A Song to Amoret

by Henry Vaughan

If I were dead, and in my place
    Some fresher youth design'd
To warm thee with new fires, and grace
    Those arms I left behind;

Were he as faithful as the sun,
    That's wedded to the sphere;
His blood as chaste and temp'rate run,
    As April's mildest tear;

Or were he rich, and with his heaps
    And spacious share of earth,
Could make divine affection cheap,
    And court his golden birth:

For all these arts I'd not believe,
    —No, though he should be thine—
The mighty amorist could give
    So rich a heart as mine.

Fortune and beauty thou might'st find,
    And greater men than I:
But my true resolvèd mind
    They never shall come nigh.

For I not for an hour did love,
    Or for a day desire,
But with my soul had from above
    This endless, holy fire.


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