If love and all the world were young: Difference between revisions
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Lyricist:''' [[Walter Raleigh]]. | '''Lyricist:''' [[Walter Raleigh]]. Written as a riposte to the somewhat cloying [[Come live with me]] by [[Christopher Marlowe]] | ||
==Settings by composers== | ==Settings by composers== | ||
*[[Come live with me (John Liptrot Hatton)| John Liptrot Hatton]] SATB | *[[Come live with me (John Liptrot Hatton)| John Liptrot Hatton]] SATB |
Revision as of 13:39, 3 January 2022
Lyricist: Walter Raleigh. Written as a riposte to the somewhat cloying Come live with me by Christopher Marlowe
Settings by composers
- John Liptrot Hatton SATB
- Samuel Webbe ATTB or TTTB
English text
1 If love and all the world were young,
And truth on ev'ry shepherd's tongue,
Thy fancied pleasures might me move,
And I might listen to thy love.
2 But time drives flocks from field to fold;
The rivers rage, and hills grow cold,
Then drooping Philomel is dumb,
And age complains of care to come.
4 Thy gowns, thy belts, thy beds of roses,
Thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy posies,
All these to me can nothing move,
To live with thee and be thy love.
6 If youth could last, and love remain,
Had joy no date, and age no pain,
Then these delights my mind might move,
And I might listen to thy love.