T. R. Smith, comp. Poetica Erotica: Rare and Curious Amatory Verse. 1921–22.
Song from The Spanish Friar
By John Dryden (16311700)FAREWELL, ungrateful Traitor, | |
Farewell, my perjur’d Swain; | |
Let never injur’d Creature | |
Believe a Man again. | |
The Pleasure of possessing | 5 |
Surpasses all expressing! | |
But ’tis too short a Blessing, | |
And Love too long a Pain. | |
’Tis easy to deceive us, | |
In Pity of your Pain; | 10 |
But when we love, you leave us, | |
To rail at you in vain. | |
Before we have descried it, | |
There is no Bliss beside it, | |
But she who once has try’d it, | 15 |
Will never love again. | |
The Passion you pretended, | |
Was only to obtain; | |
But now the Charm is ended, | |
The Charmer you disdain. | 20 |
Your Love by ours we measure, | |
’Till we have lost our Treasure; | |
But dying is a Pleasure, | |
When living is a Pain. | |