Out Of Catallus
Richard Crashaw
Come and let us live my Dear, Let us love and never fear, What the sourest Fathers say: Brightest Sol that dies today Lives again as blithe tomorrow, But if we dark sons of sorrow Set; o then, how long a Night Shuts the Eyes of our short light! Then let amorous kisses dwell On our lips, begin to tell A Thousand, and a Hundred, score An Hundred, and a Thousand more, Till another Thousand smother That, and that wipe off another. Thus at last when we have numb’red Many a Thousand, many a Hundred; We’ll confound the reckoning quite, And lose ourselves in wild delight: While our joys so multiply, As shall mock the envious eye.
Next 10 Poems
- Richard Crashaw : Prayer
- Richard Crashaw : The Flaming Heart
- Richard Crashaw : The Flaming Heart Upon The Book And Picture Of Saint Teresa
- Richard Crashaw : The Recommendation
- Richard Crashaw : The Weeper
- Richard Crashaw : To The Name Above Every Name, The Name Of Jesus
- Richard Crashaw : Two Went Up Into The Temple To Pray
- Richard Crashaw : Upon The Book And Picture Of The Seraphical Saint Teresa
- Richard Crashaw : Verses From The Shepherds' Hymn
- Richard Crashaw : Wishes To His ( Supposed ) Mistress
Previous 10 Poems
- Richard Crashaw : On Mr. G. Herbert's Book, Entitled The Temple Of Sacred Poe
- Richard Crashaw : On Mr. G. Herbert's Book
- Richard Crashaw : On Marriage
- Richard Crashaw : In The Holy Nativity Of Our Lord God: A Hymn Sung As By Shepherds
- Richard Crashaw : In The Holy Nativity Of Our Lord
- Richard Crashaw : Divine Epigrams: To Our Lord, Upon The Water Made Wine
- Richard Crashaw : Divine Epigrams: Samson To His Delilah
- Richard Crashaw : Divine Epigrams: On The Miracle Of The Multiplied Loaves
- Richard Crashaw : Divine Epigrams: On The Baptized Ethiopian
- Richard Crashaw : Christ Crucified