On My Birthday, July 21
Matthew Prior
I, MY dear, was born to-day-- So all my jolly comrades say: They bring me music, wreaths, and mirth, And ask to celebrate my birth: Little, alas! my comrades know That I was born to pain and woe; To thy denial, to thy scorn, Better I had ne'er been born: I wish to die, even whilst I say-- 'I, my dear, was born to-day.' I, my dear, was born to-day: Shall I salute the rising ray, Well-spring of all my joy and woe? Clotilda, thou alone dost know. Shall the wreath surround my hair? Or shall the music please my ear? Shall I my comrades' mirth receive, And bless my birth, and wish to live? Then let me see great Venus chase Imperious anger from thy face; Then let me hear thee smiling say-- 'Thou, my dear, wert born to-day.'
Next 10 Poems
- Matthew Prior : Phyllis's Age
- Matthew Prior : Song
- Matthew Prior : The Lady Who Offers Her Looking-glass To Venus
- Matthew Prior : The Merchant, To Secure His Treasure
- Matthew Prior : The Question To Lisetta
- Matthew Prior : To A Child Of Quality Of Five Years Old
- Matthew Prior : To A Child Of Quality, Five Years Old, 1704. The Author Then Forty
- Matthew Prior : To A Lady
- Matthew Prior : To A Lady, She Refusing To Continue A Dispute With Me, And Leaving Me In The Argument: An Ode
- Matthew Prior : To Chloe Jealous
Previous 10 Poems
- Matthew Prior : Jinny The Just
- Matthew Prior : Horace, Lib. I, Epist. Ix, Imitated
- Matthew Prior : For My Own Monument
- Matthew Prior : Cupid Mistaken
- Matthew Prior : An Ode
- Matthew Prior : An Epitaph
- Matthew Prior : A True Maid
- Matthew Prior : A Simile
- Matthew Prior : A Reasonable Affliction
- Matthew Prior : A Letter To Lady Margaret Cavendish Holles-harley, When A Child