"
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" (
1599), by Christopher Marlowe (
English playwright, poet, and translator of the Elizabethan era, 1564-1593), is a pastoral poem from the English
Renaissance (
1485–1603).
Marlowe composed the poem in iambic tetrameter (four feet of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable) in six stanzas, and each stanza is composed of two rhyming couplets; thus the first line of the poem reads: "Come live with me and be my love".
Come live with me, and be my love;
And we will all the pleasures prove
That hills and valleys, dales and fields,
Woods, or steepy mountains yields.
Walter Crane | The Passionate Shepherd to his Love illustration