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  • The Innocent Ill
  • Abraham Cowley
  • Exported from Wikisource on 02/15/20
  • Though all thy gestures and discourses be
  • Coin’d and stamp’d by modesty;
  • Though from thy tongue ne’er slipp’d away
  • One word which nuns at the’ altar might not say;
  • Yet such a sweetness, such a grace,
  • In all thy speech appear,
  • That what to the’ eye a beauteous face,
  • That thy tongue is to the’ ear:
  • So cunningly it wounds the heart,
  • It strikes such heat through every part,
  • That thou a tempter worse than Satan art.
  • Thou in thy thoughts scarce any tracks have been
  • So much as of original sin,
  • Such charms they beauty wears as might
  • Desires in dying confess’d saints excite:
  • Thou, with strange adultery,
  • Dost in each breast a brothel keep;
  • Awake all men do lust for thee,
  • And some enjoy thee when they sleep.
  • Ne’er before did woman live,
  • Who to such multitudes did give
  • The root and cause of sin, but only Eve.
  • Thou in thy breast so quick a pity be,
  • That a fly’s death’s a wound to thee;
  • Though savage and rock-hearted those
  • Appear, that weep not even Romance’s woes;
  • Yet n’eer before was tyrant known,
  • Whose rage was of so large extent;
  • The ills thou dost are whole thine own;
  • Thou’rt principal and instrument:
  • In all the deaths that come from you,
  • You do the treble office do
  • Of judge, of torturer, and of weapon too.
  • Thou lovely instrument of angry Fate,
  • Which God did for our faults create!
  • Thou pleasant, universal ill,
  • Which, sweet as health, yet like a plague dost kill!
  • Thou kind, well natured tyranny!
  • Thou chaste committer of a rape!
  • Thou voluntary destiny,
  • Which no man can, or would, escape!
  • So gentle, and so glad to spare,
  • So wondrous good, and wondrous fair,
  • (We know) even the destroying-angels are.
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