Eternity Of Love Protested
Thomas Carew
How ill doth he deserve a lover’s name,
Whose pale weak flame
Cannot retain
His heat, in spite of absence or disdain;
But doth at once, like paper set on fire,
Burn and expire;
True love can never change his seat,
Nor did her ever love, that could retreat.
That noble flame which my breast keeps alive
Shall still survive
When my soul’s fled;
Nor shall my love die when my body’s dead,
That shall wait on me to the lower shade,
And never fade;
My very ashes in their urn
Shall, like a hallow’d lamp, forever burn.
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Carew : He That Loves A Rosy Cheek
- Thomas Carew : I Do Not Love Thee For That Fair
- Thomas Carew : Ingrateful Beauty Threatened
- Thomas Carew : Know, Celia, Since Thou Art So Proud
- Thomas Carew : Lips And Eyes.
- Thomas Carew : Mediocrity In Love Rejected
- Thomas Carew : My Mistress Commanding Me To Return Her Letters.
- Thomas Carew : Persuasions To Enjoy
- Thomas Carew : Persuasions To Joy, A Song
- Thomas Carew : Secrecy Protested.
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Carew : Epitaph On The Lady Mary Villiers
- Thomas Carew : Epitaph For Maria Wentworth
- Thomas Carew : Disdain Returned
- Thomas Carew : Celia Beeding, To The Surgeon
- Thomas Carew : Boldness In Love
- Thomas Carew : Ask Me No More
- Thomas Carew : Another Epitaph
- Thomas Carew : Another
- Thomas Carew : An Elegy Upon The Death Of The Dean Of St. Paul's, Dr. John
- Thomas Carew : A Song: When June Is Past, The Fading Rose