Parts Song “Take, oh Take Those Lips Away”

                      Parts Song

“Take, oh Take Those Lips Away”

“(sung at the Eton College Concert)” ~ Emily Daymond

Take, oh take those lips away,

That so sweetly were forsworn,

And those eyes: the breake of day,

Lights that do mislead the Morn;

But my kisses bring again, bring again,

Seals of love, but sealed in vain, sealed in vain.

~William Shakespeare, Twelfth Night

Perhaps the innocent and young should not

Attempt the parts of tortured, sex-stretched love.

The earliest of young male passion, hot

Though it may be, is still too soft like dove

Breasts, still to pale like “breake of day.”  The dawn

Of teen obsession can be strong as floods

Or full Niagra Falls.  It lacks the brawn

Of hard erections in demand of thuds,

(Thud, THUD).  It’s true, though, that a young man’s “Morn”

Of pulsing hormones understands too well

The possible rejection and how torn

A heart can be.  It knows the gate to hell.

..The young don’t know the  Preacher says, “All’s vain,

….All’s vain.” They do not know love’s deepest pain.

This poem is part of a shorter sonnet sequence within this large sonnet sequence called The Encyclopedia Sonnetica.  The shorter sonnet sequence is called “A Lively Hope.”  I recommend you read this poem where it is set in its sonnet sequence.  To do that, search for “A Lively Hope” here in The Encyclopedia Sonnetica, or you may see an illustrated version the entire shorter sequence at
https://classicalpoets.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/A-Lively-Hope.pdf 
where it was first published.