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Poem by Charles Cotton


To Coelia


WHEN, Coelia, must my old day set,
 And my young morning rise
In beams of joy so bright as yet
 Ne'er bless'd a lover's eyes?
My state is more advanced than when
 I first attempted thee:
I sued to be a servant then,
 But now to be made free.

I've served my time faithful and true,
 Expecting to be placed
In happy freedom, as my due,
 To all the joys thou hast:
Ill husbandry in love is such
 A scandal to love's power,
We ought not to misspend so much
 As one poor short-lived hour.

Yet think not, sweet! I'm weary grown,
 That I pretend such haste;
Since none to surfeit e'er was known
 Before he had a taste:
My infant love could humbly wait
 When, young, it scarce knew how
To plead; but grown to man's estate,
 He is impatient now.



Charles Cotton


Charles Cotton's other poems:
  1. The Night Quatrains
  2. The Evening Quatrains
  3. The Retirement
  4. Clepsydra
  5. The Morning Quatrains


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