Amores

Ovid

Ovid. Ovid's Art of Love (in three Books), the Remedy of Love, the Art of Beauty, the Court of Love, the History of Love, and Amours. Dryden, John, et al., translator. New York: Calvin Blanchard, 1855.

  1. The preying vultures and the kites remain,
  2. And the unlucky crow still caws for rain;
  3. The chough still lives 'midst fierce Minerva's hate,
  4. And scarce nine hundred years conclude her fate;
  5. But my poor Poll now hangs his sickly head,
  6. My Poll, my present from the east, is dead.
  7. Best things are sooner snatch'd by cov'tous fate,
  8. To worse she freely gives a longer date;
  9. Thersites brave Achilles' fate surviv'd,
  10. And Hector fell, whilst all his brothers liv'd.
  11. Why should I tell what vows Corinna made?
  12. How oft she begg'd thy life, how oft she pray'd ?
  13. The seventh day came, and now the Fates begin
  14. To end the thread, they had no more to spin;
  15. Yet still he talk'd, and when death nearer drew,
  16. His last breath said, "Corinna, now adieu!"
  17. There is a shady cypress grove below,
  18. And thither (if such doubtful things we know)
  19. The ghosts of pious birds departed go;
  20. 'Tis water'd well, and verdant all the year,