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Poem by Mary Wortley Montagu


A Man in Love


L'Homme qui ne se trouve point, et ne se trouvera jamais


The man who feels the dear disease,
Forgets himself, neglects to please,
The crowd avoids, and seeks the groves,
And much he thinks when much he loves;
Press'd with alternate hope and fear,
Sighs in her absence, sighs when near.
The gay, the fond, the fair, the young,
Those trifles pass unseen along,
To him a pert insipid throng.
But most he shuns the vain coquette;
Contemns her false affected wit:
The minstrel's sound, the flowing bowl,
Oppress and hurt the amorous soul.
'Tis solitude alone can please,
And give some intervals of ease.
He feeds the soft distemper there,
And fondly courts the distant fair;
To balls the silent shade prefers,
And hates all other charms but hers.
When thus your absent swain can do,
Molly, you may believe him true. 



Mary Wortley Montagu


Mary Wortley Montagu's other poems:
  1. Ballad, on a Late Occurrence
  2. Impromptu, to a Young Lady Singing
  3. An Elegy on Mrs. Thompson
  4. Addressed to ------, 1736
  5. An Epistle from Pope to Lord Bolingbroke


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