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Upon A Fly.

By Robert Herrick

Topics: classic

A golden fly one show'd to me,     Clos'd in a box of ivory,     Where both seem'd proud: the fly to have     His burial in an ivory grave;     The ivory took state to hold     A corpse as bright as burnish'd gold.     One fate had both, both equal grace;     The buried, and the burying-place.     Not Virgil's gnat, to whom the spring     All flowers sent to's burying;     Not Martial's bee, which in a bead     Of amber quick was buried;     Nor that fine worm that does inter     Herself i' th' silken sepulchre;     Nor my rare Phil,[K] that lately was     With lilies tomb'd up in a glass;     More honour had than this same fly,     Dead, and closed up in ivory.

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"A golden fly one show'd to me,..."

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Author:Robert Herrick

"A golden fly one show'd to me,..." by Robert Herrick

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Robert Herrick

About Robert Herrick

Robert Herrick (1591–1674) was an English Cavalier poet whose "Hesperides" (1648) contains over 1,200 poems. His carpe diem verse "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" ("Gather ye rosebuds while ye may") and lyric poems celebrate love, beauty, and the passing of time.

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