The Good-Morrow
I wonder, by my troth, what thou and I
Did, till we loved? Were we 
not weaned till then? 
But sucked on country 
pleasures, childishly? 
Or snorted we in the Seven 
Sleepers’ den? 
’Twas so; but this, all 
pleasures fancies be. 
If ever any beauty I did see, 
Which I desired, and got, 
’twas but a dream of thee. 
And now good-morrow to our 
waking souls, 
Which watch not one another 
out of fear; 
For love, all love of other 
sights controls, 
And makes one little room an 
everywhere. 
Let sea-discoverers to new 
worlds have gone, 
Let maps to other, worlds on 
worlds have shown, 
Let us possess one world, each 
hath one, and is one. 
My face in thine eye, thine in 
mine appears, 
And true plain hearts do in 
the faces rest; 
Where can we find two better 
hemispheres, 
Without sharp north, without 
declining west? 
Whatever dies, was not mixed 
equally; 
If our two loves be one, or, 
thou and I 
Love so alike, that none do 
slacken, none can die.
 
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