HumanitiesWeb.org - Editor's Selection of Poems (A Dialogue Betwixt Cordanus and Amoret, On a Lost Heart) by Richard Lovelace
HumanitiesWeb HumanitiesWeb
WelcomeHistoryLiteratureArtMusicPhilosophyResourcesHelp
Periods Alphabetically Nationality Topics Themes Genres Glossary
pixel

Lovelace
Index
Biography
Selected Works
Suggested Reading
Chronology
Related Materials

Search

Get Your Degree!

Find schools and get information on the program that’s right for you.

Powered by Campus Explorer

& etc
FEEDBACK

(C)1998-2012
All Rights Reserved.

Site last updated
28 October, 2012
Real Time Analytics

Editor's Selection of Poems
A Dialogue Betwixt Cordanus and Amoret, On a Lost Heart

by Richard Lovelace

Cord.     Distressed pilgrim, whose dark clouded eyes
          Speak thee a martyr to love's cruelties,
          Whither away?
Amor.                      What pitying voice I hear,
          Calls back my flying steps?
Cord.                           Pr'ythee, draw near.
Amor.     I shall but say, kind swain, what doth become
          Of a lost heart, ere to Elysium
          It wounded walks?
Cord.                      First, it does freely flye
          Into the pleasures of a lover's eye;
          But, once condemn'd to scorn, it fetter'd lies,
          An ever-bowing slave to tyrannies.
Amor.     I pity its sad fate, since its offence
          Was but for love.  Can tears recall it thence?
Cord.     O no, such tears, as do for pity call,
          She proudly scorns, and glories at their fall.
Amor.     Since neither sighs nor tears, kind shepherd, tell,
          Will not a kiss prevail?
Cord.                           Thou may'st as well
          Court Eccho with a kiss.
Amor.                           Can no art move
          A sacred violence to make her love?
Cord.     O no! 'tis only Destiny or Fate
          Fashions our wills either to love or hate.
Amor.     Then, captive heart, since that no humane spell
          Hath power to graspe thee his, farewell.
Cord. Farewell.
Cho.      Lost hearts, like lambs drove from their folds by fears,
          May back return by chance, but not by tears.
Previous Next
Personae

Terms Defined

Referenced Works