The Fair Singer
Andrew Marvell
To make a final conquest of all me, Love did compose so sweet an Enemy, In whom both Beauties to my death agree, Joyning themselves in fatal Harmony; That while she with her Eyes my Heart does bind, She with her Voice might captivate my Mind. I could have fled from One but singly fair: My dis-intangled Soul it self might save, Breaking the curled trammels of her hair. But how should I avoid to be her Slave, Whose subtile Art invisibly can wreath My Fetters of the very Air I breath? It had been easie fighting in some plain, Where Victory might hang in equal choice. But all resistance against her is vain, Who has th' advantage both of Eyes and Voice. And all my Forces needs must be undone, She having gained both the Wind and Sun.
Next 10 Poems
- Andrew Marvell : The First Anniversary Of The Government Under O.c.
- Andrew Marvell : The First Annniversary Of The Government Under His Highness The Lord Protector, 1655
- Andrew Marvell : The Gallery
- Andrew Marvell : The Garden
- Andrew Marvell : The Match
- Andrew Marvell : The Mower Against Gardens
- Andrew Marvell : The Mower To The Glo-worms
- Andrew Marvell : The Mower To The Glow-worms
- Andrew Marvell : The Mower's Song
- Andrew Marvell : The Nymph Complaining For The Death Of Her Faun
Previous 10 Poems
- Andrew Marvell : The Definition Of Love
- Andrew Marvell : The Death Of Cromwell
- Andrew Marvell : The Coronet
- Andrew Marvell : The Character Of Holland
- Andrew Marvell : Senec. Traged. Ex Thyeste Chor.2
- Andrew Marvell : Ros
- Andrew Marvell : On The Victory Obtained By Blake Over The Spaniards, In The Bay Of Scanctacruze, In The Island Of Teneriff.1657
- Andrew Marvell : On Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost
- Andrew Marvell : On A Drop Of Dew
- Andrew Marvell : Music's Empire