Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of (Poet) Robert Herrick > Text of Wake
|
|
________________________________________________
Title: The Wake
Author: (Poet) Robert Herrick [ More Titles by Herrick]
Come, Anthea, let us two Go to feast, as others do: Tarts and custards, creams and cakes, Are the junkets still at wakes; Unto which the tribes resort, Where the business is the sport: Morris-dancers thou shalt see, Marian, too, in pageantry; And a mimic to devise Many grinning properties. Players there will be, and those Base in action as in clothes; Yet with strutting they will please The incurious villages. Near the dying of the day There will be a cudgel-play, Where a coxcomb will be broke, Ere a good word can be spoke: But the anger ends all here, Drench'd in ale, or drown'd in beer. --Happy rusticks! best content With the cheapest merriment; And possess no other fear, Than to want the Wake next year.
[The end] (Poet) Robert Herrick's poem: Wake ________________________________________________
GO TO TOP OF SCREEN
|