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Wilt thou my true friend be?Then love not mine, but me.
Robert Herrick
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Robert Herrick was a 17th-century English lyric poet and cleric. He is known for his book of poems, "Hesperides," which includes the carpe diem poem "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time." His works are noted for their clarity, simplicity, and musical quality. Herrick was also a vicar of Dean Prior in Devon, despite being ejected during the English Civil War and later reinstated.
English
Explore a curated selection of verses that share themes, styles, and emotional resonance with the poem you've just read.
Rapine Brings Ruin.
Robert Herrick, Simple Poetry
To Dianeme
Clouds.
Love Perfumes All Parts.
To His Friend, Mr. J. Jincks.
Love, love me now, because I placeThee here among my righteous race:The bastard slips may droop and dieWanting both root and earth; but thyImmortal self shall boldly trustTo live for ever with my Just.
To A Friend.
Look in my book, and herein seeLife endless signed to thee and me.We o'er the tombs and fates shall fly;While other generations die.
Friendship
When presses hard my load of care,And other friends from me depart,I want a friend my grief to share,With faithful speech and loving heart.I want a friend of noble mind,Who loves me more than praise or pelf,Reproves my faults with spirit kind,And thinks of me as well as self--A friend whose ear is ever closedAgainst traducers' poison breath;And, though in me be not disclosedAn equal love, yet loves till death--A friend who knows my weakness well,And ever seeks to calm my fears;If words should fail the storm to quell,Will soothe my fevered heart with tears--A friend not moved by jealousyShould I outrun him in life's race;And though I doubt, still trusts in meWith loyal heart and cloudless face.
Joseph Horatio Chant
On Love.
That love 'twixt men does ever longest lastWhere war and peace the dice by turns do cast.
Epistle To A Friend.
Give me the wreath of friendship true,Whose flowerets fade not in a breath:From memory gaining many a hue,To bloom beyond the touch of death.And I will send it to thy home--Thy home beloved, my faithful friend!And pray for its perpetual bloomAnd every bliss that earth can send.Within its magic wreath I'd placeHearts'-ease and every lovely flower;To win thee by their matchless grace,And cheer and bless the lonely hour.When at the world's unkind returnOf all thy worth, and all thy care,Thou may'st in spite of manhood turn,And shed the sad, the bitter, tear.Then, midst this holy grief of thine,The thought of some true friend may bless,And cheer the gloom like angel's smile,Or sunbeam in a wilderness....
Thomas Gent
To Love.
I'm free from thee; and thou no more shalt hearMy puling pipe to beat against thine ear.Farewell my shackles, though of pearl they be;Such precious thraldom ne'er shall fetter me.He loves his bonds who, when the first are broke,Submits his neck unto a second yoke.