my shame
    Go where it doth deserve."
"And know you not," says Love, "who bore the blame?"
    "My dear, then I will serve."
"You must sit down," says Love, "and taste my meat."
    So I did sit and eat.

 
        
 

 
  Hit Counter
 visits since
09/02/2002
updated 10/04/2009
 
 

 

 
 

Annonymous

Poetry books, by author:

Mathew Arnold

William Blake

Ann Bradstreet

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Robert Browning

George Gordon Byron, Lord Byron

Lewis Carroll

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Emily Dickinson

John Donne

T. S. Eliot

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Robert Frost

Thomas Gray

Thomas Hardy

George Herbert

Robert Herrick

Oliver Wendell Holmes

Gerard Manley Hopkins

Ben Jonson

John Keats

Rudyard Kipling

Katherine Mansfield

Christopher Marlowe

Andrew Marvell

Wilfred Owen

Edgar Allen Poe

Ezra Pound

Li Po

Sappho

William Shakespeare

Percy Bysshe Shelley

John Suckling

William Wordsworth

Thomas Wyatt

 
 

 

[stellar-one/poems/includes/footer.htm]