Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Love And Marriage. by Thomas Moore
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Love And Marriage.

    By Thomas Moore



            Eque brevi verbo ferre perenne malum.
            SECUNDUS, eleg. vii.


    Still the question I must parry,
        Still a wayward truant prove:
    Where I love, I must not marry;
        Where I marry, can not love.

    Were she fairest of creation,
        With the least presuming mind;
    Learned without affectation;
        Not deceitful, yet refined;

    Wise enough, but never rigid;
        Gay, but not too lightly free;
    Chaste as snow, and yet not frigid:
        Fond, yet satisfied with me:

    Were she all this ten times over,
        All that heaven to earth allows.
    I should be too much her lover
        Ever to become her spouse.

    Love will never bear enslaving;
        Summer garments suit him best;
    Bliss itself is not worth having,
        If we're by compulsion blest.



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