The Elegies of Tibullus - Being the Consolations of a Roman Lover Done in English Verse by 54 BC-19 BC Tibullus
page 43 of 90 (47%)
page 43 of 90 (47%)
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Fierce, parching suns will mar thy tender face,
And rude winds rough thy curls and clustering hair. Did I not warn thee never to defile Beauty with gold? For every wise man knows That riches only mantle with a smile A thousand sorrows and a host of woes. If snared by wealth, thou dost at love blaspheme, Venus will frown so on thy guilty deed, 'Twere better to be burned or stabbed, I deem, Or lashed with twisted scourge till one should bleed. Hope not to cover it! That god will come Who lets not mortal secrets safely hide; That god who bids our slaves be deaf and dumb, Then, in their cups, the scandal publish wide. This god from men asleep compels the cry That shouts aloud the thing they last would tell. How oft with tears I told thee this, when I At thy white feet a shameful suppliant fell! Then wouldst thou vow that never glittering gold Nor jewels rare could turn thine eyes from me, Nor all the wealth Campania's acres hold, Nor full Falernian vintage flowing free. For oaths like thine I would have sworn the skies Hold not a star, nor crystal streams look clear: |
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