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  • Project Gutenberg's The Poems of John Donne [2 vols.] Volume I, by John Donne
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  • Title: The Poems of John Donne [2 vols.] Volume I
  • Edited from the Old Editions and Numerous Manuscripts
  • Author: John Donne
  • Editor: Herbert J. C. Grierson
  • Release Date: April 12, 2015 [EBook #48688]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE POEMS OF JOHN DONNE [2 ***
  • Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lesley Halamek, Stephen Rowland
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  • THE POEMS OF JOHN DONNE
  • EDITED FROM THE OLD EDITIONS AND NUMEROUS MANUSCRIPTS,
  • WITH INTRODUCTIONS & COMMENTARY
  • BY
  • HERBERT J. C. GRIERSON M.A.
  • CHALMERS PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE
  • IN THE UNIVERSITY OF ABERDEEN
  • VOL. I
  • THE TEXT OF THE POEMS WITH APPENDIXES
  • OXFORD
  • AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
  • 1912
  • HENRY FROWDE, M.A.
  • PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
  • LONDON, EDINBURGH, NEW YORK
  • TORONTO AND MELBOURNE
  • PREFACE
  • The present edition of Donne's poems grew out of my work as a teacher.
  • In the spring of 1907, just after I had published a small volume on
  • the literature of the early seventeenth century, I was lecturing to
  • a class of Honours students on the 'Metaphysical poets'. They found
  • Donne difficult alike to understand and to appreciate, and accordingly
  • I undertook to read with them a selection from his poems with a view
  • to elucidating difficult passages and illustrating the character
  • of his 'metaphysics', the Scholastic and scientific doctrines which
  • underlie his conceits. The only editions which we had at our disposal
  • were the modern editions of Donne's poems by Grosart and Chambers, but
  • I did not anticipate that this would present any obstacle to the task
  • I had undertaken. About the same time the Master of Peterhouse asked
  • me to undertake the chapter on Donne, as poet and prose-artist, for
  • the _Cambridge History of English Literature_. The result was that
  • though I had long been interested in Donne, and had given, while at
  • work on the poetry of the seventeenth century, much thought to his
  • poetry as a centre of interest and influence, I began to make a more
  • minute study of the text of his poems than I had yet attempted.
  • The first result of this study was the discovery that there were
  • several passages in the poems, as printed in Mr. Chambers' edition,
  • of which I could give no satisfactory explanation to my class. At
  • the close of the session I went to Oxford and began in the Bodleian
  • a rapid collation of the text of that edition with the older copies,
  • especially of 1633. The conclusion to which I came was that, excellent
  • in many ways as that edition is, the editor had too often abandoned
  • the reading of 1633 for the sometimes more obvious but generally
  • weaker and often erroneous emendations of the later editions. As he
  • records the variants this had become clear in some cases already, but
  • an examination of the older editions brought out another fact,--that
  • by modernizing the punctuation, while preserving no record of the
  • changes made, the editor had corrupted some passages in such a manner
  • as to make it impossible for a student, unprovided with all the old
  • editions, to recover the original and sometimes quite correct reading,
  • or to trace the error to its fountainhead.
  • My first proposal to the Delegates of the Clarendon Press was that I
  • should attempt an edition of Donne's poems resting on a collation of
  • the printed texts; that for all poems which it contains the edition
  • of 1633 should be accepted as the authority, to be departed from only
  • when the error seemed to be obvious and certain, and that all such
  • changes, however minute, should be recorded in the notes. In the
  • case of poems not contained in the edition of 1633, the first edition
  • (whether 1635, 1649, 1650, or 1669) was to be the authority and to be
  • treated in the same fashion. Such an edition, it was hoped, might be
  • ready in a year. I had finished my first collation of the editions
  • when a copy of the Grolier Club edition came into my hands, and I
  • included it in the number of those which I compared throughout with
  • the originals.
  • While the results of this collation confirmed me in the opinion I
  • had formed as to the superiority of the edition of 1633 to all
  • its successors, it showed also that that edition was certainly not
  • faultless, and that the text of those poems which were issued only in
  • the later editions was in general very carelessly edited and corrupt,
  • especially of those poems which were added for the first time in 1669.
  • This raised the question, what use was to be made of the manuscript
  • copies of the poems in correcting the errors of the edition? Grosart
  • had based his whole text on one or two manuscripts in preference to
  • the editions. Mr. Chambers, while wisely refusing to do this, and
  • adopting the editions as the basis of his text, had made frequent
  • reference to the manuscripts and adopted corrections from them.
  • Professor Norton made no use of the manuscripts in preparing the text
  • of his edition, but he added in an Appendix an account of one of these
  • which had come into his hands, and later he described some more and
  • showed clearly that he believed corrections were to be obtained from
  • this source. Accordingly I resolved to examine tentatively those which
  • were accessible in the British Museum, especially the transcript of
  • three of the _Satyres_ in Harleian MS. 5110.
  • A short examination of the manuscripts convinced me that it would be
  • very unsafe to base a text on any single extant manuscript, or even to
  • make an eclectic use of a few of them, taking, now from one, now
  • from another, what seemed a probable emendation. On the other hand
  • it became clear that if as wide a collation as possible of extant
  • manuscripts were made one would be able to establish in many cases
  • what was, whether right or wrong, the traditional reading before any
  • printed edition appeared.
  • A few experiments further showed that one, and a very important,
  • result of this collation would be to confirm the trustworthiness of
  • 1633, to show that in places where modern editors had preferred the
  • reading of some of the later editions, generally 1635 or 1669, the
  • text of 1633 was not only intrinsically superior but had the support
  • of tradition, i.e. of the majority of the manuscripts. If this were
  • the case, then it was also possible that the traditional, manuscript
  • text might afford corrections when 1633 had fallen into error. At the
  • same time a very cursory examination of the manuscripts was sufficient
  • to show that many of them afforded an infinitely more correct and
  • intelligible text of those poems which were not published in 1633 than
  • that contained in the printed editions.
  • Another possible result of a wide collation of the manuscripts soon
  • suggested itself, and that was the settlement of the canon of Donne's
  • poems. One or two of the poems contained in the old editions had
  • already been rejected by modern editors, and some of these on the
  • strength of manuscript ascriptions. But on the one hand, no systematic
  • attempt had been made to sift the poems, and on the other, experience
  • has shown that nothing is more unsafe than to trust to the ascriptions
  • of individual, unauthenticated manuscripts. Here again it seemed to
  • the present editor that if any definite conclusion was to be obtained
  • it must be by as wide a survey as possible, by the accumulation of
  • evidence. No such conclusion might be attainable, but it was only thus
  • that it could be sought.
  • The outcome of the investigation thus instituted has been fully
  • discussed in the article on the _Text and Canon of Donne's Poems_ in
  • the second volume, and I shall not attempt to summarize it here. But
  • it may be convenient for the student to have a quite brief statement
  • of what it is that the notes in this volume profess to set forth.
  • Their first aim is to give a complete account of the variant readings
  • of the original editions of 1633, 1635, 1639, 1649-50-54 (the text in
  • these three is identical), and 1669. This was the aim of the edition
  • as originally planned, and though my opinion of the value of many
  • of the variants of the later editions has undergone considerable
  • abatement since I was able to study them in the light afforded by the
  • manuscripts, I have endeavoured to complete my original scheme; and I
  • trust it may be found that nothing more important has been overlooked
  • than an occasional misprint in the later editions. But I know from the
  • experience of examining the work of my precursors, and of revising
  • my own work, that absolute correctness is almost unattainable. It has
  • been an advantage to me in this part of the work to come after Mr.
  • Chambers and the Grolier Club editors, but neither of these editions
  • records changes of punctuation.
  • The second purpose of the notes is to set forth the evidence of the
  • manuscripts. I have not attempted to give anything like a full account
  • of the variant readings of these, but have recorded so much as is
  • sufficient for four different purposes.
  • (1) To vindicate the text of 1633. I have not thought it necessary
  • to detail the evidence in cases where no one has disputed the 1633
  • reading. If the note simply records the readings of the editions it
  • may be assumed that the manuscript evidence, so far as it is explicit
  • (the manuscripts frequently abound in absurd errors), is on the side
  • of 1633. In other cases, when there is something to be said for the
  • text of the later editions, and especially when modern editors have
  • preferred the later reading (though I have not always called attention
  • to this) I have set forth the evidence in some detail. At times I
  • have mentioned each manuscript, at others simply _all the MSS._,
  • occasionally just _MSS._ This last means generally that all the
  • positive evidence before me was in favour of the reading, but that my
  • collations were silent as to some of the manuscripts. My collators,
  • whether myself or those who worked for me, used Mr. Chambers' edition
  • because of its numbered lines. Now if Mr. Chambers had already adopted
  • a 1635 or later reading the tendency of the collator--especially
  • at first, before the importance of certain readings had become
  • obvious--was to pass over the agreement of the manuscript with this
  • later reading in silence. In all important cases I have verified
  • the reading by repeated reference to the manuscripts, but in some of
  • smaller importance I have been content to record the general trend of
  • the evidence. I have tried to cite no manuscript unless I had positive
  • evidence as to its reading.
  • (2) The second use which I have made of the manuscript evidence is
  • to justify my occasional departures from the text of the editions,
  • whether 1633 (and these are the departures which call for most
  • justification) or whatever later edition was the first to contain the
  • poem. In every such case the reader should see at a glance what was
  • the reading of the first edition, and on what authority it has been
  • altered. My aim has been a true text (so far as that was attainable),
  • not a reprint; but I have endeavoured to put the reader in exactly
  • the same position as I was myself at each stage in the construction of
  • that text. If I have erred, he can (in a favourite phrase of Donne's)
  • 'control' me. This applies to spelling and punctuation as well as to
  • the words themselves. But two warnings are necessary. When I note a
  • reading as found in a number of editions, e.g. 1635 to 1654 (1635-54),
  • or in _all_ the editions (1633-69), it must be understood that the
  • spelling is not always the same throughout. I have generally noted
  • any variation in the use of capitals, but not always. The spelling and
  • punctuation of each poem is that of the _first_ edition in which it
  • was published, or of the manuscript from which I have printed, all
  • changes being recorded. Again, if, in a case where the words and not
  • the punctuation is the matter in question, I cite the reading of an
  • edition or some editions followed by a list of agreeing manuscripts,
  • it will be understood that any punctuation given is that of the
  • editions. If a list of manuscripts only is given, the punctuation, if
  • recorded, is that of one or two of the best of these.
  • In cases where punctuation is the matter in question the issue lies
  • between the various editions and my own sense of what it ought to be.
  • Wherever it is not otherwise indicated the punctuation of a poem is
  • that of the first edition in which it appeared or of the manuscript
  • from which I have printed it. I have not recorded every variant of the
  • punctuation of later editions, but all that affect the sense while
  • at the same time not manifestly absurd. The punctuation of the
  • manuscripts is in general negligible, but of a few manuscripts it is
  • good, and I have occasionally cited these in support of my own view as
  • to what the punctuation should be.
  • (3) A third purpose served by my citation of the manuscripts is to
  • show clearly that there are more versions than one of some poems. A
  • study of the notes to the _Satyres_, _The Flea_, _The Curse_, _Elegy
  • XI: The Bracelet_, will make this clear.
  • (4) A fourth, subordinate and occasional, purpose of my citation
  • of the manuscripts is to show how Donne's poems were understood
  • or misunderstood by the copyists. Occasionally a reading which is
  • probably erroneous throws light upon a difficult passage. The version
  • of _P_ at p. 34, ll. 18-19, elucidates a difficult stanza. The reading
  • of Q in _The Storme_, l. 38,
  • Yea, and the Sunne
  • for the usual
  • I, and the Sunne
  • suggests, what is probably correct but had not been suspected by any
  • editor, that 'I' here, as often, is not the pronoun, but 'Aye'.
  • The order of the poems is that of the editions of 1635 onwards with
  • some modifications explained in the Introduction. In Appendix B I
  • have placed all those poems which were printed as Donne's in the old
  • editions (1633 to 1669), except Basse's _Epitaph on Shakespeare_, and
  • a few found in manuscripts connected with the editions, or assigned
  • to Donne by competent critics, all of which I believe to be by other
  • authors. The text of these has been as carefully revised as that
  • of the undoubted poems. In Appendix C I have placed a miscellaneous
  • collection of poems loosely connected with Donne's name, and
  • illustrating the work of some of his fellow-wits, or the trend of his
  • influence in the occasional poetry of the seventeenth century.
  • The work of settling the text, correcting the canon, and preparing the
  • Commentary has been done by myself. It was difficult to consult others
  • who had not before them all the complex mass of evidence which I had
  • accumulated. On some five or six places in the text, however, where
  • final question to be decided was the intrinsic merits of the readings
  • offered by the editions and by the manuscripts, or the advisability of
  • a bolder emendation, I have had the advantage of comparing my opinion
  • with that of Sir James Murray, Sir Walter Raleigh, Dr. Henry Bradley,
  • Mr. W. A. Craigie, Mr. J. C. Smith, or Mr. R. W. Chapman.
  • For such accuracy as I have secured in reproducing the old editions,
  • in the text and in the notes, I owe much to the help of three friends,
  • Mr. Charles Forbes, of the Post Office, Aberdeen, who transcribed the
  • greater portion of my manuscript; Professor John Purves, of University
  • College, Pretoria, who during a visit to this country read a large
  • section of my proofs, comparing them with the editions in the British
  • Museum; and especially to my assistant, Mr. Frederick Rose, M.A., now
  • Douglas Jerrold Scholar, Christ Church, Oxford, who has revised my
  • proofs throughout with minute care.
  • I am indebted to many sources for the loan of necessary material. In
  • the first place I must acknowledge my debt to the Carnegie Trust for
  • the Universities of Scotland for allowing me a grant of £40 in 1908-9,
  • and of £30 in 1909-10, for the collation of manuscripts. Without this
  • it would have been impossible for me to collate, or have collated
  • for me, the widely scattered manuscripts in London, Petworth, Oxford,
  • Cambridge, Manchester, and Boston. Some of my expenses in this
  • connexion have been met by the Delegates of the Clarendon Press, who
  • have also been very generous in the purchase of necessary books, such
  • as editions of the Poems and the Sermons. At the outset of my work
  • the Governing Body of Christ Church, Oxford, lent me the copy of
  • the edition of 1633 (originally the possession of Sir John Vaughan
  • (1603-1674) Chief Justice of the Common Pleas) on which the present
  • edition is based, and also their copies of the editions of 1639, 1650,
  • and 1654. At the same time Sir Walter Raleigh lent me his copy of
  • the edition of 1669. At an early stage of my work Captain C. Shirley
  • Harris, of 90 Woodstock Road, Oxford, communicated with me about
  • Donne's use of the word 'Mucheron', and he was kind enough to lend me
  • both his manuscript, _P_, and the transcript which he had caused to be
  • made. By the kindness of Lord Ellesmere I was permitted to collate
  • his unique copy of the 1611 edition of the _Anatomy of the World_
  • and _Funerall Elegie_. While I was doing so, Mr. Strachan Holme, the
  • Librarian, drew my attention to a manuscript collection of Donne's
  • poems (_B_), and with his kind assistance I was enabled to collate
  • this at Walkden, Manchester, and again at Bridgewater House. Mr. Holme
  • has also furnished a photograph of the title-page of the edition of
  • 1611. To the authorities of Trinity College, Dublin, and of Trinity
  • College, Cambridge, I am indebted not only for permission to collate
  • their manuscripts on the spot, but for kindly lending them to be
  • examined and compared in the Library at King's College, Aberdeen;
  • and I am indebted for a similar favour to the authorities of Queen's
  • College, Oxford. In Dublin I met Professor Edward Dowden, and no one
  • has been a kinder friend to my enterprise. He put at my disposal his
  • interesting and valuable manuscript (_D_) and all his collection of
  • Donne's works. He drew my attention to a manuscript (_O'F_) in Ellis
  • and Elvey's catalogue for 1903. Mr. Warwick Bond was good enough to
  • lend me the notes he had made upon this manuscript, which ultimately
  • I traced to Harvard College Library. With Professor Dowden, Mr. Edmund
  • Gosse has given me the most generous and whole-hearted assistance.
  • He lent me, as soon as ever I applied to him, his valuable and unique
  • Westmoreland MS., containing many poems which were not included in any
  • of the old editions. Some of these Mr. Gosse had already printed in
  • his own delightful _Life and Letters of John Donne_ (1899), but he has
  • allowed me to reprint these and to print the rest of the unpublished
  • poems for the first time. From his manuscript (_G_) of the _Progresse
  • of the Soule_, or _Metempsychosis_, I have also obtained important
  • emendations of the text. This is the most valuable manuscript copy
  • of this poem. It will be seen that Mr. Gosse is a very material
  • contributor to the completeness and interest of the present edition.
  • To the Marquess of Crewe I am indebted for permission to examine the
  • manuscript _M_, to which a note of Sir John Simon's had called my
  • attention; and to Lord Leconfield for a like permission to collate a
  • manuscript in his possession, of which a short description is given in
  • the _Hist. MSS. Commission, Sixth Report_, p. 312, No. 118. With
  • Mr. Whitcomb's aid I was enabled to do this carefully, and he has
  • subsequently verified references. Another interesting manuscript
  • (_JC_) was lent me by Mr. Elkin Mathews, who has also put at my
  • disposal his various editions of the _Lives_ of Walton and other
  • books connected with Donne. Almost at the eleventh hour, Mr. Geoffrey
  • Keynes, of St. Bartholomew's Hospital, discovered for me a copy of the
  • 1612 edition of the _Anniversaries_, for which I had asked in vain in
  • _Notes and Queries_. I owe to him, and to the kind permission of
  • Mr. Edward Huth and the Messrs. Sotheby, a careful collation and a
  • photograph of the title-page.
  • For the Commentary Dr. Norman Moore supplied me with a note on the
  • Galenists and Paracelsians; and Dr. Gaster with the materials for a
  • note on Donne's use of Jewish Apocrypha. Professor Picavet, of the
  • Sorbonne, Paris, was kind enough to read in proof my notes on Donne's
  • allusions to Scholastic doctrines, and to make suggestions. But I have
  • added to these notes as they passed through the Press, and he must not
  • be made responsible for my errors. Mr. W. Barclay Squire and Professor
  • C. Sanford Terry have revised my transcripts and proofs of the music.
  • I desire lastly to express my gratitude to the officials of the
  • Clarendon Press for the care with which they have checked my proofs,
  • the patience with which they have accepted my changes and additions,
  • and the trouble they have taken to secure photographs, music, and
  • other details. Whatever faults may be found--and I doubt not they will
  • be many--in my part of the work, I think the part for which the Press
  • is responsible is wellnigh faultless.
  • H. J. C. GRIERSON.
  • LANGCROFT,
  • DINNET, ABERDEENSHIRE.
  • _July 15, 1912._
  • NOTE
  • The typography of the edition of 1633 has been closely followed, in
  • its use for example of 'u' and 'v'; and of long 's', which is avoided
  • in certain combinations, e.g. 'sk' (but P. 12, l. 27. 'askes'
  • 1633) and frequently 'sb'; nor is it generally used when the letter
  • following 's' is elided; but there are one or two exceptions to this.
  • In the following places I have printed a full 'and' where 1633
  • contracts to '&' owing to the length of the line:
  • Page 12, l. 4. & whõ; P. 15, l. 40. & drove; P. 65, l. 8. & nought; P.
  • 153, l. 105. & almes; P. 158, l. 101. & name; do., l. 107. & rockes,
  • &; P. 159, l. 30. & black; P. 171, l. 83. & lawes; P. 183, l. 18. &
  • Courts; P. 184, l. 29. & God; P. 205, l. 2. & pleasure; P. 240, l.
  • 288. & sinke; P. 254, l. 107. & thinke; do., l. 113. & think; P. 280,
  • l. 24. & Mines; P. 297, l. 56. & lands; do., l. 62. & brow; P. 306,
  • l. 290. & lents; P. 327 (xii), l. 8. & feed; P. 337, l. 35. & thou; P.
  • 360, l. 188. & turn'd; P. 384, l. 78. & face.
  • In the following places 'm' or 'n', indicated by a contraction, has
  • been printed in full: Page 12, l. 4. Her whõ; do. & whõ; P. 37, 1. 17.
  • whẽ (_bis_); P. 82, l. 46. thẽ; P. 90, l. 2. frõ; P. 128, l. 28.
  • Valẽtine; P. 141, l. 8. whẽ; P. 150, l. 16. thẽ; P. 159, l.
  • 30. strãge; P. 169, l. 31. whõ; P. 257, l. 210. successiõ; P. 266, l.
  • 513. anciẽt; P. 305, l. 255. thẽ; P. 336, l. 10. whẽ; P. 343,
  • l. 126. Frõ; P. 345, l. 169. thẽ; P. 387, l. 71. Pẽbrooke.
  • There are a few examples of the same changes in the poems printed from
  • the later editions, but I have not reproduced any of these editions so
  • completely as 1633, every poem in which, with the exception of Basse's
  • _An Epitaph upon Shakespeare_ (1633. p. 149 i.e. 165) has been here
  • reprinted.
  • CONTENTS OF VOL. I
  • SOURCE PAGE
  • 1633 THE PRINTER TO THE UNDERSTANDERS 1
  • 1633 HEXASTICHON BIBLIOPOLAE 3
  • 1635 HEXASTICHON AD BIBLIOPOLAM 3
  • 1650 DEDICATION TO THE EDITION OF 1650 4
  • 1650 TO JOHN DONNE 5
  • 1650 TO LUCY, COUNTESSE OF BEDFORD, WITH M. DONNES SATYRES 6
  • 1650 TO JOHN DONNE 6
  • SONGS AND SONETS
  • 1633 195 The good-morrow 7
  • 196-7 Song 8
  • 197-8 Womans constancy 9
  • 198-9 The undertaking 10
  • 199-200 The Sunne Rising 11
  • 200-1 The Indifferent 12
  • 201-2 Loves Vsury 13
  • 202-4 The Canonization 14
  • 204-5 The triple Foole 16
  • 205-6 Lovers infiniteness 17
  • 206-8 Song 18
  • 208-9 The Legacie 20
  • 209-10 A Feaver 21
  • 211-12 Aire and Angels 22
  • 212 Breake of day 23
  • 213-14 The Anniversarie 24
  • 214-17 A Valediction: of my name, in the window 25
  • 218-19 Twicknam garden 28
  • 219-21 A Valediction: of the booke 29
  • 222 Communitie 32
  • 223-4 Loves growth 33
  • 224-5 Loves exchange 34
  • 226 Confined Love 36
  • 227 The Dreame 37
  • 228-9 A Valediction: of weeping 38
  • 229-30 Loves Alchymie 39
  • 230-1 The Flea 40
  • 231-2 The Curse 41
  • 186 The Message 43
  • 187-8 A nocturnall upon S. Lucies day, Being
  • the shortest day 44
  • 189 Witchcraft by a picture 45
  • 190-1 The Baite 46
  • 191 The Apparition 47
  • 192-3 The broken heart 48
  • 193-4 A Valediction: forbidding mourning 49
  • 277-80 The Extasie 51
  • 280-1 Loves Deitie 54
  • 281-2 Loves diet 55
  • 283-5 The Will 56
  • 285-6 The Funerall 58
  • 286-7 The Blossome 59
  • 288-9 The Primrose, being at Montgomery Castle,
  • upon the hill, on which it is situate 61
  • 289-90 The Relique 62
  • 290-1 The Dampe 63
  • 291-2 The Dissolution 64
  • 292-3 A Ieat Ring sent 65
  • 293 Negative love 66
  • 294 The Prohibition 67
  • 295 The Expiration 68
  • 295 The Computation 69
  • 302 The Paradox 69
  • 1635 63-4 Farewell to love 70
  • 66-7 A Lecture upon the Shadow 71
  • 1650 264-5 Sonnet. The Token 72
  • 391-2 Love> He that cannot chuse but love 73
  • EPIGRAMS
  • 1633 40 Hero and Leander 75
  • 40 Pyramus and Thisbe 75
  • 40 Niobe 75
  • 41 A burnt ship 75
  • 41 Fall of a wall 76
  • 41 A lame begger 76
  • Westmoreland MS. Cales and Guyana 76
  • " MS. Sir Iohn Wingefield 76
  • 1633 41 A selfe accuser 76
  • 42 A licentious person 77
  • 42 Antiquary 77
  • 42 Disinherited 77
  • 42 Phryne 77
  • 42 An obscure writer 77
  • 42 Klockius 77
  • 43 Raderus 78
  • 43 Mercurius Gallo-Belgicus 78
  • 43 Ralphius 78
  • Westmoreland MS. The Lier 78
  • ELEGIES
  • 1633 44-5 I. Iealosie 79
  • 45-7 II. The Anagram 80
  • 47-8 III. Change 82
  • 49-51 IV. The Perfume 84
  • 51-2 V. His Picture 86
  • 53-5 VI. Oh, let mee not 87
  • 55-6 VII. Natures lay Ideot 89
  • 149-50 VIII. The Comparison 90
  • 151-2 IX. The Autumnall 92
  • 153 X. The Dreame 95
  • 1635 89-93 XI. The Bracelet 96
  • 1669 86-9 XII. His parting from her 100
  • 1635 96-7 XIII. Iulia 104
  • 98-100 XIV. A Tale of a Citizen and his Wife 105
  • 1633 300-2 XV. The Expostulation 108
  • 1635 269-70 XVI. On his Mistris 111
  • 1650 388-90 XVII. Variety 113
  • 1669 94-7 XVIII. Loves Progress 116
  • 97-9 XIX. Going to Bed 119
  • Westmoreland MS. XX. Loves Warr 122
  • 1633 166-8 HEROICALL EPISTLE: Sapho to Philænis 124
  • EPITHALAMIONS, OR MARRIAGE SONGS
  • 1633 118-22 An Epithalamion, Or marriage Song on the
  • Lady Elizabeth, and Count Palatine being
  • married on St. Valentines day 127
  • 123-27 Eclogue. 1613. December 26 131
  • 127-35 Epithalamion 135
  • 135-8 Epithalamion made at Lincolnes Inne 141
  • SATYRES
  • 1633 325-8 Satyre I 145
  • 329-32 Satyre II 149
  • 333-6 Satyre III 154
  • 337-45 Satyre IIII 158
  • 346-9 Satyre V 168
  • 1650 262-4 Vpon Mr. Thomas Coryats Crudities 172
  • _Coryats Crudities_ In eundem Macaronicon 174
  • LETTERS TO SEVERALL PERSONAGES
  • 1633 56-9 The Storme 175
  • 59-61 The Calme 178
  • 61-3 To S^r Henry Wotton. Sir, more then kisses 180
  • 72-4 To S^r Henry Goodyere. Who makes the Past 183
  • 74-5 To M^r Rowland Woodward. Like one who 185
  • 76-7 To S^r Henry Wootton. Here's no more newes 187
  • Burley MS. H: W: in Hiber: belligeranti 188
  • 1633 77-9 To the Countesse of Bedford. Madame, Reason is 189
  • 79-82 To the Countesse of Bedford. Madame, You
  • have refin'd 191
  • 82-4 To S^r Edward Herbert, at Iulyers. Man is a lumpe 193
  • 84-7 To the Countesse of Bedford. T'have written then 195
  • 87-90 To the Countesse of Bedford. This twilight of 198
  • 90-3 To the Countesse of Huntingdon. Madame,
  • Man to Gods image 201
  • 93-4 To M^r T. W. All haile sweet Poët 203
  • 95 To M^r T. W. Hast thee harsh verse 205
  • 95-6 To M^r T. W. Pregnant again 206
  • 96 To M^r T. W. At once, from 206
  • Westmoreland MS. To M^r R. W. Zealously my Muse 207
  • " MS. To M^r R. W. Muse not that by 207
  • 1633 97 To M^r C. B. Thy friend, whom 208
  • Westmoreland MS. To M^r E. G. Even as lame things 208
  • 1633 100-1 To M^r R. W. If, as mine is 209
  • Westmoreland MS. To M^r R. W. Kindly I envy 210
  • 1633 98 To M^r S. B. O Thou which 211
  • 101 To M^r I. L. Of that short 212
  • 99-100 To M^r B. B. Is not thy sacred 212
  • 102 To M^r I. L. Blest are your 213
  • 104-5 To Sir H. W. at his going Ambassador to Venice 214
  • 106-8 To M^rs M. H. Mad paper stay 216
  • 108-10 To the Countesse of Bedford. Honour is so 218
  • 111 To the Countesse of Bedford. Though I be dead 220
  • 112-13 A Letter to the Lady Carey, and M^rs Essex
  • Riche, From Amyens. Madame, Here where 221
  • 115-18 To the Countesse of Salisbury. August. 1614 224
  • 298-9 To the Lady Bedford. You that are she 227
  • AN ANATOMIE OF THE WORLD
  • 1633 233-5 To the praise of the dead 229
  • 235-51 The first Anniversary 231
  • 252-5 A Funerall Elegie 245
  • OF THE PROGRESSE OF THE SOULE
  • 1633 257-9 The Harbinger to the Progresse 249
  • 260-77 The second Anniversarie 251
  • EPICEDES AND OBSEQUIES UPON THE
  • DEATHS OF SUNDRY PERSONAGES
  • 1633 154-7 Elegie upon the untimely death of the
  • incomparable Prince Henry 267
  • 139 To the Countesse of Bedford. _Letter introducing_ 270
  • 140-8 Obsequies to the Lord Harrington, brother to
  • the Lady Lucy, Countesse of Bedford 271
  • 66-8 Elegie on the Lady Marckham 279
  • 69-71 Elegie on M^{ris} Boulstred 282
  • 296-8 Elegie. Death 284
  • 52-3 Elegie on the L. C. 287
  • 162-3 An hymne to the Saints, and to Marquesse
  • Hamylton 288
  • EPITAPHS
  • 1635 271 On himselfe 291
  • 386-7 Omnibus 292
  • 1633 before p. 1 INFINITATI SACRUM
  • Epistle 293
  • 1-27 The Progresse of the Soule 295
  • DIVINE POEMS
  • 1633 103 To E. of D. with six holy Sonnets 317
  • Walton's _Life of }To the Lady Magdalen Herbert: of St. Mary
  • M^r George Herbert_} Magdalen 317
  • HOLY SONNETS
  • 1633 28 _La Corona_ 318
  • 28-9 Annunciation 319
  • 29 Nativitie 319
  • 30 Temple 320
  • 30-1 Crucifying 320
  • 31 Resurrection 321
  • 31-2 Ascention 321
  • _Holy Sonnets_
  • 1635 331-2 I. Thou hast made me 322
  • 1633 32 II. As due by many titles 322
  • 1635 333 III. O might those sighes and teares 323
  • 1633 33 IV. Oh my blacke Soule 323
  • 1635 334 V. I am a little world 324
  • 1633 33-4 VI. This is my playes last scene 324
  • 34 VII. At the round earths imagin'd corners 325
  • 1635 336 VIII. If faithfull soules be alike glorifi'd 325
  • 1633 35 IX. If poysonous mineralls 326
  • 35-6 X. Death be not proud 326
  • 36 XI. Spit in my face you Jewes 327
  • 37 XII. Why are wee by all creatures waited on? 327
  • 37-8 XIII. What if this present were the worlds last
  • night? 328
  • 38 XIV. Batter my heart 328
  • 39 XV. Wilt thou love God, as he thee! 329
  • 39-40 XVI. Father, part of his double interest 329
  • Westmoreland MS. XVII. Since she whom I lov'd hath payd
  • her last debt 330
  • " MS. XVIII. Show me deare Christ, thy spouse 330
  • " MS. XIX. Oh, to vex me, contraryes meet in one 331
  • 1633 64-6 The Crosse 331
  • 161-2 Resurrection, imperfect 333
  • 168-9 The Annuntiation and Passion 334
  • 170-1 Goodfriday, 1613. Riding Westward 336
  • 172-85 THE LITANIE 338
  • 1635 366-8 Vpon the translation of the Psalmes by Sir
  • Philip Sydney, and the Countesse of Pembroke
  • his Sister 348
  • 368 Ode: Of our Sense of Sinne 350
  • 369-70 To M^r Tilman after he had taken orders 351
  • 1633 304-5 A Hymne to Christ, at the Authors last going
  • into Germany 352
  • 306-23 The Lamentations of Ieremy, for the most part
  • according to Tremelius 354
  • 1635 387-8 Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse 368
  • 1633 350 A Hymne to God the Father 369
  • Trinity College, Dublin, MS. To Christ 370
  • ELEGIES UPON THE AUTHOR 371
  • APPENDIX A
  • LATIN POEMS AND TRANSLATIONS
  • 1635 278 De libro cum mutuaretur &c. 397
  • 278 397
  • 1650 370-1 Amicissimo, & meritissimo, Ben Jonson 398
  • 378 To M^r George Herbert, with one of my Seals 398
  • 379 A sheafe of Snakes used 399
  • 385 Translated out of Gazæus 401
  • APPENDIX B
  • POEMS ATTRIBUTED TO JOHN DONNE IN THE OLD EDITIONS
  • (1633-1669) AND THE PRINCIPAL MS. COLLECTIONS,
  • ARRANGED ACCORDING TO THEIR PROBABLE AUTHOR.
  • I
  • POEMS. Probably by Sir John Roe, Knt.
  • 1669 130-42 To S^r Nicholas Smyth. Sleep, next society 401
  • 1635 146-7 Satyre. Men write that love and reason
  • disagree 406
  • 93-5 An Elegie. Come, Fates; I feare you not 407
  • Hawthornden MS. An Elegie to M^{ris} Boulstred: 1602 410
  • Addl. MS. 10309 An Elegie. True love findes witt 412
  • 1635 65-6 Song. Deare Love, continue 412
  • 208-9 To Ben. Iohnson, 6 Ian. 1603 414
  • 207-8 To Ben. Iohnson, 9. Novembris, 1603 415
  • 209-10 To S^r Tho. Roe. 1603 416
  • II
  • 1635 191-5 To the Countesse of Huntington.
  • That unripe side of earth 417
  • III
  • 1635 272 Elegie.
  • Death be not proud 422
  • IV
  • 1635 157-61 Psalme 137. Probably by Francis Davison.
  • By Euphrates Flowry side 424
  • V
  • 1635 342 On the blessed Virgin Mary. Probably by
  • Henry Constable 427
  • VI
  • 1635 372 On the Sacrament 427
  • VII
  • Stowe MS. 961 Absence. Absence, heare my protestation 428
  • Probably by John Hoskins.
  • VIII
  • 1635 62 Song. Soules joy. Probably by the Earl of
  • Pembroke 429
  • 195-6 A Dialogue 430
  • IX
  • 1669 17 Break of Daye.
  • Stay, O sweet 432
  • Probably by John Dowlands.
  • APPENDIX C
  • Addl. MS. 25707 A Letter written by S^r H: G: and J: D:
  • alternis vicibus 433
  • Addl. MS. 25707 O Frutefull Garden 434
  • To my Lord of Pembroke 435
  • Of a Lady in the Black Masque 436
  • Burley MS. 437
  • Love.> 437
  • Eyes!> 438
  • Best Praise.> 439
  • in Little Room.> 440
  • Zodiake.> 440
  • , Love, and Time.> 440
  • a Play.> 441
  • A Kisse 441
  • Epi: B: Jo: 443
  • Epi: Hen: Princ: Hug^o Holland 443
  • O'Flaherty MS. Annuntiation. Additional Lines.> 443
  • Elegy. To Chast Love 445
  • Upon his scornefull Mistresse. Elegy 446
  • Lansdowne MS. 740 447
  • Love.> 447
  • O'Flaherty MS. , if a God thou art.> 448
  • Lord of Love.> 448
  • Exchange.> 449
  • Song. Now y'have killd 450
  • Stowe MS. 961 Love, bred of glances 450
  • Bridgewater MS. To a Watch restored to its Mystres 451
  • Egerton MS. Solem.> 451
  • Stephens MS. She Deride.> 452
  • Never Fails.> 453
  • To His Mistress 455
  • Stowe MS. 961 A Paradoxe of a Painted Face 456
  • Sonnett. Madam that flea 459
  • Addl. MS. 11811 On Black Hayre and Eyes 460
  • Phillipps MS. Fragment of an Elegy 462
  • Walton's _Compleat Angler_ , ye guilded follies.> 465
  • INDEX OF FIRST LINES 469
  • PLATES
  • John Donne, from the engraving prefixed to the _Poems_, 1635
  • _face page_ 7
  • John Donne, 1613, from an engraving prefixed to the prose
  • _Letters &c._, 1651 _face page_ 175
  • John Donne, from the frontispiece to _Death's Duel_, 1632
  • _face page_ 369
  • LIST OF EDITIONS REGULARLY CITED IN NOTES.
  • _1633_, _1635_, _1639_, _1650_, _1654_, _1669_.
  • Contractions:
  • _1633-54_ i.e. All editions between and including these dates.
  • _1633-69_ i.e. All the editions.
  • Etc.
  • EDITIONS OCCASIONALLY CITED.
  • _1649_, in lists of editions and MSS. appended to poems first
  • published in that edition. Textually it is identical with
  • _1650-54_.
  • _1719_, Tonson's edition.
  • _1855_, The Boston edition of that year--cited once.
  • _Grosart_, A. B. Grosart's edition of 1872-3.
  • _Grolier_, The Grolier Club edition of Professor Norton and
  • Mrs. Burnett, 1895.
  • _Chambers_, Mr. E. K. Chambers' edition of 1896.
  • LIST OF MS. SIGLA
  • _A10_ Additional MS. 10,309, British Museum.
  • _A11_ " " 11,811, "
  • _A18_ " " 18,646, "
  • _A23_ " " 23,229, "
  • _A25_ " " 25,707, "
  • _A34_ " " 34,744, "
  • _Ash 38_ Ashmole MS. 38, Bodleian Library.
  • _B_ Bridgewater MS., Bridgewater House.
  • _Bur_ Burley MS., formerly at Burley-on-the-Hill House, Rutland.
  • _C_ Cambridge University Library MS.
  • _Cy_ Carnaby MS., Harvard College.
  • _D_ Dowden MS., belonging to Professor Edward Dowden.
  • _E20_ Egerton MS. 2013, British Museum.
  • _E22_ " " 2230, "
  • _G_ Gosse MS. of _Metempsychosis_, belonging to Mr. Edmund Gosse.
  • _H39_ Harleian MS. 3910, British Museum.
  • _H40_ " " 4064, "
  • _H49_ " " 4944, "
  • _H51_ " " 5110, "
  • _HN_ Hawthornden MS., Library of Society of Antiquaries, Edinburgh.
  • _JC_ John Cave MS., belonging to Mr. Elkin Mathews.
  • _L74_ Lansdowne MS. 740, British Museum.
  • _L77_ " " 777, "
  • _Lec_ Leconfield MS., at Petworth House.
  • _M_ Monckton-Milnes MS., belonging to the Marquis of Crewe.
  • _N_ Norton MS., Harvard College.
  • _O'F_ O'Flaherty MS., Harvard College.
  • _P_ Phillipps MS., belonging to Captain C. Shirley Harris.
  • _Q_ Queen's College MS., Queen's College, Oxford.
  • _RP31_ Rawlinson Poetical MS. 31, Bodleian Library, Oxford.
  • _RP61_ " " " 61 " " "
  • _S_ Stephens MS., Harvard College.
  • _S96_ Stowe MS. 961, British Museum.
  • _TCC_ Trinity College, Cambridge, MS.
  • _TCD_ Trinity College, Dublin, MS. G. 2. 21.
  • _TCD_ (II) A second collection of poems in the same MS.
  • _W_ Westmoreland MS., belonging to Mr. Edmund Gosse.
  • The following groups are important:--
  • _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • and
  • _A18_, _N_, _TC_, where _TC_ represents _TCC_ and _TCD_
  • THE PRINTER
  • TO THE
  • UNDERSTANDERS.
  • For this time I must speake only to you: at another, _Readers_ may
  • perchance serve my turne; and I thinke this a way very free from
  • exception, in hope that very few will have a minde to confesse
  • themselves ignorant.
  • If you looke for an Epistle, as you have before ordinary publications,
  • I am sory that I must deceive you; but you will not lay it to my
  • charge, when you shall consider that this is not ordinary, for if I
  • should say it were the best in this kinde, that ever this Kingdome
  • hath yet seene; he that would doubt of it must goe out of the Kingdome
  • to enforme himselfe, for the best judgments, within it, take it for
  • granted.
  • You may imagine (if it please you) that I could endeare it unto
  • you, by saying, that importunity drew it on; that had it not beene
  • presented here, it would have come to us from beyond the Seas; (which
  • perhaps is true enough,) That my charge and paines in procuring of
  • it hath beene such, and such. I could adde hereto, a promise of more
  • correctnesse, or enlargement in the next Edition, if you shall in the
  • meane time content you with this. But these things are so common, as
  • that I should profane this Peece by applying them to it; A Peece
  • which who so takes not as he findes it, in what manner soever, he
  • is unworthy of it, sith a scattered limbe of this Author, hath more
  • amiablenesse in it, in the eye of a discerner, then a whole body of
  • some other; Or, (to expresse him best by himselfe)
  • [Sidenote: _In the Storme._]
  • --_A hand, or eye,
  • By_ Hilyard _drawne, is worth a history
  • By a worse Painter made_;--
  • If any man (thinking I speake this to enflame him for the vent of
  • the Impression) be of another opinion, I shall as willingly spare his
  • money as his judgement. I cannot lose so much by him as hee will by
  • himselfe. For I shall satisfie my selfe with the conscience of well
  • doing, in making so much good common.
  • Howsoever it may appeare to you, it shall suffice mee to enforme you,
  • that it hath the best warrant that can bee, publique authority, and
  • private friends.
  • There is one thing more wherein I will make you of my counsell, and
  • that is, That whereas it hath pleased some, who had studyed and did
  • admire him, to offer to the memory of the Author, not long after his
  • decease, I have thought I should do you service in presenting them
  • unto you now; onely whereas, had I placed them in the beginning, they
  • might have serv'd for so many Encomiums of the Author (as is usuall
  • in other workes, where perhaps there is need of it, to prepare men to
  • digest such stuffe as follows after,) you shall here finde them in the
  • end, for whosoever reades the rest so farre, shall perceive that there
  • is no occasion to use them to that purpose; yet there they are, as an
  • attestation for their sakes that knew not so much before, to let them
  • see how much honour was attributed to this worthy man, by those that
  • are capable to give it. _Farewell._
  • [The Printer _&c._ _1633-49:_ _om. 1650-69, which substitute
  • Dedication_ To the _&c._ (_p._ 4)]
  • [2 you: _1635-49:_ you, _1633_]
  • [The Printer to the Vnderstanders. _1635-69:_ The Printer to
  • the Reader. _1633. See note_]
  • [28 here _1635-69: om. 1633_ (... you shall here finde them in
  • the end,...)]
  • _Hexastichon Bibliopolae._
  • I see in his last preach'd, and printed Booke,
  • His Picture in a sheet; in _Pauls_ I looke,
  • And see his Statue in a sheete of stone,
  • And sure his body in the grave hath one:
  • Those sheetes present him dead, these if you buy,
  • You have him living to Eternity.
  • JO. MAR.
  • [Hexastichon Bibliopolae. _1633-69_]
  • Hexastichon ad Bibliopolam.
  • Incerti.
  • _In thy Impression of_ Donnes _Poems rare,
  • For his Eternitie thou hast ta'ne care:
  • 'Twas well, and pious; And for ever may
  • He live: Yet shew I thee a better way;
  • Print but his Sermons, and if those we buy,
  • He, We, and Thou shall live t' Eternity._
  • [Hexastichon ad Bibliopolam. _1635-69_]
  • _Dedication to the Edition of 1650._
  • To the Right Honourable
  • _William_ Lord _Craven_ Baron of
  • _Hamsted-Marsham_.
  • _My Lord_,
  • Many of these Poems have, for severall impressions, wandred up and
  • down trusting (as well they might) upon the Authors reputation;
  • neither do they now complain of any injury but what may proceed either
  • from the kindnesse of the Printer, or the curtesie of the Reader; the
  • one by adding something too much, lest any spark of this sacred fire
  • might perish undiscerned, the other by putting such an estimation upon
  • the wit & fancy they find here, that they are content to use it
  • as their own: as if a man should dig out the stones of a royall
  • Amphitheatre to build a stage for a countrey show. Amongst all the
  • monsters this unlucky age has teemed with, I finde none so prodigious,
  • as the Poets of these later times, wherein men as if they would level
  • understandings too as well as estates, acknowledging no inequality of
  • parts and Judgements, pretend as indifferently to the chaire of wit as
  • to the Pulpit, & conceive themselves no lesse inspired with the spirit
  • of Poetry then with that of Religion: so it is not onely the noise of
  • Drums and Trumpets which have drowned the Muses harmony, or the feare
  • that the Churches ruine wil destroy their Priests likewise, that now
  • frights them from this Countrey, where they have been so ingenuously
  • received, but these rude pretenders to excellencies they unjustly
  • own who profanely rushing into _Minervaes_ Temple, with noysome Ayres
  • blast the lawrell w^{ch} thunder cannot hurt. In this sad condition
  • these learned sisters are fled over to beg your L^{ps}. protection,
  • who have been so certain a patron both to arts and armes, and who in
  • this generall confusion have so intirely preserved your Honour, that
  • in your Lordship we may still read a most perfect character of what
  • _England_ was in all her pompe and greatnesse, so that although these
  • poems were formerly written upon severall occasions, and to severall
  • persons, they now unite themselves, and are become one pyramid to set
  • your Lordships statue upon, where you may stand like Armed _Apollo_
  • the defendor of the Muses, encouraging the Poets now alive to
  • celebrate your great Acts by affording your countenance to his poems
  • that wanted onely so noble a subject.
  • My Lord,
  • _Your most humble servant_
  • JOHN DONNE.
  • [To the _&c._ _1650-69_]
  • TO JOHN DONNE.
  • Donne, _the delight of Phoebus, and each Muse,
  • Who, to thy one, all other braines refuse;
  • Whose every work, of thy most early wit,
  • Came forth example, and remaines so, yet:
  • Longer a knowing, than most wits doe live;
  • And which no'n affection praise enough can give!
  • To it, thy language, letters, arts, best life,
  • Which might with halfe mankind maintain a strife;
  • All which I mean to praise, and, yet, I would;
  • But leave, because I cannot as I should_!
  • B. JONS.
  • [To John Donne. _1650-69, following the_ Hexastichon ad
  • Bibliopolam.]
  • To LUCY, COUNTESSE OF BEDFORD, with M. DONNES Satyres.
  • _Lucy_, you brightnesse of our Spheare, who are
  • Life of the _Muses_ day, their morning Starre!
  • If works (not th'Authors) their own grace should look
  • Whose poems would not wish to be your book?
  • But these, desir'd by you, the makers ends
  • Crown with their own. Rare Poems ask rare friends.
  • Yet, _Satyres_, since the most of mankind bee
  • Their unavoided subject, fewest see:
  • For none ere took that pleasure in sins sense,
  • But, when they heard it tax'd, took more offence.
  • They, then, that living where the matter is bred,
  • Dare for these Poems, yet, both ask, and read,
  • And like them too; must needfully, though few,
  • Be of the best: and 'mongst those best are you;
  • _Lucy_, you brightnefle of our Spheare, who are
  • The _Muses_ evening, as their morning-Starre.
  • B. JON.
  • TO JOHN DONNE.
  • Who shall doubt, _Donne_, where I a _Poet_ bee,
  • When I dare send my _Epigrammes_ to thee?
  • That so alone canst judge, so'alone do'st make:
  • And, in thy censures, evenly, dost take
  • As free simplicity, to dis-avow,
  • As thou hast best authority, t'allow.
  • Read all I send: and, if I finde but one
  • Mark'd by thy hand, and with the better stone,
  • My title's seal'd. Those that for claps doe write,
  • Let punees, porters, players praise delight,
  • And, till they burst, their backs, like asses load:
  • A man should seek great glory, and not broad.
  • B. JON.
  • [To Lucy _&c._ To John Donne _&c._ _1650-69, in sheets added
  • 1650_. _See_ Text and Canon _&c._]
  • [Illustration: JOHN DONNE
  • From the engraving prefixed to the Poems in the Editions of 1635,
  • 1639, 1649, 1650, 1654]
  • SONGS _AND_ SONETS.
  • _The good-morrow._
  • I wonder by my troth, what thou, and I
  • Did, till we lov'd? were we not wean'd till then?
  • But suck'd on countrey pleasures, childishly?
  • Or snorted we in the seaven sleepers den?
  • T'was so; But this, all pleasures fancies bee. 5
  • If ever any beauty I did see,
  • Which I desir'd, and got, t'was but a dreame of thee.
  • And now good morrow to our waking soules,
  • Which watch not one another out of feare;
  • For love, all love of other sights controules, 10
  • And makes one little roome, an every where.
  • Let sea-discoverers to new worlds have gone,
  • Let Maps to other, worlds on worlds have showne,
  • Let us possesse one world, each hath one, and is one.
  • My face in thine eye, thine in mine appeares, 15
  • And true plaine hearts doe in the faces rest,
  • Where can we finde two better hemispheares
  • Without sharpe North, without declining West?
  • What ever dyes, was not mixt equally;
  • If our two loves be one, or, thou and I 20
  • Love so alike, that none doe slacken, none can die.
  • [SONGS AND SONETS. _1635-69: no division into sections, 1633_]
  • [The good-morrow. _1633-69_, _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • _no title_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S:_ Elegie. _S96_]
  • [2 lov'd? _1639-69:_ lov'd, _1633-35_]
  • [3 countrey pleasures, childishly? _1633-54_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _Lec:_ childish pleasures seelily? _1669_, _A18_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [4 snorted _1633-54_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S96:_
  • slumbred _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TC_
  • seaven sleepers _1633:_ seven-sleepers _1635-69_]
  • [5 this,] as _1669_]
  • [10 For _1633-69_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec:_ But _rest of
  • MSS_.]
  • [13 to other, worlds on _1633-54:_ to other worlds our _1669:_
  • to others, worlds on _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _and other MSS_.]
  • [14 one world _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ our world _rest of
  • MSS_.]
  • [17 better _1633_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec:_ fitter _1635-69_,
  • _and rest of MSS_.]
  • [19 was not] is not _1669_]
  • [20-1 or, thou and I ... can die. _1633_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _Lec:_ or, thou and I ... can slacken, ... can die.
  • _Chambers:_
  • both thou and I
  • Love just alike in all, none of these loves can die.
  • _1635-69_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P:_
  • or thou and I
  • Love just alike in all, none of these loves can die.
  • _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _L74_, _S96_, _TC_
  • As thou and I _&c._
  • _H40:_
  • And thou and I _&c._
  • _S_]
  • _Song._
  • Goe, and catche a falling starre,
  • Get with child a mandrake roote,
  • Tell me, where all past yeares are,
  • Or who cleft the Divels foot,
  • Teach me to heare Mermaides singing, 5
  • Or to keep off envies stinging,
  • And finde
  • What winde
  • Serves to advance an honest minde.
  • If thou beest borne to strange sights, 10
  • Things invisible to see,
  • Ride ten thousand daies and nights,
  • Till age snow white haires on thee,
  • Thou, when thou retorn'st, wilt tell mee
  • All strange wonders that befell thee, 15
  • And sweare
  • No where
  • Lives a woman true, and faire.
  • If thou findst one, let mee know,
  • Such a Pilgrimage were sweet; 20
  • Yet doe not, I would not goe,
  • Though at next doore wee might meet,
  • Though shee were true, when you met her,
  • And last, till you write your letter,
  • Yet shee 25
  • Will bee
  • False, ere I come, to two, or three.
  • [Song. _1633-69:_ Song, A Songe, _or no title_, _A18_, _A25_,
  • _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [3 past yeares] times past _1669:_ past times _P_]
  • [11 to see] go see _1669_, _S_, _S96:_ see _most other MSS_.]
  • [20 sweet; _1669:_ sweet, _1633-54_]
  • [24 last, till] last so till _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [27 False, ... three] False, ere she come to two or three.
  • _1669_]
  • _Womans constancy._
  • Now thou hast lov'd me one whole day,
  • To morrow when thou leav'st, what wilt thou say?
  • Wilt thou then Antedate some new made vow?
  • Or say that now
  • We are not just those persons, which we were? 5
  • Or, that oathes made in reverentiall feare
  • Of Love, and his wrath, any may forsweare?
  • Or, as true deaths, true maryages untie,
  • So lovers contracts, images of those,
  • Binde but till sleep, deaths image, them unloose? 10
  • Or, your owne end to Justifie,
  • For having purpos'd change, and falsehood; you
  • Can have no way but falsehood to be true?
  • Vaine lunatique, against these scapes I could
  • Dispute, and conquer, if I would, 15
  • Which I abstaine to doe,
  • For by to morrow, I may thinke so too.
  • [Womans constancy. _1633-69_, _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD:_ _no title_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _P_, _S_]
  • [8 Or, _1633_, _1669:_ For, _1635-54_ (_ll._ 8-10 _in
  • brackets_)]
  • _The undertaking._
  • I have done one braver thing
  • Then all the _Worthies_ did,
  • And yet a braver thence doth spring,
  • Which is, to keepe that hid.
  • It were but madnes now t'impart 5
  • The skill of specular stone,
  • When he which can have learn'd the art
  • To cut it, can finde none.
  • So, if I now should utter this,
  • Others (because no more 10
  • Such stuffe to worke upon, there is,)
  • Would love but as before.
  • But he who lovelinesse within
  • Hath found, all outward loathes,
  • For he who colour loves, and skinne, 15
  • Loves but their oldest clothes.
  • If, as I have, you also doe
  • Vertue'attir'd in woman see,
  • And dare love that, and say so too,
  • And forget the Hee and Shee; 20
  • And if this love, though placed so,
  • From prophane men you hide,
  • Which will no faith on this bestow,
  • Or, if they doe, deride:
  • Then you have done a braver thing 25
  • Then all the _Worthies_ did;
  • And a braver thence will spring,
  • Which is, to keepe that hid.
  • [The undertaking. _1635-69:_ _no title_, _1633_, _B_, _D_,
  • _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S:_ Platonique Love.
  • _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [2 _Worthies_] _worthies_ _1633_]
  • [3 And yet] Yet _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [7-8 art ... it, _1669:_ art, ... it _1633-54_]
  • [16 their] her _B_]
  • [18 Vertue'attir'd in _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TC:_ Vertue in _1635-69_, _O'F_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [26 did; _Ed:_ did. _1633-39:_ did, _1650-69_]
  • [27 spring,] spring _1633-39_]
  • _The Sunne Rising._
  • Busie old foole, unruly Sunne,
  • Why dost thou thus,
  • Through windowes, and through curtaines call on us?
  • Must to thy motions lovers seasons run?
  • Sawcy pedantique wretch, goe chide 5
  • Late schoole boyes, and sowre prentices,
  • Goe tell Court-huntsmen, that the King will ride,
  • Call countrey ants to harvest offices;
  • Love, all alike, no season knowes, nor clyme,
  • Nor houres, dayes, moneths, which are the rags of time. 10
  • Thy beames, so reverend, and strong
  • Why shouldst thou thinke?
  • I could eclipse and cloud them with a winke,
  • But that I would not lose her sight so long:
  • If her eyes have not blinded thine, 15
  • Looke, and to morrow late, tell mee,
  • Whether both the'India's of spice and Myne
  • Be where thou leftst them, or lie here with mee.
  • Aske for those Kings whom thou saw'st yesterday,
  • And thou shalt heare, All here in one bed lay. 20
  • She'is all States, and all Princes, I,
  • Nothing else is.
  • Princes doe but play us; compar'd to this,
  • All honor's mimique; All wealth alchimie.
  • Thou sunne art halfe as happy'as wee, 25
  • In that the world's contracted thus;
  • Thine age askes ease, and since thy duties bee
  • To warme the world, that's done in warming us.
  • Shine here to us, and thou art every where;
  • This bed thy center is, these walls, thy spheare. 30
  • [The Sunne Rising. _1633-69:_ Sunne Rising. _A18_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ Ad Solem. _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96:_ To the Sunne. _Cy_, _Lec_, _O'F (as a second title):_
  • _no title_, _B_]
  • [3 call] look _1669_]
  • [6 and] or _1669_
  • sowre] slowe _B_, _Cy_, _P_]
  • [8 offices;] offices, _1633_]
  • [11-14 Thy beames, ... so long: _1633 and all MSS.:_
  • Thy beames so reverend, and strong
  • Dost thou not thinke
  • I could eclipse and cloude them with a winke,
  • But that I would not lose her sight so long? _1635-69_
  • ]
  • [17 spice] space _1650-54_]
  • [18 leftst _1633:_ left _1635-69_]
  • [23 us;] us, _1633_]
  • [24 wealth] wealth's _A25_, _C_, _P_
  • alchimie. _Ed:_ alchimie; _1633-69_]
  • [26 thus; _Ed:_ thus. _1633-69_]
  • _The Indifferent._
  • I can love both faire and browne,
  • Her whom abundance melts, and her whom want betraies,
  • Her who loves lonenesse best, and her who maskes and plaies,
  • Her whom the country form'd, and whom the town,
  • Her who beleeves, and her who tries, 5
  • Her who still weepes with spungie eyes,
  • And her who is dry corke, and never cries;
  • I can love her, and her, and you and you,
  • I can love any, so she be not true.
  • Will no other vice content you? 10
  • Wil it not serve your turn to do, as did your mothers?
  • Or have you all old vices spent, and now would finde out others?
  • Or doth a feare, that men are true, torment you?
  • Oh we are not, be not you so,
  • Let mee, and doe you, twenty know. 15
  • Rob mee, but binde me not, and let me goe.
  • Must I, who came to travaile thorow you,
  • Grow your fixt subject, because you are true?
  • _Venus_ heard me sigh this song,
  • And by Loves sweetest Part, Variety, she swore, 20
  • She heard not this till now; and that it should be so no more.
  • She went, examin'd, and return'd ere long,
  • And said, alas, Some two or three
  • Poore Heretiques in love there bee,
  • Which thinke to stablish dangerous constancie. 25
  • But I have told them, since you will be true,
  • You shall be true to them, who'are false to you.
  • [The Indifferent. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ A
  • Songe, Songe, _or no title_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96:_ Sonnet. _P_]
  • [3 lonenesse] lovers _1669_
  • maskes] sports _1669_, _S_
  • and _1669:_ & _1633-39:_ _om._ _1650-54_]
  • [12 spent] worn _1669_]
  • [15 mee, _1633:_ me; _1635-69_]
  • [17 travaile] _spelt_ travell, travel _1635-69_]
  • [19 sigh] sing _1669_]
  • [20 sweetest Part,] sweetest sweet, _1669_, _P_, _S_]
  • [21 and that it _1633_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S:_ it
  • _1635-69_, _H40_, _P:_ and it _A18_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_,
  • _TC_]
  • _Loves Vsury._
  • For every houre that thou wilt spare mee now,
  • I will allow,
  • Usurious God of Love, twenty to thee,
  • When with my browne, my gray haires equall bee;
  • Till then, Love, let my body raigne, and let 5
  • Mee travell, sojourne, snatch, plot, have, forget,
  • Resume my last yeares relict: thinke that yet
  • We'had never met.
  • Let mee thinke any rivalls letter mine,
  • And at next nine 10
  • Keepe midnights promise; mistake by the way
  • The maid, and tell the Lady of that delay;
  • Onely let mee love none, no, not the sport;
  • From country grasse, to comfitures of Court,
  • Or cities quelque choses, let report 15
  • My minde transport.
  • This bargaine's good; if when I'am old, I bee
  • Inflam'd by thee,
  • If thine owne honour, or my shame, or paine,
  • Thou covet most, at that age thou shalt gaine. 20
  • Doe thy will then, then subject and degree,
  • And fruit of love, Love I submit to thee,
  • Spare mee till then, I'll beare it, though she bee
  • One that loves mee.
  • [Loves Vsury. _1633-69_, _L74:_ _no title_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S:_ Elegie. _S96_]
  • [5 raigne, _1633_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _P_, _S:_ range, _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S96_. _See note_]
  • [6 snatch, _1633_, _1669:_ match, _1635-54_]
  • [7 relict] relique _1669_]
  • [12 that] her _1669_]
  • [13 sport; _1669:_ sport _1633-54:_ sport, _most MSS._]
  • [15 let report _1633_, _1669_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _P_, _S:_ let not report _1635-54_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [19 or paine _1633, 1669, and most MSS.:_ and paine _1635-54_,
  • _O'F_]
  • [22 fruit] fruites _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [24 loves _1633, 1669 and all the MSS.:_ love _1635-54_]
  • _The Canonization._
  • For Godsake hold your tongue, and let me love,
  • Or chide my palsie, or my gout,
  • My five gray haires, or ruin'd fortune flout,
  • With wealth your state, your minde with Arts improve,
  • Take you a course, get you a place, 5
  • Observe his honour, or his grace,
  • Or the Kings reall, or his stamped face
  • Contemplate, what you will, approve,
  • So you will let me love.
  • Alas, alas, who's injur'd by my love? 10
  • What merchants ships have my sighs drown'd?
  • Who saies my teares have overflow'd his ground?
  • When did my colds a forward spring remove?
  • When did the heats which my veines fill
  • Adde one more to the plaguie Bill? 15
  • Soldiers finde warres, and Lawyers finde out still
  • Litigious men, which quarrels move,
  • Though she and I do love.
  • Call us what you will, wee are made such by love;
  • Call her one, mee another flye, 20
  • We'are Tapers too, and at our owne cost die,
  • And wee in us finde the'Eagle and the Dove.
  • The Phœnix ridle hath more wit
  • By us, we two being one, are it.
  • So to one neutrall thing both sexes fit, 25
  • Wee dye and rise the same, and prove
  • Mysterious by this love.
  • Wee can dye by it, if not live by love,
  • And if unfit for tombes and hearse
  • Our legend bee, it will be fit for verse; 30
  • And if no peece of Chronicle wee prove,
  • We'll build in sonnets pretty roomes;
  • As well a well wrought urne becomes
  • The greatest ashes, as halfe-acre tombes,
  • And by these hymnes, all shall approve 35
  • Us _Canoniz'd_ for Love:
  • And thus invoke us; You whom reverend love
  • Made one anothers hermitage;
  • You, to whom love was peace, that now is rage;
  • Who did the whole worlds soule contract, and drove 40
  • Into the glasses of your eyes
  • (So made such mirrors, and such spies,
  • That they did all to you epitomize,)
  • Countries, Townes, Courts: Beg from above
  • A patterne of your love! 45
  • [The Canonization. _1633-39_, _A18_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Canonization. _1650-69_, _S:_
  • Canonizatio. _S96:_ _no title_, _B_, _H40_, _JC_]
  • [3 five _1633_, _1669:_ true _1635-54_
  • fortune] fortunes _1669_]
  • [4 improve, _1650-69:_ improve _1633-39_]
  • [7 reall] Roiall _Lec_]
  • [14 veines] reynes _1669_]
  • [15 more, _1633-54_, _Lec:_ man _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [17 which] whom _1669_]
  • [18 Though] While _1669_]
  • [22 Dove. _Ed:_ dove, _1633-69_]
  • [24 are it. _1633-69:_ are it; _Chambers and Grolier_]
  • [25 So _1650-69:_ So, _1633-39_. _See note_
  • fit, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ fit. _1633-69_. _See note_]
  • [29 tombes and _1633-54:_ tomb or _1669_]
  • [30 legend] legends _1633_]
  • [35 these _1633:_ those _1635-69_]
  • [36 Love:] Love. _1633_]
  • [39 rage; _Ed:_ rage, _1633-69_]
  • [40 contract] extract _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_]
  • [41 eyes _1633-69:_ eyes; _Chambers_]
  • [42-3 _brackets_, _Ed_]
  • [44 Courts: Beg] Courts Beg _1669:_ courts beg _Chambers_.
  • _See note_
  • from] frow _1633_]
  • [45 your _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _H40_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S96_, _TC:_ our _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_
  • love! _Ed:_ love. _1633-69_]
  • _The triple Foole._
  • I am two fooles, I know,
  • For loving, and for saying so
  • In whining Poëtry;
  • But where's that wiseman, that would not be I,
  • If she would not deny? 5
  • Then as th'earths inward narrow crooked lanes
  • Do purge sea waters fretfull salt away,
  • I thought, if I could draw my paines,
  • Through Rimes vexation, I should them allay,
  • Griefe brought to numbers cannot be so fierce, 10
  • For, he tames it, that fetters it in verse.
  • But when I have done so,
  • Some man, his art and voice to show,
  • Doth Set and sing my paine,
  • And, by delighting many, frees againe 15
  • Griefe, which verse did restraine.
  • To Love, and Griefe tribute of Verse belongs,
  • But not of such as pleases when'tis read,
  • Both are increased by such songs:
  • For both their triumphs so are published, 20
  • And I, which was two fooles, do so grow three;
  • Who are a little wise, the best fooles bee.
  • [The triple Foole. _1633-69_, _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • Song _or no title_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [4 the wiser man, _1669_]
  • [5 If he should not deny? _P_]
  • [6 narrow _om._ _P:_ crooked _om._ _B_
  • lanes] vaines _Cy_, _P_]
  • [9 allay, _1633-39:_ allay. _1650-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [10 numbers] number _1669_]
  • [11 For, he tames it] He tames it much _B_]
  • [13 and] or _1669_]
  • _Lovers infinitenesse._
  • If yet I have not all thy love,
  • Deare, I shall never have it all,
  • I cannot breath one other sigh, to move,
  • Nor can intreat one other teare to fall,
  • And all my treasure, which should purchase thee, 5
  • Sighs, teares, and oathes, and letters I have spent.
  • Yet no more can be due to mee,
  • Then at the bargaine made was ment,
  • If then thy gift of love were partiall,
  • That some to mee, some should to others fall, 10
  • Deare, I shall never have Thee All.
  • Or if then thou gavest mee all,
  • All was but All, which thou hadst then;
  • But if in thy heart, since, there be or shall,
  • New love created bee, by other men, 15
  • Which have their stocks intire, and can in teares,
  • In sighs, in oathes, and letters outbid mee,
  • This new love may beget new feares,
  • For, this love was not vowed by thee.
  • And yet it was, thy gift being generall, 20
  • The ground, thy heart is mine, what ever shall
  • Grow there, deare, I should have it all.
  • Yet I would not have all yet,
  • Hee that hath all can have no more,
  • And since my love doth every day admit 25
  • New growth, thou shouldst have new rewards in store;
  • Thou canst not every day give me thy heart,
  • If thou canst give it, then thou never gavest it:
  • Loves riddles are, that though thy heart depart,
  • It stayes at home, and thou with losing savest it: 30
  • But wee will have a way more liberall,
  • Then changing hearts, to joyne them, so wee shall
  • Be one, and one anothers All.
  • [Lovers infinitenesse. _1633-69:_ Mon Tout. _A25_, _C:_ _no
  • title_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S:_
  • Elegie. _S96_
  • _Query_ Loves infinitenesse.]
  • [3 move, _Ed:_ move; _1633-69_]
  • [4 fall, _Ed:_ fall. _1633:_ fall; _1635-69_]
  • [6 teares,] teares _1633_
  • spent. _Ed:_ spent, _1633-69 and Grolier:_ spent; _Chambers_]
  • [8 Then _1633-35_, _1669:_ That _1639-54_]
  • [9 were] was _1669_
  • partiall] generall _A25_, _C_]
  • [11 Thee _1633:_ It _1635-69_ (it _1669_)]
  • [12 gavest] givest _1669_]
  • [13 then; _1635-54:_ then, _1633_]
  • [17 and letters _1633:_ in letters _1635-69_]
  • [19 thee. _1639-69:_ thee, _1633-35_]
  • [20 it] is _1633_]
  • [21 is _1633_, _1669:_ was _1635-54_]
  • [25-6 And since my heart doth every day beget New love, _&c._
  • _A25_.]
  • [29-30
  • Except mine come when thine doth part
  • And in such giving it, thou savest it: _A25_, _C_
  • Perchance mine comes, when thine doth parte,
  • And by such losing it, _&c._ _JC_
  • ]
  • [31 have] love _1669:_ find _A25_, _C_]
  • [32 them] us _1669_]
  • _Song._
  • Sweetest love, I do not goe,
  • For wearinesse of thee,
  • Nor in hope the world can show
  • A fitter Love for mee;
  • But since that I 5
  • Must dye at last, 'tis best,
  • To use my selfe in jest
  • Thus by fain'd deaths to dye;
  • Yesternight the Sunne went hence,
  • And yet is here to day, 10
  • He hath no desire nor sense,
  • Nor halfe so short a way:
  • Then feare not mee,
  • But beleeve that I shall make
  • Speedier journeyes, since I take 15
  • More wings and spurres then hee.
  • O how feeble is mans power,
  • That if good fortune fall,
  • Cannot adde another houre,
  • Nor a lost houre recall! 20
  • But come bad chance,
  • And wee joyne to'it our strength,
  • And wee teach it art and length,
  • It selfe o'r us to'advance.
  • When thou sigh'st, thou sigh'st not winde, 25
  • But sigh'st my soule away,
  • When thou weep'st, unkindly kinde,
  • My lifes blood doth decay.
  • It cannot bee
  • That thou lov'st mee, as thou say'st, 30
  • If in thine my life thou waste,
  • Thou art the best of mee.
  • Let not thy divining heart
  • Forethinke me any ill,
  • Destiny may take thy part, 35
  • And may thy feares fulfill;
  • But thinke that wee
  • Are but turn'd aside to sleepe;
  • They who one another keepe
  • Alive, ne'r parted bee. 40
  • [Song. _1633-69:_ Song. _or no title_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ _in A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _this with_ Send
  • home my long stray'd eyes _and_ The Bait _are given as_ Songs
  • which were made to certain ayres which were made before.]
  • [1-4 _In most MSS. these lines are written as two long lines,
  • and so with ll._ 9-12, 17-20, 25-28, 33-36]
  • [4 mee; _1650-69:_ mee, _1633-39_]
  • [5-8 But since ... dye; _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_
  • At the last must part 'tis best,
  • Thus to use my selfe in jest
  • By fained deaths to dye; _1635-54_, _O'F:_
  • Must dye at last, 'tis best,
  • Thus to use my self in jest
  • By fained death to dye; _1669_
  • ]
  • [15 Speedier] Hastier _1669_]
  • [20 recall! _Ed:_ recall? _1633-69_]
  • [25 not wind _1633:_ no wind _1635-69_]
  • [32 Thou _1633 and MSS. generally:_ That _1635-54:_ Which
  • _1669_
  • best _1633-54:_ life _1669_]
  • [36 may _1633-35_, _1669:_ make _1639-54_
  • fulfill; _Ed:_ fulfill, _1633-69_]
  • [38 turn'd] lai'd _1669_]
  • _The Legacie._
  • When I dyed last, and, Deare, I dye
  • As often as from thee I goe,
  • Though it be but an houre agoe,
  • And Lovers houres be full eternity,
  • I can remember yet, that I 5
  • Something did say, and something did bestow;
  • Though I be dead, which sent mee, I should be
  • Mine owne executor and Legacie.
  • I heard mee say, Tell her anon,
  • That my selfe, (that is you, not I,) 10
  • Did kill me, and when I felt mee dye,
  • I bid mee send my heart, when I was gone,
  • But I alas could there finde none,
  • When I had ripp'd me,'and search'd where hearts did lye;
  • It kill'd mee againe, that I who still was true, 15
  • In life, in my last Will should cozen you.
  • Yet I found something like a heart,
  • But colours it, and corners had,
  • It was not good, it was not bad,
  • It was intire to none, and few had part. 20
  • As good as could be made by art
  • It seem'd; and therefore for our losses sad,
  • I meant to send this heart in stead of mine,
  • But oh, no man could hold it, for twas thine.
  • [The Legacie. _1633-69:_ Legacie. _L74:_ Song. _or no title_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96:_ Elegie. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [1 When I dyed last,] When last I dyed, _1669_]
  • [1-4 (and deare ... eternity) _Grolier_.]
  • [7 sent _1633_, _1669:_ meant _1635-54_
  • should be] might be _1669_]
  • [10 that is _1635-69:_ that's _1633:_ _brackets from A18_,
  • _N_, _TC_]
  • [13 none, _1633-69:_ none. _Chambers and Grolier_]
  • [14 When ... did _1633_, _A25_ (doe), _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _S_, _S96:_ When I had ripp'd, and search'd where
  • hearts should _1635-69_, _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TC_ lye; _Ed:_
  • lye, _1633-69_, _Chambers and Grolier_. _See note_]
  • [18 But] For _1650-69_]
  • [20 part. _1633-39:_ part: _1650-69_]
  • [22 seem'd; _Ed:_ seem'd, _1633-69_, _Grolier, and Chambers_
  • our losses sad, _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S96_, _TC:_ our loss be sad, _1669:_ our loss be ye
  • sad. _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S:_ our losses sad;
  • _Grolier:_ our loss be sad. _Chambers_]
  • [23 meant] thought _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_
  • this _1633:_ that _1635-69_]
  • _A Feaver._
  • Oh doe not die, for I shall hate
  • All women so, when thou art gone,
  • That thee I shall not celebrate,
  • When I remember, thou wast one.
  • But yet thou canst not die, I know; 5
  • To leave this world behinde, is death,
  • But when thou from this world wilt goe,
  • The whole world vapors with thy breath.
  • Or if, when thou, the worlds soule, goest,
  • It stay, tis but thy carkasse then, 10
  • The fairest woman, but thy ghost,
  • But corrupt wormes, the worthyest men.
  • O wrangling schooles, that search what fire
  • Shall burne this world, had none the wit
  • Unto this knowledge to aspire, 15
  • That this her feaver might be it?
  • And yet she cannot wast by this,
  • Nor long beare this torturing wrong,
  • For much corruption needfull is
  • To fuell such a feaver long. 20
  • These burning fits but meteors bee,
  • Whose matter in thee is soone spent.
  • Thy beauty,'and all parts, which are thee,
  • Are unchangeable firmament.
  • Yet t'was of my minde, seising thee, 25
  • Though it in thee cannot persever.
  • For I had rather owner bee
  • Of thee one houre, then all else ever.
  • [A Feaver. _1633-69_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S96:_ Of a
  • fever. _L74:_ The Fever. _B_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P:_ Fever. _A18_,
  • _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title_, _JC_]
  • [5 know; _Ed:_ know, _1633-69_]
  • [8 with] in _1669_]
  • [16 might] must _TCC_]
  • [18 beare] endure _1669_
  • torturing] tormenting _JC_, _O'F_ (_corr. from_ torturing)]
  • [19 For much _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ For more _1635-69_,
  • _O'F:_ Far more _Cy_, _P_]
  • [22 is soon] soon is _1669_]
  • [24 Are] Are an _1669_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [25 Yet 'twas of _1633-54:_ And here as _1669_]
  • [27 For] Yet _1669_]
  • _Aire and Angels._
  • Twice or thrice had I loved thee,
  • Before I knew thy face or name;
  • So in a voice, so in a shapelesse flame,
  • _Angells_ affect us oft, and worship'd bee;
  • Still when, to where thou wert, I came, 5
  • Some lovely glorious nothing I did see.
  • But since my soule, whose child love is,
  • Takes limmes of flesh, and else could nothing doe,
  • More subtile then the parent is,
  • Love must not be, but take a body too, 10
  • And therefore what thou wert, and who,
  • I bid Love aske, and now
  • That it assume thy body, I allow,
  • And fixe it selfe in thy lip, eye, and brow.
  • Whilst thus to ballast love, I thought, 15
  • And so more steddily to have gone,
  • With wares which would sinke admiration,
  • I saw, I had loves pinnace overfraught,
  • Ev'ry thy haire for love to worke upon
  • Is much too much, some fitter must be sought; 20
  • For, nor in nothing, nor in things
  • Extreme, and scatt'ring bright, can love inhere;
  • Then as an Angell, face, and wings
  • Of aire, not pure as it, yet pure doth weare,
  • So thy love may be my loves spheare; 25
  • Just such disparitie
  • As is twixt Aire and Angells puritie,
  • 'Twixt womens love, and mens will ever bee.
  • [Aire and Angels. _1633-69_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title_, _B_,
  • _H40_]
  • [4 bee; _Ed:_ bee, _1633-69_]
  • [5 came,] came _1633_]
  • [6 I did] did I _1669_
  • see. _Ed:_ see, _1633-69_]
  • [7 since _Ed:_ since, _1633-69_]
  • [11 who, _Ed:_ who _1633-69_]
  • [14 lip, eye,] lips, eyes, _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [19 Ev'ry thy _1633-39_, _A18_, _B_ (Even), _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_ (Ever), _S96_, _TC:_ Thy every
  • _1650-69_]
  • [22 scatt'ring _Ed:_ scattring, _1633-35:_ scattering
  • _1639-69_]
  • [27 Aire _1633-54 and all MSS.:_ Airs _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • _Breake of day._
  • 'Tis true, 'tis day; what though it be?
  • O wilt thou therefore rise from me?
  • Why should we rise, because 'tis light?
  • Did we lie downe, because 'twas night?
  • Love which in spight of darknesse brought us hether, 5
  • Should in despight of light keepe us together.
  • Light hath no tongue, but is all eye;
  • If it could speake as well as spie,
  • This were the worst, that it could say,
  • That being well, I faine would stay, 10
  • And that I lov'd my heart and honor so,
  • That I would not from him, that had them, goe.
  • Must businesse thee from hence remove?
  • Oh, that's the worst disease of love,
  • The poore, the foule, the false, love can 15
  • Admit, but not the busied man.
  • He which hath businesse, and makes love, doth doe
  • Such wrong, as when a maryed man doth wooe.
  • [Breake of day, _1633-69_, _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • _no title or_ Sonnet, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96:_ A Songe. _A25_]
  • [1 day;] day, _1633_]
  • [5 in spight of _1633-39_, _1669_, _A25_, _JC_, _S96:_ in
  • dispight _1650-54_, _A18_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [6 in despight _1633_, _1650-69:_ in spight _1635-39_
  • keepe] holde _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [9 were] is _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_ _TC_]
  • [11 I lov'd] I love _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [12 him, that had them _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S:_ him
  • that had them (_or_ it) _A25_, _B_, _C_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _TC:_ her, that had them, _1669:_ her that hath them _B_, _JC_
  • (it), _S96_]
  • [15 foule,] foole, _H40_]
  • [18 as when ... doth _1633_, _1669_, _A25_, _C_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _Lec_, _S_, _S96:_ as if ... should _A18_, _B_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ as when ... should _1635-54_]
  • _The Anniversarie._
  • All Kings, and all their favorites,
  • All glory of honors, beauties, wits,
  • The Sun it selfe, which makes times, as they passe,
  • Is elder by a yeare, now, then it was
  • When thou and I first one another saw: 5
  • All other things, to their destruction draw,
  • Only our love hath no decay;
  • This, no to morrow hath, nor yesterday,
  • Running it never runs from us away,
  • But truly keepes his first, last, everlasting day. 10
  • Two graves must hide thine and my coarse,
  • If one might, death were no divorce.
  • Alas, as well as other Princes, wee,
  • (Who Prince enough in one another bee,)
  • Must leave at last in death, these eyes, and eares, 15
  • Oft fed with true oathes, and with sweet salt teares;
  • But soules where nothing dwells but love
  • (All other thoughts being inmates) then shall prove
  • This, or a love increased there above,
  • When bodies to their graves, soules from their graves remove. 20
  • And then wee shall be throughly blest,
  • But wee no more, then all the rest;
  • Here upon earth, we'are Kings, and none but wee
  • Can be such Kings, nor of such subjects bee.
  • Who is so safe as wee? where none can doe 25
  • Treason to us, except one of us two.
  • True and false feares let us refraine,
  • Let us love nobly, and live, and adde againe
  • Yeares and yeares unto yeares, till we attaine
  • To write threescore: this is the second of our raigne. 30
  • [The Anniversarie. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no
  • title_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S:_ Ad Liviam. _S96_]
  • [3 times, as they passe, _1633_, _1669_ (_which brackets_
  • which ... pass), _MSS.:_ times, as these pass, _1635-54:_
  • time, as they pass, _Chambers, who attributes to 1633, 1669_]
  • [12 divorce. _Ed:_ divorce, _1633-69_]
  • [17 love _Ed:_ love; _1633-69_]
  • [20 to their graves] to their grave _1635-39_]
  • [22 wee _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ now _1633-69_. _See note_
  • rest; _Ed:_ rest. _1633-69_]
  • [23 none _om. 1669, D, H40, H49, JC, Lec, S, S96_]
  • [24 None are such Kings, _1669_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _S_, _S96_]
  • nor] and _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _S_, _S96_, bee.
  • _Ed:_ bee; _1633-69_]
  • [27 refraine,] refraine. _1669_]
  • [30 threescore: _Grolier:_ threescore, _1633-69_]
  • _A Valediction: of my name, in the window._
  • I.
  • My name engrav'd herein,
  • Doth contribute my firmnesse to this glasse,
  • Which, ever since that charme, hath beene
  • As hard, as that which grav'd it, was;
  • Thine eye will give it price enough, to mock 5
  • The diamonds of either rock.
  • II.
  • 'Tis much that Glasse should bee
  • As all confessing, and through-shine as I,
  • 'Tis more, that it shewes thee to thee,
  • And cleare reflects thee to thine eye. 10
  • But all such rules, loves magique can undoe,
  • Here you see mee, and I am you.
  • III.
  • As no one point, nor dash,
  • Which are but accessaries to this name,
  • The showers and tempests can outwash, 15
  • So shall all times finde mee the same;
  • You this intirenesse better may fulfill,
  • Who have the patterne with you still.
  • IIII.
  • Or, if too hard and deepe
  • This learning be, for a scratch'd name to teach, 20
  • It, as a given deaths head keepe,
  • Lovers mortalitie to preach,
  • Or thinke this ragged bony name to bee
  • My ruinous Anatomie.
  • V.
  • Then, as all my soules bee, 25
  • Emparadis'd in you, (in whom alone
  • I understand, and grow and see,)
  • The rafters of my body, bone
  • Being still with you, the Muscle, Sinew, and Veine,
  • Which tile this house, will come againe. 30
  • VI.
  • Till my returne, repaire
  • And recompact my scattered body so.
  • As all the vertuous powers which are
  • Fix'd in the starres, are said to flow
  • Into such characters, as graved bee 35
  • When these starres have supremacie:
  • VII.
  • So, since this name was cut
  • When love and griefe their exaltation had,
  • No doore 'gainst this names influence shut;
  • As much more loving, as more sad, 40
  • 'Twill make thee; and thou shouldst, till I returne,
  • Since I die daily, daily mourne.
  • VIII.
  • When thy inconsiderate hand
  • Flings ope this casement, with my trembling name,
  • To looke on one, whose wit or land, 45
  • New battry to thy heart may frame,
  • Then thinke this name alive, and that thou thus
  • In it offendst my Genius.
  • IX.
  • And when thy melted maid,
  • Corrupted by thy Lover's gold, and page, 50
  • His letter at thy pillow'hath laid,
  • Disputed it, and tam'd thy rage,
  • And thou begin'st to thaw towards him, for this,
  • May my name step in, and hide his.
  • X.
  • And if this treason goe 55
  • To an overt act, and that thou write againe;
  • In superscribing, this name flow
  • Into thy fancy, from the pane.
  • So, in forgetting thou remembrest right,
  • And unaware to mee shalt write. 60
  • XI.
  • But glasse, and lines must bee,
  • No meanes our firme substantiall love to keepe;
  • Neere death inflicts this lethargie,
  • And this I murmure in my sleepe;
  • Impute this idle talke, to that I goe, 65
  • For dying men talke often so.
  • [A Valediction: Of _&c._ _D_, _H49:_ A Valediction of _&c._
  • _1633-69_, _H40_, _Lec_; Valediction of _&c._ _A18_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ A Valediction of my name in the Glasse Window
  • _Cy:_ A Valediction to _&c._ _B:_ Valediction 4: of Glasse
  • _O'F:_ Valediction in Glasse _P:_ The Diamond and Glasse _S:_
  • Vpon the ingravinge of his name with a Diamonde in his mistris
  • windowe when he was to travel. _S96_ (_This is added to the
  • title in O'F._): _similarly, JC_]
  • [4 was; _Ed:_ was, _1633-69_]
  • [5 eye] eyes _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TC_]
  • [8 I, _1633-54:_ I _1669_]
  • [12 am you.] see you. _1669_]
  • [14 accessaries _1633-69_, _O'F_, _S:_ accessary _A18_, _B_,
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [15 tempests _1633_, _1669:_ tempest _1635-54_]
  • [19 Or, _Ed:_ Or _1633-69_]
  • [32 so. _1633-35:_ so, _1639-69_, _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [34 flow _Ed:_ flow, _1633-69_]
  • [36 these _1633:_ those _1635-69_
  • have] had _1669_
  • supremacie: _1633-69:_ supremacie. _1650-69_. _See note_]
  • [37 So, _Ed:_ So _1633-69_]
  • [39 shut; _Ed:_ shut, _1633-69_]
  • [44 ope _1633-69_, _O'F_, _S96:_ out _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [48 offendst] offends _1669_]
  • [50 and] or _1669_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [52-3
  • Disputed thou it, and tame thy rage.
  • If thou to him begin'st to thaw for this,
  • _1669_]
  • [55 goe] growe _JC_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [56 againe; _1633:_ againe: _1635-69_]
  • [57 this] my _1669_]
  • [58 pane. _1633:_ Pen, _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [60 unaware] unawares _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [64 this] thus _1635-69_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • _Twicknam garden._
  • Blasted with sighs, and surrounded with teares,
  • Hither I come to seeke the spring,
  • And at mine eyes, and at mine eares,
  • Receive such balmes, as else cure every thing;
  • But O, selfe traytor, I do bring 5
  • The spider love, which transubstantiates all,
  • And can convert Manna to gall,
  • And that this place may thoroughly be thought
  • True Paradise, I have the serpent brought.
  • 'Twere wholsomer for mee, that winter did 10
  • Benight the glory of this place,
  • And that a grave frost did forbid
  • These trees to laugh, and mocke mee to my face;
  • But that I may not this disgrace
  • Indure, nor yet leave loving, Love let mee 15
  • Some senslesse peece of this place bee;
  • Make me a mandrake, so I may groane here,
  • Or a stone fountaine weeping out my yeare.
  • Hither with christall vyals, lovers come,
  • And take my teares, which are loves wine, 20
  • And try your mistresse Teares at home,
  • For all are false, that tast not just like mine;
  • Alas, hearts do not in eyes shine,
  • Nor can you more judge womans thoughts by teares,
  • Then by her shadow, what she weares. 25
  • O perverse sexe, where none is true but shee,
  • Who's therefore true, because her truth kills mee.
  • [Twicknam garden. _1633-69:_ _do. or_ Twitnam Garden. _A18_,
  • _L74_ (_in margin_), _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD:_ In a Garden. _B:_ _no title_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _P_]
  • [3 eares] years _1669_]
  • [4 balms ... cure _1633_, _A25_, _D_, _H49:_ balm ... cures
  • _1635-69_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TC_
  • thing; _Ed:_ thing, _1633:_ thing: _1635-69_]
  • [6 spider] spiders _1669_]
  • [8 thoroughly _1633-39:_ throughly _1650-69_]
  • [12 did] would _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [13 laugh,] laugh _1633_]
  • [14 that I may not] since I cannot _1669_]
  • [15 nor yet leave loving, _1633:_ _om. D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _Lec:_ nor leave this garden, _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _Cy_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [17 groane _A18_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _N_, _TC:_ grow
  • _1633-69_, _B_, _L74_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [18 my yeare, _1633_, _1669_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec:_ the
  • yeare. _1635-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [20 loves] lovers _1639_]
  • [24 womans _A18_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _TC:_ womens
  • _1633-69_, _Lec_, _P_, _S96_]
  • _A Valediction: of the booke._
  • I'll tell thee now (deare Love) what thou shalt doe
  • To anger destiny, as she doth us,
  • How I shall stay, though she Esloygne me thus
  • And how posterity shall know it too;
  • How thine may out-endure 5
  • Sybills glory, and obscure
  • Her who from Pindar could allure,
  • And her, through whose helpe _Lucan_ is not lame,
  • And her, whose booke (they say) _Homer_ did finde, and name.
  • Study our manuscripts, those Myriades 10
  • Of letters, which have past twixt thee and mee,
  • Thence write our Annals, and in them will bee
  • To all whom loves subliming fire invades,
  • Rule and example found;
  • There, the faith of any ground 15
  • No schismatique will dare to wound,
  • That sees, how Love this grace to us affords,
  • To make, to keep, to use, to be these his Records.
  • This Booke, as long-liv'd as the elements,
  • Or as the worlds forme, this all-graved tome 20
  • In cypher writ, or new made Idiome,
  • Wee for loves clergie only'are instruments:
  • When this booke is made thus,
  • Should againe the ravenous
  • Vandals and Goths inundate us, 25
  • Learning were safe; in this our Universe
  • Schooles might learne Sciences, Spheares Musick, Angels Verse.
  • Here Loves Divines, (since all Divinity
  • Is love or wonder) may finde all they seeke,
  • Whether abstract spirituall love they like, 30
  • Their Soules exhal'd with what they do not see,
  • Or, loth so to amuze
  • Faiths infirmitie, they chuse
  • Something which they may see and use;
  • For, though minde be the heaven, where love doth sit, 35
  • Beauty a convenient type may be to figure it.
  • Here more then in their bookes may Lawyers finde,
  • Both by what titles Mistresses are ours,
  • And how prerogative these states devours,
  • Transferr'd from Love himselfe, to womankinde, 40
  • Who though from heart, and eyes,
  • They exact great subsidies,
  • Forsake him who on them relies,
  • And for the cause, honour, or conscience give,
  • Chimeraes, vaine as they, or their prerogative. 45
  • Here Statesmen, (or of them, they which can reade,)
  • May of their occupation finde the grounds:
  • Love and their art alike it deadly wounds,
  • If to consider what 'tis, one proceed,
  • In both they doe excell 50
  • Who the present governe well,
  • Whose weaknesse none doth, or dares tell;
  • In this thy booke, such will their nothing see,
  • As in the Bible some can finde out Alchimy.
  • Thus vent thy thoughts; abroad I'll studie thee, 55
  • As he removes farre off, that great heights takes;
  • How great love is, presence best tryall makes,
  • But absence tryes how long this love will bee;
  • To take a latitude
  • Sun, or starres, are fitliest view'd 60
  • At their brightest, but to conclude
  • Of longitudes, what other way have wee,
  • But to marke when, and where the darke eclipses bee?
  • [A Valediction: of _&c._ _Ed:_ A Valediction of the Booke
  • _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Valediction of the booke. _D_,
  • _H49_, _Lec:_ Valediction 3: Of the Booke _O'F:_ The Booke
  • _Cy_, _P:_ Valediction to his booke. _1633-69_, _S:_ A
  • Valediction of a booke left in a windowe. _JC_]
  • [18 Records, _1633-69:_ records, _Grolier_]
  • [20 tome _1633-35:_ to me _1639-54:_ Tomb. _1669_, _A18_,
  • _Cy_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_]
  • [21 Idiome, _Ed:_ Idiome; _1633-69_]
  • [22 instruments: _Ed:_ instruments, _1633-69_. _See note_]
  • [25 and Goths inundate us, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC:_ and the Goths invade us, _1633-54_,
  • _S:_ and Goths invade us, _1669_, _H40_, _JC_ (or), _O'F_,
  • _P_]
  • [26 were safe; _1633:_ _rest omit semicolon_.
  • Universe _1633-39:_ Universe, _1650-69_]
  • [30 abstract] abstracted _1669_]
  • [32 Or, ... amuze _Ed:_ Or ... amuze, _1633-69_]
  • [33 infirmitie,] infirmities, _1669_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [38 titles] titles, _1663_]
  • [39 these states] those rites _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [40 womankinde, _Ed:_ womankinde. _1633-54:_ womankinde:
  • _1669_]
  • [43 relies, _Ed:_ relies _1633:_ relies; _1635-69_]
  • [44 give,] give; _1635-69_]
  • [46 Statesmen] Tradesmen _Cy_, _P_]
  • [47 grounds: _Ed:_ grounds, _1633-69_]
  • [49 'tis, one] 'tis on _1669_]
  • [53 their nothing _1635-54_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_ (nothings), _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_ (_but
  • the MSS. waver between_ their _and_ there): there something
  • _1633_, _1669_, _P_]
  • [55 vent _1633_, _1669:_ went _1635-54_
  • thoughts; abroad] thoughts abroad: _1669_]
  • [56 great heights] shadows _O'F_]
  • [63 _1669 omits_ darke]
  • _Communitie._
  • Good wee must love, and must hate ill,
  • For ill is ill, and good good still,
  • But there are things indifferent,
  • Which wee may neither hate, nor love,
  • But one, and then another prove,
  • As wee shall finde our fancy bent. 5
  • If then at first wise Nature had
  • Made women either good or bad,
  • Then some wee might hate, and some chuse,
  • But since shee did them so create, 10
  • That we may neither love, nor hate,
  • Onely this rests, All, all may use.
  • If they were good it would be seene,
  • Good is as visible as greene,
  • And to all eyes it selfe betrayes: 15
  • If they were bad, they could not last,
  • Bad doth it selfe, and others wast,
  • So, they deserve nor blame, nor praise.
  • But they are ours as fruits are ours,
  • He that but tasts, he that devours, 20
  • And he that leaves all, doth as well:
  • Chang'd loves are but chang'd sorts of meat,
  • And when hee hath the kernell eate,
  • Who doth not fling away the shell?
  • [Communitie. _1635-69:_ _no title_, _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [3 there _1635-69_, _A18_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_, _&c.:_
  • these _1633_, _D_, _Cy_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [7 had _Ed:_ had, _1633-39_]
  • [12 All, all _1633-54:_ All men _1669_]
  • [15 betrayes: _1650-69:_ betrayes, _1633-39_]
  • [21 well: _Ed:_ well, _1633-69_]
  • _Loves growth._
  • I scarce beleeve my love to be so pure
  • As I had thought it was,
  • Because it doth endure
  • Vicissitude, and season, as the grasse;
  • Me thinkes I lyed all winter, when I swore, 5
  • My love was infinite, if spring make'it more.
  • But if this medicine, love, which cures all sorrow
  • With more, not onely bee no quintessence,
  • But mixt of all stuffes, paining soule, or sense,
  • And of the Sunne his working vigour borrow, 10
  • Love's not so pure, and abstract, as they use
  • To say, which have no Mistresse but their Muse,
  • But as all else, being elemented too,
  • Love sometimes would contemplate, sometimes do.
  • And yet no greater, but more eminent, 15
  • Love by the spring is growne;
  • As, in the firmament,
  • Starres by the Sunne are not inlarg'd, but showne.
  • Gentle love deeds, as blossomes on a bough,
  • From loves awakened root do bud out now. 20
  • If, as in water stir'd more circles bee
  • Produc'd by one, love such additions take,
  • Those like so many spheares, but one heaven make,
  • For, they are all concentrique unto thee.
  • And though each spring doe adde to love new heate, 25
  • As princes doe in times of action get
  • New taxes, and remit them not in peace,
  • No winter shall abate the springs encrease.
  • [Loves growth. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ The
  • Spring. _or_ Spring. _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96:_ _no title_, _JC_]
  • [9 paining _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _S96_, _TC:_ vexing _1635-69_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_]
  • [10 working _1633 and MSS. as above:_ active _1635-69 and MSS.
  • as above_]
  • [11 pure, and] pure an _1669_, _O'F_]
  • [14 do.] do _1633_]
  • [18-19 Starres ... showne. Gentle love _Ed:_ Starres ...
  • showne, Gentle love _1633-69:_
  • Stars are not by the sunne enlarg'd; but showne
  • Greater; Loves deeds
  • _P_. _See note_]
  • [24 thee. _Ed:_ thee, _1633-69_]
  • [28 the _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _S96_, _TC:_ this _1635-69_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_]
  • _Loves exchange._
  • _Love_, any devill else but you,
  • Would for a given Soule give something too.
  • At Court your fellowes every day,
  • Give th'art of Riming, Huntsmanship, or Play,
  • For them which were their owne before; 5
  • Onely I have nothing which gave more,
  • But am, alas, by being lowly, lower.
  • I aske no dispensation now
  • To falsifie a teare, or sigh, or vow,
  • I do not sue from thee to draw 10
  • A _non obstante_ on natures law,
  • These are prerogatives, they inhere
  • In thee and thine; none should forsweare
  • Except that hee _Loves_ minion were.
  • Give mee thy weaknesse, make mee blinde, 15
  • Both wayes, as thou and thine, in eies and minde;
  • Love, let me never know that this
  • Is love, or, that love childish is;
  • Let me not know that others know
  • That she knowes my paines, least that so 20
  • A tender shame make me mine owne new woe.
  • If thou give nothing, yet thou'art just,
  • Because I would not thy first motions trust;
  • Small townes which stand stiffe, till great shot
  • Enforce them, by warres law _condition_ not. 25
  • Such in loves warfare is my case,
  • I may not article for grace,
  • Having put Love at last to shew this face.
  • This face, by which he could command
  • And change the Idolatrie of any land, 30
  • This face, which wheresoe'r it comes,
  • Can call vow'd men from cloisters, dead from tombes,
  • And melt both Poles at once, and store
  • Deserts with cities, and make more
  • Mynes in the earth, then Quarries were before. 35
  • For this, Love is enrag'd with mee,
  • Yet kills not. If I must example bee
  • To future Rebells; If th'unborne
  • Must learne, by my being cut up, and torne:
  • Kill, and dissect me, Love; for this 40
  • Torture against thine owne end is,
  • Rack't carcasses make ill Anatomies.
  • [Loves exchange. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no
  • title_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • [4 or] and _most MSS._
  • Play _D:_ play _1633-69_]
  • [9 or sigh, or vow, _1633-54:_ a sigh, a vow, _1669_]
  • [18 is; _Ed:_ is. _1633-69_]
  • [20 paines] paine _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [21 _1669 omits_ new]
  • [28 Love _D:_ love _1633-69_
  • this] his _1669_]
  • [36 For this, _Ed:_ For, this _1633-69_
  • Love _D:_ love _1633-69_]
  • [37 not. If _Ed:_ not; if _1633-39:_ not: if _1650-69_]
  • _Confined Love._
  • Some man unworthy to be possessor
  • Of old or new love, himselfe being false or weake,
  • Thought his paine and shame would be lesser,
  • If on womankind he might his anger wreake,
  • And thence a law did grow, 5
  • One might but one man know;
  • But are other creatures so?
  • Are Sunne, Moone, or Starres by law forbidden,
  • To smile where they list, or lend away their light?
  • Are birds divorc'd, or are they chidden 10
  • If they leave their mate, or lie abroad a night?
  • Beasts doe no joyntures lose
  • Though they new lovers choose,
  • But we are made worse then those.
  • Who e'r rigg'd faire ship to lie in harbors, 15
  • And not to seeke new lands, or not to deale withall?
  • Or built faire houses, set trees, and arbors,
  • Only to lock up, or else to let them fall?
  • Good is not good, unlesse
  • A thousand it possesse, 20
  • But doth wast with greedinesse.
  • [Confined Love _1635-69:_ _no title_, _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ To the
  • worthiest of all my lovers. _Cy:_ To the of all my loves my
  • virtuous mistriss. _P_]
  • [3 his] this _1669_
  • lesser] the lesser _A18_, _Cy_, _JC_, _P_]
  • [6 might _1633-69:_ should _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [9 lend] bend _1669_]
  • [11 mate, _1633-39:_ meate, _1650:_ meat, _1669_
  • a night (_i.e._ a-night) _1633-54:_ all night _1669_]
  • [12 Beasts] Beast _1635_]
  • [15 ship] ships _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [16 seeke new lands _1633-35 and MSS.:_ seeke lands _1639-69_,
  • _Chambers, whose note is incorrect_
  • withall _1633:_ with all _1635-69_]
  • [17 built _1633-35:_ build _1639-69_]
  • _The Dreame._
  • Deare love, for nothing lesse then thee
  • Would I have broke this happy dreame,
  • It was a theame
  • For reason, much too strong for phantasie,
  • Therefore thou wakd'st me wisely; yet 5
  • My Dreame thou brok'st not, but continued'st it,
  • Thou art so truth, that thoughts of thee suffice,
  • To make dreames truths; and fables histories;
  • Enter these armes, for since thou thoughtst it best,
  • Not to dreame all my dreame, let's act the rest. 10
  • As lightning, or a Tapers light,
  • Thine eyes, and not thy noise wak'd mee;
  • Yet I thought thee
  • (For thou lovest truth) an Angell, at first sight,
  • But when I saw thou sawest my heart, 15
  • And knew'st my thoughts, beyond an Angels art,
  • When thou knew'st what I dreamt, when thou knew'st when
  • Excesse of joy would wake me, and cam'st then,
  • I must confesse, it could not chuse but bee
  • Prophane, to thinke thee any thing but thee. 20
  • Comming and staying show'd thee, thee,
  • But rising makes me doubt, that now,
  • Thou art not thou.
  • That love is weake, where feare's as strong as hee;
  • 'Tis not all spirit, pure, and brave, 25
  • If mixture it of _Feare_, _Shame_, _Honor_, have.
  • Perchance as torches which must ready bee,
  • Men light and put out, so thou deal'st with mee,
  • Thou cam'st to kindle, goest to come; Then I
  • Will dreame that hope againe, but else would die. 30
  • [The Dreame. _1633-69:_ _do. or similarly_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _RP31_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [6 brok'st ... continued'st] breakest ... continuest _1669_,
  • _A25_, _C_, _P_, _S_]
  • [7 so truth, _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TC:_ so true, _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_. _See note_]
  • [10 act] doe _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [14 an Angell,] but an Angell, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [16 thoughts,] _om. comma Grolier and Chambers_. _See Note_]
  • [17 then thou knew'st when _1669_]
  • [19 must] doe _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [20 Prophane,] Profaness _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _S96_, _TC_]
  • [24 feare's as strong _1635-54_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _TCC:_ feares are strong _1669_, _B_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96:_ feare is strong, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [26 have. _1669:_ have; _1633-54_]
  • [29 cam'st] com'st _1669_
  • Then I] Thus I _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC_
  • (_RP31 agrees with this group throughout_)]
  • _A Valediction: of weeping._
  • Let me powre forth
  • My teares before thy face, whil'st I stay here,
  • For thy face coines them, and thy stampe they beare,
  • And by this Mintage they are something worth,
  • For thus they bee 5
  • Pregnant of thee;
  • Fruits of much griefe they are, emblemes of more,
  • When a teare falls, that thou falst which it bore,
  • So thou and I are nothing then, when on a divers shore.
  • On a round ball 10
  • A workeman that hath copies by, can lay
  • An Europe, Afrique, and an Asia,
  • And quickly make that, which was nothing, _All_,
  • So doth each teare,
  • Which thee doth weare, 15
  • A globe, yea world by that impression grow,
  • Till thy teares mixt with mine doe overflow
  • This world, by waters sent from thee, my heaven dissolved so.
  • O more then Moone,
  • Draw not up seas to drowne me in thy spheare, 20
  • Weepe me not dead, in thine armes, but forbeare
  • To teach the sea, what it may doe too soone;
  • Let not the winde
  • Example finde,
  • To doe me more harme, then it purposeth; 25
  • Since thou and I sigh one anothers breath,
  • Who e'r sighes most, is cruellest, and hasts the others death.
  • [A Valediction: of _&c._ _Ed:_ A Valediction of weeping.
  • _1633-69:_ Valediction of Weeping. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • A Valediction. _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec:_ A
  • Valediction of Teares. _Cy_, _S_, _S96:_ Valediction 2. Of
  • Tears. _O'F:_ _no title_, _JC_]
  • [3 beare, _1633:_ beare; _1635-69_]
  • [6 thee; _Ed:_ thee, _1633-69_]
  • [8 falst _1633-69:_ falls _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [9 shore.] shore, _1633_]
  • [13 _All_, _1633:_ _All_ _1635:_ _All._ _1639:_ _All:_
  • _1650-69_]
  • [16 world] would _1669_]
  • [20 up seas] thy seas _1669_]
  • [22 soone; _Ed:_ soone, _1633-69_]
  • [25 purposeth; _Ed:_ purposeth, _1633-69_]
  • _Loves Alchymie._
  • Some that have deeper digg'd loves Myne then I,
  • Say, where his centrique happinesse doth lie:
  • I have lov'd, and got, and told,
  • But should I love, get, tell, till I were old,
  • I should not finde that hidden mysterie; 5
  • Oh, 'tis imposture all:
  • And as no chymique yet th'Elixar got,
  • But glorifies his pregnant pot,
  • If by the way to him befall
  • Some odoriferous thing, or medicinall, 10
  • So, lovers dreame a rich and long delight,
  • But get a winter-seeming summers night.
  • Our ease, our thrift, our honor, and our day,
  • Shall we, for this vaine Bubles shadow pay?
  • Ends love in this, that my man, 15
  • Can be as happy'as I can; If he can
  • Endure the short scorne of a Bridegroomes play?
  • That loving wretch that sweares,
  • 'Tis not the bodies marry, but the mindes,
  • Which he in her Angelique findes, 20
  • Would sweare as justly, that he heares,
  • In that dayes rude hoarse minstralsey, the spheares.
  • Hope not for minde in women; at their best
  • Sweetnesse and wit, they'are but _Mummy_, possest.
  • [Loves Alchymie. _1633-69:_ Mummye. _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_ (or Alchymy. _added in a later
  • hand_), _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • Elegie. _P:_ _no title_, _A25_]
  • [14 Bubles] Bubless _1669_]
  • [15 my _1633-69 and MSS.:_ any _S96_, _1855_, _and Grolier_
  • (_perhaps from some copy of 1633_)]
  • [23-4 _punctuation from MSS:_
  • at their best,
  • Sweetnesse, and wit they'are, but, _Mummy_, possest.
  • _1633-54:_ _1669 omits all punctuation in these lines_]
  • _The Flea._
  • Marke but this flea, and marke in this,
  • How little that which thou deny'st me is;
  • It suck'd me first, and now sucks thee,
  • And in this flea, our two bloods mingled bee;
  • Thou know'st that this cannot be said 5
  • A sinne, nor shame, nor losse of maidenhead,
  • Yet this enjoyes before it wooe,
  • And pamper'd swells with one blood made of two,
  • And this, alas, is more then wee would doe.
  • Oh stay, three lives in one flea spare, 10
  • Where wee almost, yea more then maryed are.
  • This flea is you and I, and this
  • Our mariage bed, and mariage temple is;
  • Though parents grudge, and you, w'are met,
  • And cloysterd in these living walls of Jet. 15
  • Though use make you apt to kill mee,
  • Let not to that, selfe murder added bee,
  • And sacrilege, three sinnes in killing three.
  • Cruell and sodaine, hast thou since
  • Purpled thy naile, in blood of innocence? 20
  • Wherein could this flea guilty bee,
  • Except in that drop which it suckt from thee?
  • Yet thou triumph'st, and saist that thou
  • Find'st not thy selfe, nor mee the weaker now;
  • 'Tis true, then learne how false, feares bee; 25
  • Just so much honor, when thou yeeld'st to mee,
  • Will wast, as this flea's death tooke life from thee.
  • [The Flea _is placed here in the 1633 edition:_ _1635-69 place
  • it at beginning of_ Songs and Sonets: The Flea. _or no title_,
  • _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [3 It suckt mee first, _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S96:_
  • Mee it suck'd first, _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_
  • and now sucks] and now it sucks _1669_]
  • [5 Thou know'st that _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ Confess it.
  • This cannot be said _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [6 nor shame, nor losse _1633-54_ (shame _1633_), _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec:_ or shame, or loss _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _H40_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [9 would] could _1669_]
  • [11: yea, _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ nay, _1669_, _A18_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _C_, _H40_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [16 you] thee _A18_, _Cy_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [21 Wherein] In what _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [22 drop] blood _1669_]
  • _The Curse._
  • Who ever guesses, thinks, or dreames he knowes
  • Who is my mistris, wither by this curse;
  • His only, and only his purse
  • May some dull heart to love dispose,
  • And shee yeeld then to all that are his foes; 5
  • May he be scorn'd by one, whom all else scorne,
  • Forsweare to others, what to her he'hath sworne,
  • With feare of missing, shame of getting, torne:
  • Madnesse his sorrow, gout his cramp, may hee
  • Make, by but thinking, who hath made him such: 10
  • And may he feele no touch
  • Of conscience, but of fame, and bee
  • Anguish'd, not that'twas sinne, but that'twas shee:
  • In early and long scarcenesse may he rot,
  • For land which had been his, if he had not 15
  • Himselfe incestuously an heire begot:
  • May he dreame Treason, and beleeve, that hee
  • Meant to performe it, and confesse, and die,
  • And no record tell why:
  • His sonnes, which none of his may bee, 20
  • Inherite nothing but his infamie:
  • Or may he so long Parasites have fed,
  • That he would faine be theirs, whom he hath bred,
  • And at the last be circumcis'd for bread:
  • The venom of all stepdames, gamsters gall, 25
  • What Tyrans, and their subjects interwish,
  • What Plants, Mynes, Beasts, Foule, Fish,
  • Can contribute, all ill which all
  • Prophets, or Poets spake; And all which shall
  • Be annex'd in schedules unto this by mee, 30
  • Fall on that man; For if it be a shee
  • Nature before hand hath out-cursed mee.
  • [The Curse. _1633-69:_ A Curse. _or_ The Curse. _A18_, _A25_,
  • _B_, _C_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Dirae. _P_, _Q_]
  • [2 curse] course _1669_]
  • [3 His only, and only his purse _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _C_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _TC:_ Him, only for his purse _1669_, _Chambers:_ His one and
  • his onely purse _P_]
  • [4 heart _1633-54 and MSS.:_ whore _1669 and Chambers_]
  • [5 And she yeeld then to _1633-54 and MSS.:_ And then yield
  • unto _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [8 getting, _Ed:_ getting _1633-69_
  • torne: _Ed:_ torne; _1633-54:_ torne. _1669_. _Compare_ 16
  • _and_ 24]
  • [9 cramp,] cramps, _1669_, _Chambers_, _and most MSS._]
  • [10 him _1633-54 and MSS.:_ them _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [12 fame,] shame; _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [14-16 In early and long scarceness ... an heire begot:
  • _1633_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_ (_which gives
  • alternate version in margin_), _S:_
  • Or may he for her vertue reverence
  • One that hates him onely for impotence,
  • And equall Traitors be she and his sense.
  • _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _C_, _JC_, _N_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [18 Meant] Went _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [26 Tyrans, _1633-35:_ Tyrants, _1639:_ tyrants, _1650-69_]
  • [27 Mynes, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _H40_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _Q_, _S_, _TC:_ Myne, _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [28 ill _1669:_ ill, _1633-54_]
  • _The Message._
  • Send home my long strayd eyes to mee,
  • Which (Oh) too long have dwelt on thee;
  • Yet since there they have learn'd such ill,
  • Such forc'd fashions,
  • And false passions, 5
  • That they be
  • Made by thee
  • Fit for no good sight, keep them still.
  • Send home my harmlesse heart againe,
  • Which no unworthy thought could staine; 10
  • But if it be taught by thine
  • To make jestings
  • Of protestings,
  • And crosse both
  • Word and oath, 15
  • Keepe it, for then 'tis none of mine.
  • Yet send me back my heart and eyes,
  • That I may know, and see thy lyes,
  • And may laugh and joy, when thou
  • Art in anguish 20
  • And dost languish
  • For some one
  • That will none,
  • Or prove as false as thou art now.
  • [The Message. _1635-69:_ _no title_, _1633:_ Song. _or no
  • title_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96:_ Sonnet. _P:_ Songes w^{ch} were made to _&c._ (_vid.
  • sup._ _p._ 18) _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [2 thee; _Ed:_ thee, _1633-69_]
  • [3 But if they there _1669_, _S_]
  • [10 staine;] staine, _1633-69_]
  • [11 But _1635-69:_ Which _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [14 crosse, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ breake _1633-69_]
  • [16 Keep it still 'tis _1669_]
  • [19 And may laugh, when that Thou _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [24 art now.] dost now. _1669_]
  • _A nocturnall upon S._ Lucies _day,_
  • _Being the shortest day._
  • Tis the yeares midnight, and it is the dayes,
  • _Lucies_, who scarce seaven houres herself unmaskes,
  • The Sunne is spent, and now his flasks
  • Send forth light squibs, no constant rayes;
  • The worlds whole sap is sunke: 5
  • The generall balme th'hydroptique earth hath drunk,
  • Whither, as to the beds-feet, life is shrunke,
  • Dead and enterr'd; yet all these seeme to laugh,
  • Compar'd with mee, who am their Epitaph.
  • Study me then, you who shall lovers bee 10
  • At the next world, that is, at the next Spring:
  • For I am every dead thing,
  • In whom love wrought new Alchimie.
  • For his art did expresse
  • A quintessence even from nothingnesse, 15
  • From dull privations, and leane emptinesse:
  • He ruin'd mee, and I am re-begot
  • Of absence, darknesse, death; things which are not.
  • All others, from all things, draw all that's good,
  • Life, soule, forme, spirit, whence they beeing have; 20
  • I, by loves limbecke, am the grave
  • Of all, that's nothing. Oft a flood
  • Have wee two wept, and so
  • Drownd the whole world, us two; oft did we grow
  • To be two Chaosses, when we did show 25
  • Care to ought else; and often absences
  • Withdrew our soules, and made us carcasses.
  • But I am by her death, (which word wrongs her)
  • Of the first nothing, the Elixer grown;
  • Were I a man, that I were one, 30
  • I needs must know; I should preferre,
  • If I were any beast,
  • Some ends, some means; Yea plants, yea stones detest,
  • And love; All, all some properties invest;
  • If I an ordinary nothing were, 35
  • As shadow, a light, and body must be here.
  • But I am None; nor will my Sunne renew.
  • You lovers, for whose sake, the lesser Sunne
  • At this time to the Goat is runne
  • To fetch new lust, and give it you, 40
  • Enjoy your summer all;
  • Since shee enjoyes her long nights festivall,
  • Let mee prepare towards her, and let mee call
  • This houre her Vigill, and her Eve, since this
  • Both the yeares, and the dayes deep midnight is. 45
  • [A nocturnal _&c._ _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [7 beds-feet,] beds-feet _1633-69_]
  • [12 every _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_ (_altered to_ a very),
  • _TC:_ a very _1635-69_]
  • [16 emptinesse: _1719:_ emptinesse; _Chambers and Grolier:_
  • emptinesse _1633-54:_ emptinesse, _1669_. _See note_]
  • [20 have; _Ed:_ have, _1633-69_.]
  • [31 know;] know, _1633_]
  • [32 beast,] beast; _Grolier_]
  • [34 love; All, all _Ed:_ love, all, all _1633-69_
  • invest; _Ed:_ invest, _1633:_ invest _1635-69_]
  • [37 renew. _1633:_ renew, _1635-69_]
  • [41 all; _Ed:_ all, _1633-69 and Chambers, who places a full
  • stop after_ festivall]
  • [44 Eve, _1650-69:_ eve, _1633-39_]
  • _Witchcraft by a picture._
  • I fixe mine eye on thine, and there
  • Pitty my picture burning in thine eye,
  • My picture drown'd in a transparent teare,
  • When I looke lower I espie;
  • Hadst thou the wicked skill 5
  • By pictures made and mard, to kill,
  • How many wayes mightst thou performe thy will?
  • But now I have drunke thy sweet salt teares,
  • And though thou poure more I'll depart;
  • My picture vanish'd, vanish feares, 10
  • That I can be endamag'd by that art;
  • Though thou retaine of mee
  • One picture more, yet that will bee,
  • Being in thine owne heart, from all malice free.
  • [Witchcraft _&c._ _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ The
  • Picture. _or_ Picture. _Cy_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ A Songe.
  • _B_]
  • [4 espie; _Ed:_ espie, _1633-69_]
  • [6 to kill, _Ed:_ to kill? _1633-39:_ to kill; _1650-69_]
  • [9 And though] Although _1669_ And though thou therefore poure
  • more will depart; _B_, _H40_]
  • [10 vanish'd, vanish feares, _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_,
  • _JC_, _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC:_ vanished, vanish all feares
  • _1635-54_, _O'F:_ vanish, vanish fears, _1669_]
  • [11 that] thy _JC_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [14 all] thy _B_, _H40_, _S96_]
  • _The Baite._
  • Come live with mee, and bee my love,
  • And wee will some new pleasures prove
  • Of golden sands, and christall brookes,
  • With silken lines, and silver hookes.
  • There will the river whispering runne 5
  • Warm'd by thy eyes, more then the Sunne.
  • And there the'inamor'd fish will stay,
  • Begging themselves they may betray.
  • When thou wilt swimme in that live bath,
  • Each fish, which every channell hath, 10
  • Will amorously to thee swimme,
  • Gladder to catch thee, then thou him.
  • If thou, to be so seene, beest loath,
  • By Sunne, or Moone, thou darknest both,
  • And if my selfe have leave to see, 15
  • I need not their light, having thee.
  • Let others freeze with angling reeds,
  • And cut their legges, with shells and weeds,
  • Or treacherously poore fish beset,
  • With strangling snare, or windowie net: 20
  • Let coarse bold hands, from slimy nest
  • The bedded fish in banks out-wrest,
  • Or curious traitors, sleavesilke flies
  • Bewitch poore fishes wandring eyes.
  • For thee, thou needst no such deceit, 25
  • For thou thy selfe art thine owne bait;
  • That fish, that is not catch'd thereby,
  • Alas, is wiser farre then I.
  • [The Baite. _1635-69:_ _no title_, _1633:_ Song. _or no
  • title_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _Walton's_
  • Compleate Angler: _Fourth Day:_ _Chap. XII.:_ Songs that were
  • made _&c._ (_vid. sup. p._ 18) _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [2 some new] all the _P_]
  • [3 brookes, _Ed:_ brookes: _1633-69_]
  • [5 whispering _1633:_ whispring _1635-69_]
  • [6 thy] thine _1669_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [7 inamor'd] enamelled _Walton_
  • stay] play _1669_]
  • [11 to] unto _JC_, _O'F_, _P:_ to see _N:_ Most amoroussly to
  • thee will swim _Walton_]
  • [15 my selfe] mine eyes _Walton:_ my heart _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [18 with] which _1633_]
  • [20 snare,] snares, _Walton_
  • windowie] winding _1669_. _See note_]
  • [23 Or _1633-69:_ Let _Walton_
  • sleavesilke _1635:_ sleave silke _1639-69 and Walton:_
  • sleavesicke _1633_]
  • [24 To witch poor wandring fishes eyes. _Walton_]
  • [25 thou needst] there needs _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S96_]
  • [26 bait; _Ed:_ bait, _1633-69_]
  • [27 catch'd _1633-69:_ catch't _Walton:_ caught _P_]
  • [28 Is wiser far, alas _Walton_]
  • _The Apparition._
  • When by thy scorne, O murdresse, I am dead,
  • And that thou thinkst thee free
  • From all solicitation from mee,
  • Then shall my ghost come to thy bed,
  • And thee, fain'd vestall, in worse armes shall see; 5
  • Then thy sicke taper will begin to winke,
  • And he, whose thou art then, being tyr'd before,
  • Will, if thou stirre, or pinch to wake him, thinke
  • Thou call'st for more,
  • And in false sleepe will from thee shrinke, 10
  • And then poore Aspen wretch, neglected thou
  • Bath'd in a cold quicksilver sweat wilt lye
  • A veryer ghost then I;
  • What I will say, I will not tell thee now,
  • Lest that preserve thee'; and since my love is spent, 15
  • I'had rather thou shouldst painfully repent,
  • Then by my threatnings rest still innocent.
  • [The Apparition. _1633-69:_ _do. or_ An Apparition. _A18_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [2 that thou thinkst] thou shalt think _1669_]
  • [3 solicitation] solicitations _JC_, _O'F_]
  • [5 thee, ... vestall, _Ed:_ thee ... vestall _1633-39:_ thee
  • ... Vestall _1650-69_]
  • [7 then] _1669 omits_]
  • [10 in false sleepe will from _1633_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _S:_ in false sleepe from _1635-54:_ in a false sleepe even
  • from _1669:_ in a false sleepe from _A25_, _P:_ in a false
  • sleepe will from _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [13 I;] I, _1633, some copies_]
  • [17 rest still] keep thee _A25_, _Cy_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • _The broken heart._
  • He is starke mad, who ever sayes,
  • That he hath beene in love an houre,
  • Yet not that love so soone decayes,
  • But that it can tenne in lesse space devour;
  • Who will beleeve mee, if I sweare 5
  • That I have had the plague a yeare?
  • Who would not laugh at mee, if I should say,
  • I saw a flaske of _powder burne a day_?
  • Ah, what a trifle is a heart,
  • If once into loves hands it come! 10
  • All other griefes allow a part
  • To other griefes, and aske themselves but some;
  • They come to us, but us Love draws,
  • Hee swallows us, and never chawes:
  • By him, as by chain'd shot, whole rankes doe dye, 15
  • He is the tyran Pike, our hearts the Frye.
  • If 'twere not so, what did become
  • Of my heart, when I first saw thee?
  • I brought a heart into the roome,
  • But from the roome, I carried none with mee: 20
  • If it had gone to thee, I know
  • Mine would have taught thine heart to show
  • More pitty unto mee: but Love, alas,
  • At one first blow did shiver it as glasse.
  • Yet nothing can to nothing fall, 25
  • Nor any place be empty quite,
  • Therefore I thinke my breast hath all
  • Those peeces still, though they be not unite;
  • And now as broken glasses show
  • A hundred lesser faces, so 30
  • My ragges of heart can like, wish, and adore,
  • But after one such love, can love no more.
  • [The broken heart. _1633-69:_ Broken Heart. _L74:_ Song. _or
  • no title_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Elegie. _P_, _S96_]
  • [8 flaske _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _Lec_,
  • _O'F_ (_corrected from_ flash), _P_, _S:_ flash _1635-69_,
  • _A18_, _H49_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [10 come! _Ed:_ come? _1633-69_]
  • [12 some; _Ed:_ some, _1633-69_]
  • [15 chain'd shot] chain-shott _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [16 tyran] Tyrant _1669_
  • our hearts] and we _1669_]
  • [17 did] could _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _L74_, _O'F_, _N_,
  • _TC:_ would _B_, _Cy_, _M_, _S_]
  • [20 mee: _1650-69:_ mee; _1633-39_]
  • [23 alas,] alas _1633_]
  • [24 first] fierce _A18_, _B_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [30 hundred] thousand _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _M_,
  • _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_]
  • _A Valediction: forbidding mourning._
  • As virtuous men passe mildly away,
  • And whisper to their soules, to goe,
  • Whilst some of their sad friends doe say,
  • The breath goes now, and some say, no:
  • So let us melt, and make no noise, 5
  • No teare-floods, nor sigh-tempests move,
  • T'were prophanation of our joyes
  • To tell the layetie our love.
  • Moving of th'earth brings harmes and feares,
  • Men reckon what it did and meant, 10
  • But trepidation of the spheares,
  • Though greater farre, is innocent.
  • Dull sublunary lovers love
  • (Whose soule is sense) cannot admit
  • Absence, because it doth remove 15
  • Those things which elemented it.
  • But we by a love, so much refin'd,
  • That our selves know not what it is,
  • Inter-assured of the mind,
  • Care lesse, eyes, lips, and hands to misse. 20
  • Our two soules therefore, which are one,
  • Though I must goe, endure not yet
  • A breach, but an expansion,
  • Like gold to ayery thinnesse beate.
  • If they be two, they are two so 25
  • As stiffe twin compasses are two,
  • Thy soule the fixt foot, makes no show
  • To move, but doth, if the'other doe.
  • And though it in the center sit,
  • Yet when the other far doth rome, 30
  • It leanes, and hearkens after it,
  • And growes erect, as that comes home.
  • Such wilt thou be to mee, who must
  • Like th'other foot, obliquely runne;
  • Thy firmnes makes my circle just,
  • And makes me end, where I begunne. 35
  • [A Valediction: forbidding _&c._ _Ed:_ A Valediction
  • forbidding _&c._ _1633-69:_ Valediction forbidding _&c._
  • _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Valediction agaynst _&c._ _A25_,
  • _C:_ A Valediction. _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec:_ Vpon
  • the partinge from his Mistris. _O'F_, _S96:_ To his love upon
  • his departure from her. _JC:_ Elegie. _L74_, _P:_ _also in
  • Walton's_ Life of Donne (1675)]
  • [4 The breath goes now, _1633-54, and all the MSS.:_ Now his
  • breath goes, _1669_, _Chambers_
  • no: _Ed:_ no. _1633-54:_ No; _1669_]
  • [30 the other] my other _Walton_]
  • [31 It] Thine _Walton_]
  • [32 that] mine _Walton_]
  • [34 runne; _Ed:_ runne. _1633-69_]
  • [35 circle] circles _1639-54_]
  • [36 makes me] me to _Walton_]
  • _The Extasie._
  • Where, like a pillow on a bed,
  • A Pregnant banke swel'd up, to rest
  • The violets reclining head,
  • Sat we two, one anothers best.
  • Our hands were firmely cimented 5
  • With a fast balme, which thence did spring,
  • Our eye-beames twisted, and did thred
  • Our eyes, upon one double string;
  • So to'entergraft our hands, as yet
  • Was all the meanes to make us one, 10
  • And pictures in our eyes to get
  • Was all our propagation.
  • As 'twixt two equall Armies, Fate
  • Suspends uncertaine victorie,
  • Our soules, (which to advance their state, 15
  • Were gone out,) hung 'twixt her, and mee.
  • And whil'st our soules negotiate there,
  • Wee like sepulchrall statues lay;
  • All day, the same our postures were,
  • And wee said nothing, all the day. 20
  • If any, so by love refin'd,
  • That he soules language understood,
  • And by good love were growen all minde,
  • Within convenient distance stood,
  • He (though he knew not which soule spake, 25
  • Because both meant, both spake the same)
  • Might thence a new concoction take,
  • And part farre purer then he came.
  • This Extasie doth unperplex
  • (We said) and tell us what we love, 30
  • Wee see by this, it was not sexe,
  • Wee see, we saw not what did move:
  • But as all severall soules containe
  • Mixture of things, they know not what,
  • Love, these mixt soules, doth mixe againe, 35
  • And makes both one, each this and that.
  • A single violet transplant,
  • The strength, the colour, and the size,
  • (All which before was poore, and scant,)
  • Redoubles still, and multiplies. 40
  • When love, with one another so
  • Interinanimates two soules,
  • That abler soule, which thence doth flow,
  • Defects of lonelinesse controules.
  • Wee then, who are this new soule, know, 45
  • Of what we are compos'd, and made,
  • For, th'Atomies of which we grow,
  • Are soules, whom no change can invade.
  • But O alas, so long, so farre
  • Our bodies why doe wee forbeare? 50
  • They are ours, though they are not wee, Wee are
  • The intelligences, they the spheare.
  • We owe them thankes, because they thus,
  • Did us, to us, at first convay,
  • Yeelded their forces, sense, to us, 55
  • Nor are drosse to us, but allay.
  • On man heavens influence workes not so,
  • But that it first imprints the ayre,
  • Soe soule into the soule may flow,
  • Though it to body first repaire. 60
  • As our blood labours to beget
  • Spirits, as like soules as it can,
  • Because such fingers need to knit
  • That subtile knot, which makes us man:
  • So must pure lovers soules descend 65
  • T'affections, and to faculties,
  • Which sense may reach and apprehend,
  • Else a great Prince in prison lies.
  • To'our bodies turne wee then, that so
  • Weake men on love reveal'd may looke; 70
  • Loves mysteries in soules doe grow,
  • But yet the body is his booke.
  • And if some lover, such as wee,
  • Have heard this dialogue of one,
  • Let him still marke us, he shall see 75
  • Small change, when we'are to bodies gone.
  • [The Extasie. _1633-69:_ _do. or_ Extasie. _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [3 reclining _1633-54:_ declining _1669_]
  • [4 best. _Ed:_ best; _1633-54_
  • Sate we on one anothers breasts. _1669_]
  • [6 With _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _P_, _S_, _TC:_ By _1635-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [8 string; _Ed:_ string, _1633-69_]
  • [9 to'entergraft _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC:_ to engraft _1635-69_, _A25_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [11 in _1633-69_, _P:_ on _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [15 their _1633 and most MSS.:_ our _1635-69_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • [18 lay; _Ed:_ lay, _1633-69_]
  • [25 knew _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _N_, _P_, _TC:_ knowes _1633_, _D_, _Lec_]
  • [29 doth] do _1669_]
  • [31 sexe, _1669:_ sexe _1633-54_]
  • [42 Interinanimates _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC:_ Interanimates _1633-69_, _D_, _Lec_]
  • [44 loneliness] loveliness _1669_]
  • [46 made, _1633-39:_ made: _1650-69_]
  • [47 Atomies _1633-54:_ Atomes _1669_]
  • [48 are soules, _1633_, _1669:_ are soule, _1635-54_]
  • [51 though they are not _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ though not
  • _1633-69_]
  • [52 spheare. _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ spheares. _1633-69_]
  • [55 forces, sense, _A18_, _A25_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ senses force _1633-69_]
  • [59 Soe _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _H40_, _JC_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TC:_ For _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [64 makes] make _1635-39_]
  • [72 his] the _1669_]
  • [76 gone. _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _TC:_ growne. _1635-69_, _P_, _S96_]
  • _Loves Deitie._
  • I long to talke with some old lovers ghost,
  • Who dyed before the god of Love was borne:
  • I cannot thinke that hee, who then lov'd most,
  • Sunke so low, as to love one which did scorne.
  • But since this god produc'd a destinie, 5
  • And that vice-nature, custome, lets it be;
  • I must love her, that loves not mee.
  • Sure, they which made him god, meant not so much,
  • Nor he, in his young godhead practis'd it;
  • But when an even flame two hearts did touch, 10
  • His office was indulgently to fit
  • Actives to passives. Correspondencie
  • Only his subject was; It cannot bee
  • Love, till I love her, that loves mee.
  • But every moderne god will now extend 15
  • His vast prerogative, as far as Jove.
  • To rage, to lust, to write to, to commend,
  • All is the purlewe of the God of Love.
  • Oh were wee wak'ned by this Tyrannie
  • To ungod this child againe, it could not bee 20
  • I should love her, who loves not mee.
  • Rebell and Atheist too, why murmure I,
  • As though I felt the worst that love could doe?
  • Love might make me leave loving, or might trie
  • A deeper plague, to make her love mee too, 25
  • Which, since she loves before, I'am loth to see;
  • Falshood is worse then hate; and that must bee,
  • If shee whom I love, should love mee.
  • [Loves Deitie. _1633-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD:_ Elegye. _P_]
  • [8 much, _1639-69:_ much: _1633:_ much? _1635_]
  • [9 it; _Ed:_ it. _1633-69_]
  • [13 subject] _Subject 1669_]
  • [14 Love, ... mee. _1633_, _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H40_ (who), _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _S_ (lov'd), _TCD:_
  • Love, if I love, who loves not me. _1635-54_, _O'F_]
  • [19 Oh ... wak'ned] Were we not weak'ned _1669_]
  • [21 That I should love, who loves not me. _A18_, _A25_, _C_,
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TC:_ _O'F reads as these but alters to as in printed edd._]
  • [24 might make _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ may make _1633-69_,
  • _Lec_]
  • [26 Which,] Which _1633_]
  • _Loves diet._
  • To what a combersome unwieldinesse
  • And burdenous corpulence my love had growne,
  • But that I did, to make it lesse,
  • And keepe it in proportion,
  • Give it a diet, made it feed upon 5
  • That which love worst endures, _discretion_.
  • Above one sigh a day I'allow'd him not,
  • Of which my fortune, and my faults had part;
  • And if sometimes by stealth he got
  • A she sigh from my mistresse heart, 10
  • And thought to feast on that, I let him see
  • 'Twas neither very sound, nor meant to mee.
  • If he wroung from mee'a teare, I brin'd it so
  • With scorne or shame, that him it nourish'd not;
  • If he suck'd hers, I let him know 15
  • 'Twas not a teare, which hee had got,
  • His drinke was counterfeit, as was his meat;
  • For, eyes which rowle towards all, weepe not, but sweat.
  • What ever he would dictate, I writ that,
  • But burnt my letters; When she writ to me, 20
  • And that that favour made him fat,
  • I said, if any title bee
  • Convey'd by this, Ah, what doth it availe,
  • To be the fortieth name in an entaile?
  • Thus I reclaim'd my buzard love, to flye 25
  • At what, and when, and how, and where I chuse;
  • Now negligent of sport I lye,
  • And now as other Fawkners use,
  • I spring a mistresse, sweare, write, sigh and weepe:
  • And the game kill'd, or lost, goe talke, and sleepe. 30
  • [Loves diet. _1633-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCC_ (_torn
  • out of TCD_): Amoris Dieta. _S96_]
  • [12 mee. _Ed:_ mee; _1633-35:_ mee: _1639-69_]
  • [18 For,] Her _1669_]
  • [19 Whatever ... that, _1633-39_, _1669:_ Whate'er might him
  • distast I still writ that, _1650-54:_ Whatsoever hee would
  • distast I writt that, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [20 But burnt my letters; When she writ to me, _1633:_ But
  • burnt her letters when she writ to me, _1635:_ But burnt her
  • letters when she writ to me; _1639-54_, _Chambers:_ But burnt
  • my letters which she writ to me; _1669_]
  • [21 that that _1633:_ if that _1635-69_. _See note_]
  • [24 name] man _1669_]
  • [25 reclaim'd _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCC:_ redeem'd _1633_, _Lec_]
  • [26 chuse] chose _1669_]
  • [27 sport _1635-69_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC:_ sports, _1633_]
  • [30 and _1633 and most MSS.:_ or _1635-69_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • _The Will._
  • Before I sigh my last gaspe, let me breath,
  • Great love, some Legacies; Here I bequeath
  • Mine eyes to _Argus_, if mine eyes can see,
  • If they be blinde, then Love, I give them thee;
  • My tongue to Fame; to'Embassadours mine eares; 5
  • To women or the sea, my teares.
  • Thou, Love, hast taught mee heretofore
  • By making mee serve her who'had twenty more,
  • That I should give to none, but such, as had too much before.
  • My constancie I to the planets give; 10
  • My truth to them, who at the Court doe live;
  • Mine ingenuity and opennesse,
  • To Jesuites; to Buffones my pensivenesse;
  • My silence to'any, who abroad hath beene;
  • My mony to a Capuchin. 15
  • Thou Love taught'st me, by appointing mee
  • To love there, where no love receiv'd can be,
  • Onely to give to such as have an incapacitie.
  • My faith I give to Roman Catholiques;
  • All my good works unto the Schismaticks 20
  • Of Amsterdam; my best civility
  • And Courtship, to an Universitie;
  • My modesty I give to souldiers bare;
  • My patience let gamesters share.
  • Thou Love taughtst mee, by making mee 25
  • Love her that holds my love disparity,
  • Onely to give to those that count my gifts indignity.
  • I give my reputation to those
  • Which were my friends; Mine industrie to foes;
  • To Schoolemen I bequeath my doubtfulnesse; 30
  • My sicknesse to Physitians, or excesse;
  • To Nature, all that I in Ryme have writ;
  • And to my company my wit.
  • Thou Love, by making mee adore
  • Her, who begot this love in mee before, 35
  • Taughtst me to make, as though I gave, when I did but restore.
  • To him for whom the passing bell next tolls,
  • I give my physick bookes; my writen rowles
  • Of Morall counsels, I to Bedlam give;
  • My brazen medals, unto them which live 40
  • In want of bread; To them which passe among
  • All forrainers, mine English tongue.
  • Thou, Love, by making mee love one
  • Who thinkes her friendship a fit portion
  • For yonger lovers, dost my gifts thus disproportion. 45
  • Therefore I'll give no more; But I'll undoe
  • The world by dying; because love dies too.
  • Then all your beauties will bee no more worth
  • Then gold in Mines, where none doth draw it forth;
  • And all your graces no more use shall have 50
  • Then a Sun dyall in a grave.
  • Thou Love taughtst mee, by making mee
  • Love her, who doth neglect both mee and thee,
  • To'invent, and practise this one way, to'annihilate all three.
  • [The Will. _1633-69:_ _do. or_ A Will. _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _M_, _O'F_, _P:_ Loves Will. _L74:_
  • Loves Legacies. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_ (_torn out of TCD_), _S:_
  • Testamentum. _S96:_ His Last Will and Testament. _JC_]
  • [2 Here I _1633-54:_ I here _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [6 teares. _Ed:_ teares; _1633-69_]
  • [8 serve her] love her _1669_]
  • [10 give; _Ed:_ give, _1633-69_]
  • [10-27 _These stanzas printed without a break, 1669_]
  • [14 hath] have _1669_]
  • [18 an incapacitie.] no good Capacity. _1669_]
  • [19-27 _omitted_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _L74_ (_added later_), _Lec_, _M_ (_added later_), _N_,
  • _P_, _TCC:_ _given in O'F_, _S_, _and all editions_]
  • [33 wit. _Ed:_ wit; _1633-69_]
  • [34 Love, _1650-69:_ love, _1633-39_]
  • [36 did _1633 and MSS.:_ do _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [45 gifts _1633-35_, _1669:_ gift _1639-54_]
  • [46 more; But _1633:_ more, but _1635-69_]
  • [49-51 forth; ... grave. _1669:_ forth ... grave, _1633-39 by
  • interchange:_ forth ... grave. _1650-54_]
  • [54 all three. _1633-39_, three _being below the line in 1633
  • and above in 1635-39:_ al. three _1650-54_, _the full stop
  • having fallen from_ three _to_ all _below it:_ annihilate
  • thee. _1669_]
  • _The Funerall._
  • Who ever comes to shroud me, do not harme
  • Nor question much
  • That subtile wreath of haire, which crowns my arme;
  • The mystery, the signe you must not touch,
  • For 'tis my outward Soule, 5
  • Viceroy to that, which then to heaven being gone,
  • Will leave this to controule,
  • And keepe these limbes, her Provinces, from dissolution.
  • For if the sinewie thread my braine lets fall
  • Through every part, 10
  • Can tye those parts, and make mee one of all;
  • These haires which upward grew, and strength and art
  • Have from a better braine,
  • Can better do'it; Except she meant that I
  • By this should know my pain, 15
  • As prisoners then are manacled, when they'are condemn'd to die.
  • What ere shee meant by'it, bury it with me,
  • For since I am
  • Loves martyr, it might breed idolatrie,
  • If into others hands these Reliques came; 20
  • As'twas humility
  • To afford to it all that a Soule can doe,
  • So,'tis some bravery,
  • That since you would save none of mee, I bury some of you.
  • [The Funerall. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [3 which ... arme;] about mine arm; _1669_]
  • [6 then to _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ unto _1633-69_]
  • [12 These _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _S_ (The),
  • _S96_, _TC:_ Those _1633-69_, _Lec_, _O'F_ grew, _1633-39:_
  • grow, _1650-69_]
  • [16 condemn'd] condem'nd _1633_]
  • [17 with me, _1635-69 and MSS.:_ by me, _1633_]
  • [24 save _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TC:_
  • have _1633-69_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S96:_ _om. S_]
  • _The Blossome._
  • Little think'st thou, poore flower,
  • Whom I have watch'd sixe or seaven dayes,
  • And seene thy birth, and seene what every houre
  • Gave to thy growth, thee to this height to raise,
  • And now dost laugh and triumph on this bough, 5
  • Little think'st thou
  • That it will freeze anon, and that I shall
  • To morrow finde thee falne, or not at all.
  • Little think'st thou poore heart
  • That labour'st yet to nestle thee, 10
  • And think'st by hovering here to get a part
  • In a forbidden or forbidding tree,
  • And hop'st her stiffenesse by long siege to bow:
  • Little think'st thou,
  • That thou to morrow, ere that Sunne doth wake, 15
  • Must with this Sunne, and mee a journey take.
  • But thou which lov'st to bee
  • Subtile to plague thy selfe, wilt say,
  • Alas, if you must goe, what's that to mee?
  • Here lyes my businesse, and here I will stay: 20
  • You goe to friends, whose love and meanes present
  • Various content
  • To your eyes, eares, and tongue, and every part.
  • If then your body goe, what need you a heart?
  • Well then, stay here; but know, 25
  • When thou hast stayd and done thy most;
  • A naked thinking heart, that makes no show,
  • Is to a woman, but a kinde of Ghost;
  • How shall shee know my heart; or having none,
  • Know thee for one? 30
  • Practise may make her know some other part,
  • But take my word, shee doth not know a Heart.
  • Meet mee at London, then,
  • Twenty dayes hence, and thou shalt see
  • Mee fresher, and more fat, by being with men, 35
  • Then if I had staid still with her and thee.
  • For Gods sake, if you can, be you so too:
  • I would give you
  • There, to another friend, whom wee shall finde
  • As glad to have my body, as my minde. 40
  • [The Blossome. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title_, _A25_]
  • [9-13 poore heart ... bow:] _in brackets 1650-69_]
  • [10 labour'st _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ labourest _1635-69:_ labours
  • _1633_]
  • [15 that Sunne _1633:_ the Sunne _1635-69_]
  • [18 wilt] will _1669_]
  • [23 tongue _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _TC:_ _om. S:_ tast _1633-69_]
  • [24 need you a heart? _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ need you have a heart? _JC:_ need
  • your heart? _1633-69_]
  • [38 I would _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ I will _1633-69_, _Lec_]
  • _The Primrose, being at Montgomery Castle, upon the hill, on which it
  • is situate._
  • Vpon this Primrose hill,
  • Where, if Heav'n would distill
  • A shoure of raine, each severall drop might goe
  • To his owne primrose, and grow Manna so;
  • And where their forme, and their infinitie 5
  • Make a terrestriall Galaxie,
  • As the small starres doe in the skie:
  • I walke to finde a true Love; and I see
  • That'tis not a mere woman, that is shee,
  • But must, or more, or lesse then woman bee. 10
  • Yet know I not, which flower
  • I wish; a sixe, or foure;
  • For should my true-Love lesse then woman bee,
  • She were scarce any thing; and then, should she
  • Be more then woman, shee would get above 15
  • All thought of sexe, and thinke to move
  • My heart to study her, and not to love;
  • Both these were monsters; Since there must reside
  • Falshood in woman, I could more abide,
  • She were by art, then Nature falsify'd. 20
  • Live Primrose then, and thrive
  • With thy true number five;
  • And women, whom this flower doth represent,
  • With this mysterious number be content;
  • Ten is the farthest number; if halfe ten 25
  • Belonge unto each woman, then
  • Each woman may take halfe us men;
  • Or if this will not serve their turne, Since all
  • Numbers are odde, or even, and they fall
  • First into this, five, women may take us all. 30
  • [The Primrose. _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ The Primrose, being at _&c._
  • _1635-69_]
  • [16 sexe, _1633:_ sexe; _1635-69_]
  • [17 and not] and _om. 1635-39, A18, N, S, TC_]
  • [23 women] woman _Chambers_]
  • [25 number; _Ed:_ number, _1633-69_]
  • [26 Belonge _all the MSS.:_ Belongs _1633-69_. _See note_]
  • [27 men; _Ed:_ men, _1633-39:_ men: _1650-69_]
  • [28 their _1633-39:_ the _1650-69_]
  • [29 and _1633:_ since _1635-69_]
  • [30 this, _Ed:_ this _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ _om. 1635-69, O'F, Chambers_]
  • _The Relique._
  • When my grave is broke up againe
  • Some second ghest to entertaine,
  • (For graves have learn'd that woman-head
  • To be to more then one a Bed)
  • And he that digs it, spies 5
  • A bracelet of bright haire about the bone,
  • Will he not let'us alone,
  • And thinke that there a loving couple lies,
  • Who thought that this device might be some way
  • To make their soules, at the last busie day, 10
  • Meet at this grave, and make a little stay?
  • If this fall in a time, or land,
  • Where mis-devotion doth command,
  • Then, he that digges us up, will bring
  • Us, to the Bishop, and the King, 15
  • To make us Reliques; then
  • Thou shalt be a Mary Magdalen, and I
  • A something else thereby;
  • All women shall adore us, and some men;
  • And since at such time, miracles are sought, 20
  • I would have that age by this paper taught
  • What miracles wee harmelesse lovers wrought.
  • First, we lov'd well and faithfully,
  • Yet knew not what wee lov'd, nor why,
  • Difference of sex no more wee knew, 25
  • Then our Guardian Angells doe;
  • Comming and going, wee
  • Perchance might kisse, but not between those meales;
  • Our hands ne'r toucht the seales,
  • Which nature, injur'd by late law, sets free: 30
  • These miracles wee did; but now alas,
  • All measure, and all language, I would passe,
  • Should I tell what a miracle shee was.
  • [The Relique. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title, A25_]
  • [13 mis-devotion _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ mass-devotion
  • _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [15 and _1633-54 and MSS.:_ or _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [17 Thou shalt be] You shal be _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _S_. _See note_]
  • [20 time] times _JC_, _O'F_]
  • [21 have that age] that age were _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [25-26 Difference ... doe, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_
  • Difference of Sex we never knew,
  • No more then Guardian Angells do, _1635-69:_
  • Difference of Sex we never knew,
  • More then our Guardian Angells do. _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _S_, _S96_ (No more then our _&c._ _B_,
  • _S96_)]
  • [26 doe; _Ed:_ doe, _1633-69_]
  • [27 wee _Ed:_ wee, _1633-69_]
  • [28 not] yet _1669_
  • meales; _Ed:_ meales. _1633:_ meales _1635-69, following some
  • copies of 1633_]
  • [30 sets] set _1669_ free: _1650-69:_ free, _1633-39_]
  • _The Dampe._
  • When I am dead, and Doctors know not why,
  • And my friends curiositie
  • Will have me cut up to survay each part,
  • When they shall finde your Picture in my heart,
  • You thinke a sodaine dampe of love 5
  • Will through all their senses move,
  • And worke on them as mee, and so preferre
  • Your murder, to the name of Massacre.
  • Poore victories! But if you dare be brave,
  • And pleasure in your conquest have, 10
  • First kill th'enormous Gyant, your _Disdaine_,
  • And let th'enchantresse _Honor_, next be slaine,
  • And like a Goth and Vandall rize,
  • Deface Records, and Histories
  • Of your owne arts and triumphs over men, 15
  • And without such advantage kill me then.
  • For I could muster up as well as you
  • My Gyants, and my Witches too,
  • Which are vast _Constancy_, and _Secretnesse_,
  • But these I neyther looke for, nor professe; 20
  • Kill mee as Woman, let mee die
  • As a meere man; doe you but try
  • Your passive valor, and you shall finde than,
  • In that you'have odds enough of any man.
  • [The Dampe. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [4 When] And _1669_
  • my _1633-39:_ mine _1650-69_]
  • [9 victories! _1650-69:_ victories; _1633-39_]
  • [10 your] the _1669_
  • conquest] conquests _JC_]
  • [13 and Vandall _1633-54_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ or Vandall _1669_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [15 arts] acts _1669_, _JC_]
  • [20 professe; _Ed:_ professe, _1633-69_]
  • [24 In that _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ Naked _1635-69_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_]
  • _The Dissolution._
  • Shee'is dead; And all which die
  • To their first Elements resolve;
  • And wee were mutuall Elements to us,
  • And made of one another.
  • My body then doth hers involve, 5
  • And those things whereof I consist, hereby
  • In me abundant grow, and burdenous,
  • And nourish not, but smother.
  • My fire of Passion, sighes of ayre,
  • Water of teares, and earthly sad despaire, 10
  • Which my materialls bee,
  • But neere worne out by loves securitie,
  • Shee, to my losse, doth by her death repaire,
  • And I might live long wretched so
  • But that my fire doth with my fuell grow. 15
  • Now as those Active Kings
  • Whose foraine conquest treasure brings,
  • Receive more, and spend more, and soonest breake:
  • This (which I am amaz'd that I can speake)
  • This death, hath with my store 20
  • My use encreas'd.
  • And so my soule more earnestly releas'd,
  • Will outstrip hers; As bullets flowen before
  • A latter bullet may o'rtake, the pouder being more.
  • [The Dissolution. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [10 earthly _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ earthy _1635-69_]
  • [12 neere _1635-69_ (But ... securitie _bracketed 1669_): ne'r
  • _1633_]
  • [24 latter] later _1669_]
  • _A Ieat Ring Sent._
  • Thou art not so black, as my heart,
  • Nor halfe so brittle, as her heart, thou art;
  • What would'st thou say? shall both our properties by thee bee spoke,
  • Nothing more endlesse, nothing sooner broke?
  • Marriage rings are not of this stuffe; 5
  • Oh, why should ought lesse precious, or lesse tough
  • Figure our loves? Except in thy name thou have bid it say,
  • I'am cheap, and nought but fashion, fling me'away.
  • Yet stay with mee since thou art come,
  • Circle this fingers top, which did'st her thombe. 10
  • Be justly proud, and gladly safe, that thou dost dwell with me,
  • She that, Oh, broke her faith, would soon breake thee.
  • [A Ieat Ring sent. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • To a Jeat Ring sent to me. _W_ (_among the_ Epigrams)]
  • [7 loves] love _O'F_ say, _Ed:_ say _1633-69_]
  • _Negative love._
  • I never stoop'd so low, as they
  • Which on an eye, cheeke, lip, can prey,
  • Seldome to them, which soare no higher
  • Then vertue or the minde to'admire,
  • For sense, and understanding may 5
  • Know, what gives fuell to their fire:
  • My love, though silly, is more brave,
  • For may I misse, when ere I crave,
  • If I know yet, what I would have.
  • If that be simply perfectest 10
  • Which can by no way be exprest
  • But _Negatives_, my love is so.
  • To All, which all love, I say no.
  • If any who deciphers best,
  • What we know not, our selves, can know, 15
  • Let him teach mee that nothing; This
  • As yet my ease, and comfort is,
  • Though I speed not, I cannot misse.
  • [Negative love. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Negative
  • Love: or the Nothing. _O'F:_ The Nothing. _A25_, _C_]
  • [4 to'admire, _1633-39:_ to'admire; _1650-69_]
  • [5 For] Both _A25_, _C_]
  • [11 way] means _1669_, _O'F_]
  • [16 nothing; _1633:_ nothing. _1635-69_]
  • _The Prohibition._
  • Take heed of loving mee,
  • At least remember, I forbade it thee;
  • Not that I shall repaire my'unthrifty wast
  • Of Breath and Blood, upon thy sighes, and teares,
  • By being to thee then what to me thou wast; 5
  • But, so great Joy, our life at once outweares,
  • Then, least thy love, by my death, frustrate bee,
  • If thou love mee, take heed of loving mee.
  • Take heed of hating mee,
  • Or too much triumph in the Victorie. 10
  • Not that I shall be mine owne officer,
  • And hate with hate againe retaliate;
  • But thou wilt lose the stile of conquerour,
  • If I, thy conquest, perish by thy hate.
  • Then, least my being nothing lessen thee, 15
  • If thou hate mee, take heed of hating mee.
  • Yet, love and hate mee too,
  • So, these extreames shall neithers office doe;
  • Love mee, that I may die the gentler way;
  • Hate mee, because thy love is too great for mee; 20
  • Or let these two, themselves, not me decay;
  • So shall I, live, thy Stage, not triumph bee;
  • Lest thou thy love and hate and mee undoe,
  • _To let mee live, O love and hate mee too._
  • [The Prohibition. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no
  • title_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S96:_
  • _in B first two verses headed_ J. D., _last verse_ T. R.: _in
  • A18_, _N_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD the last stanza is omitted_]
  • [3 repaire my'unthrifty wast] repay in unthrifty a wast,
  • _1669_]
  • [5 By ... wast; _Ed:_ By ... wast, _1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _RP31_, _S96_ (mee _for_ thee _B_, _P_): By
  • being to mee then that which thou wast; _1633:_ _om._ _A18_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [18 neithers _Ed:_ neythers _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC:_ neyther
  • _O'F_, _RP31:_ neyther their _Cy:_ ne'r their _1633-69_, _B_]
  • [20 thy _1635-69:_ my _1633_ (thy _in some copies_)]
  • [22 I, live, _Ed:_ I live _1633-69_
  • Stage, _1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _O'F:_ stay, _1633_, _JC:_
  • staye, _D_, _H49_
  • not] and _H40_]
  • [23-4
  • Lest thou thy love and hate and mee undoe
  • _To let mee live, Oh_ (of _in some copies_)
  • _love and hate mee too._
  • _1633_, _B_
  • Then lest thou thy love hate, and mee thou undoe
  • _O let me live, yet love and hate me too._
  • _1635-54_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_ (_MSS.
  • omitting first_ thou _and some with_ Oh _for_ yet)
  • Lest thou thy love, and hate, and me thou undo,
  • _O let me live, yet love and hate me too._
  • _1669_.]
  • _The Expiration._
  • So, so, breake off this last lamenting kisse,
  • Which sucks two soules, and vapors Both away,
  • Turne thou ghost that way, and let mee turne this,
  • And let our selves benight our happiest day,
  • We ask'd none leave to love; nor will we owe 5
  • Any, so cheape a death, as saying, Goe;
  • Goe; and if that word have not quite kil'd thee,
  • Ease mee with death, by bidding mee goe too.
  • Oh, if it have, let my word worke on mee,
  • And a just office on a murderer doe. 10
  • Except it be too late, to kill me so,
  • Being double dead, going, and bidding, goe.
  • [The Expiration. _1633-69:_ An Expiration. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD:_ Valediction. _B:_ Valedictio. _O'F:_ Valedictio Amoris.
  • _S:_ Valedico. _P:_ _no title_, _A25_, _C_, _JC_]
  • [1 So, so,] So, go _1669_]
  • [5 ask'd _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_ _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC:_
  • aske _1633-69_, _P_, _S_]
  • [9 Oh, _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _JC_, _N_, _TC:_ Or, _1635-69_,
  • _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • _The Computation._
  • For the first twenty yeares, since yesterday,
  • I scarce beleev'd, thou could'st be gone away,
  • For forty more, I fed on favours past,
  • And forty'on hopes, that thou would'st, they might last.
  • Teares drown'd one hundred, and sighes blew out two, 5
  • A thousand, I did neither thinke, nor doe,
  • Or not divide, all being one thought of you;
  • Or in a thousand more, forgot that too.
  • Yet call not this long life; But thinke that I
  • Am, by being dead, Immortall; Can ghosts die? 10
  • [The Computation. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no
  • title_, _B_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [1 For _1633-54:_ From _1669_
  • the _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ my _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [3 For] And _1669_]
  • [6 One thousand I did think nothing nor doe, _S_, _O'F_
  • (nothing think) doe, _1635-69:_ doe. _1633_]
  • [7 divide, _1633_, _1669:_ deem'd, _1635-54_, _O'F_]
  • [8 a] one _O'F_, _S:_ _line dropped_ _A18_, _N_, _TC_
  • forgot] forget _1669_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_]
  • _The Paradox._
  • No Lover saith, I love, nor any other
  • Can judge a perfect Lover;
  • Hee thinkes that else none can, nor will agree
  • That any loves but hee:
  • I cannot say I lov'd, for who can say 5
  • Hee was kill'd yesterday?
  • Love with excesse of heat, more yong then old,
  • Death kills with too much cold;
  • Wee dye but once, and who lov'd last did die,
  • Hee that saith twice, doth lye: 10
  • For though hee seeme to move, and stirre a while,
  • It doth the sense beguile.
  • Such life is like the light which bideth yet
  • When the lights life is set,
  • Or like the heat, which fire in solid matter 15
  • Leaves behinde, two houres after.
  • Once I lov'd and dy'd; and am now become
  • Mine Epitaph and Tombe.
  • Here dead men speake their last, and so do I;
  • Love-slaine, loe, here I lye. 20
  • [The Paradox. _1635-69_: _no title_, _1633_, _A18_, _H40_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_ _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [3 can, nor will agree _A18_, _H40_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_:
  • can or will agree, _1633-69_]
  • [6 yesterday?] yesterday. _1633-39_]
  • [14 lights life _H40_, _L74_, _RP31_, _S:_ lifes light
  • _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [15 which _Ed:_ which, _1633-69_]
  • [17 lov'd _A18_, _H40_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC:_ love
  • _1633-69_
  • dy'd] dyed _1633-69_]
  • [20 lye. _H40_, _RP31_, _S_, _S96:_ dye. _1633-69_, _A18_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • _Farewell to Love._
  • Whilst yet to prove,
  • I thought there was some Deitie in love
  • So did I reverence, and gave
  • Worship; as Atheists at their dying houre
  • Call, what they cannot name, an unknowne power, 5
  • As ignorantly did I crave:
  • Thus when
  • Things not yet knowne are coveted by men,
  • Our desires give them fashion, and so
  • As they waxe lesser, fall, as they sise, grow. 10
  • But, from late faire
  • His hignesse sitting in a golden Chaire,
  • Is not lesse cared for after three dayes
  • By children, then the thing which lovers so
  • Blindly admire, and with such worship wooe; 15
  • Being had, enjoying it decayes:
  • And thence,
  • What before pleas'd them all, takes but one sense,
  • And that so lamely, as it leaves behinde
  • A kinde of sorrowing dulnesse to the minde. 20
  • Ah cannot wee,
  • As well as Cocks and Lyons jocund be,
  • After such pleasures? Unlesse wise
  • Nature decreed (since each such Act, they say,
  • Diminisheth the length of life a day) 25
  • This, as shee would man should despise
  • The sport;
  • Because that other curse of being short,
  • And onely for a minute made to be,
  • (Eagers desire) to raise posterity. 30
  • Since so, my minde
  • Shall not desire what no man else can finde,
  • I'll no more dote and runne
  • To pursue things which had indammag'd me.
  • And when I come where moving beauties be, 35
  • As men doe when the summers Sunne
  • Growes great,
  • Though I admire their greatnesse, shun their heat;
  • Each place can afford shadowes. If all faile,
  • 'Tis but applying worme-seed to the Taile. 40
  • [Farewell to love. _1635-69_ (_following_ Soules joy: _p._
  • 429), _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [4 Worship; _Ed:_ Worship, _1635-69_]
  • [10 sise, _1635-69_, _O'F:_ rise _S96_]
  • [23 pleasures? _Ed:_ pleasures, _1635-69_]
  • [26 This, _Ed:_ This; _1635-69_]
  • [27 sport; _Ed:_ sport, _1635-69_]
  • [29 to be, _Ed:_ to be _1635-69_]
  • [30 (Eagers desire) _Ed:_ Eager, desires _1635-69_. _See
  • note_]
  • [36 summers _1635-69:_ summer _1650-1669_]
  • _A Lecture upon the Shadow._
  • Stand still, and I will read to thee
  • A Lecture, Love, in loves philosophy.
  • These three houres that we have spent,
  • Walking here, Two shadowes went
  • Along with us, which we our selves produc'd; 5
  • But, now the Sunne is just above our head,
  • We doe those shadowes tread;
  • And to brave clearnesse all things are reduc'd.
  • So whilst our infant loves did grow,
  • Disguises did, and shadowes, flow, 10
  • From us, and our cares; but, now 'tis not so.
  • That love hath not attain'd the high'st degree,
  • Which is still diligent lest others see.
  • Except our loves at this noone stay,
  • We shall new shadowes make the other way. 15
  • As the first were made to blinde
  • Others; these which come behinde
  • Will worke upon our selves, and blind our eyes.
  • If our loves faint, and westwardly decline;
  • To me thou, falsly, thine, 20
  • And I to thee mine actions shall disguise.
  • The morning shadowes weare away,
  • But these grow longer all the day,
  • But oh, loves day is short, if love decay.
  • Love is a growing, or full constant light; 25
  • And his first minute, after noone, is night.
  • [A Lecture _&c._ _1650-69:_ Lecture _&c_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD:_ Song. _1635-39_ (_following_ Dear Love continue: _p._
  • 412): The Shadowe. _O'F_, _P:_ Shadowe. _S96:_ Loves Lecture.
  • _S:_ Loves Lecture upon the Shaddow. _L74:_ Loves Philosophy.
  • _JC:_ _no title_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [4 Walking _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _TC:_ In walking _B_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _S96_
  • here, _1719:_ here; _1635-39:_ here: _1650-69_]
  • [9 loves _1635-54_, _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TC:_ love _1669_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [12 high'st] least _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _S96_]
  • [14 loves _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _L74_, _N_, _TC:_ love _B_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [19 If our loves faint _1635-69_, _A25_, _O'F_ (love), _P_,
  • _S96_ (love), _TC:_ If once love faint _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _S_]
  • [26 first _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC:_ short _1635-69_]
  • _Sonnet. The Token._
  • Send me some token, that my hope may live,
  • Or that my easelesse thoughts may sleep and rest;
  • Send me some honey to make sweet my hive,
  • That in my passion I may hope the best.
  • I beg noe ribbond wrought with thine owne hands, 5
  • To knit our loves in the fantastick straine
  • Of new-toucht youth; nor Ring to shew the stands
  • Of our affection, that as that's round and plaine,
  • So should our loves meet in simplicity;
  • No, nor the Coralls which thy wrist infold, 10
  • Lac'd up together in congruity,
  • To shew our thoughts should rest in the same hold;
  • No, nor thy picture, though most gracious,
  • And most desir'd, because best like the best;
  • Nor witty Lines, which are most copious, 15
  • Within the Writings which thou hast addrest.
  • Send me nor this, nor that, t'increase my store,
  • But swear thou thinkst I love thee, and no more.
  • [Sonnet. The Token. _1649-69_ (_following_ Vpon Mr. Thomas
  • Coryats Crudities. _at close of_ Epicedes): Ad Lesbiam. _S96_:
  • _no title_, _B_, _Cy_: Sonnet. _O'F_: Elegie. _P_]
  • [1 token _B_, _O'F_, _S96_: Tokens _1650-69_, _P_]
  • [4 passion _S96_: passions _1650-69_, _B_, _P_]
  • [5 noe _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ nor _1650-69_]
  • [9 simplicity; _Ed:_ simplicity. _1650-69_]
  • [11 in _1650-69:_ with _B_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [12 hold; _Ed:_ hold. _1650-69_]
  • [14 desir'd because ... best; _B_, _O'F_, _S96:_ desired
  • 'cause 'tis like thee best; _1650-54:_ desired 'cause 'tis
  • like the best; _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [17 store, _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ score, _1650-69_]
  • <_Selfe Love._>
  • He that cannot chuse but love,
  • And strives against it still,
  • Never shall my fancy move;
  • For he loves 'gaynst his will;
  • Nor he which is all his own, 5
  • And can att pleasure chuse,
  • When I am caught he can be gone,
  • And when he list refuse.
  • Nor he that loves none but faire,
  • For such by all are sought; 10
  • Nor he that can for foul ones care,
  • For his Judgement then is nought:
  • Nor he that hath wit, for he
  • Will make me his jest or slave;
  • Nor a fool, for when others..., 15
  • He can neither....
  • Nor he that still his Mistresse payes,
  • For she is thrall'd therefore:
  • Nor he that payes not, for he sayes
  • Within, shee's worth no more. 20
  • Is there then no kinde of men
  • Whom I may freely prove?
  • I will vent that humour then
  • In mine own selfe love.
  • [ Love.> _title given by Chambers:_ _no title, 1650-69_
  • (_in appendix_), _JC_, _O'F_]
  • [4 'gaynst _JC_, _O'F:_ against _1650-69_]
  • [6 And can ... chuse, _JC:_ And cannot pleasure chuse,
  • _1650-69:_ And can all pleasures chuse, _O'F_]
  • [11 foul ones] fouleness _O'F_]
  • [14 slave; _1719:_ slave _1650-69_]
  • [15 fool, _1719:_ fool _1650-69_]
  • [17 payes, _JC_, _O'F:_ prays, _1650-69_]
  • [19 payes not,] payes, not, _1650-69_]
  • [20 Within, _Ed:_ Within _1650-69_]
  • _The end of the Songs and Sonets._
  • * * * * *
  • EPIGRAMS.
  • _Hero_ and _Leander_.
  • Both rob'd of aire, we both lye in one ground,
  • Both whom one fire had burnt, one water drownd.
  • [Hero and Leander. _1633-69_, _A18_, _HN_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD_, _W_]
  • _Pyramus_ and _Thisbe_.
  • Two, by themselves, each other, love and feare
  • Slaine, cruell friends, by parting have joyn'd here.
  • [Pyramus and Thisbe. _1633-69_, _A18_, _Cy_, _HN_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [1: feare] feare, _Chambers, and Grolier_ (_which drops all
  • the other commas_)]
  • _Niobe._
  • By childrens births, and death, I am become
  • So dry, that I am now mine owne sad tombe.
  • [Niobe. _1633-69_, _A18_, _HN_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [2: mine owne sad tombe. _1633-69:_ mine owne tombe. _A18_,
  • _N_, _TC:_ made mine owne tombe. _HN_, _W_]
  • _A burnt ship._
  • Out of a fired ship, which, by no way
  • But drowning, could be rescued from the flame,
  • Some men leap'd forth, and ever as they came
  • Neere the foes ships, did by their shot decay;
  • So all were lost, which in the ship were found,
  • They in the sea being burnt, they in the burnt ship drown'd.
  • [A burnt ship. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Nave arsa.
  • _W:_ De Nave arsa. _O'F_. _See note_]
  • _Fall of a wall._
  • Vnder an undermin'd, and shot-bruis'd wall
  • A too-bold Captaine perish'd by the fall,
  • Whose brave misfortune, happiest men envi'd,
  • That had a towne for tombe, his bones to hide.
  • [Fall of a wall. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Caso
  • d'un muro. _O'F_, _W_]
  • [4 towne _1633 and MSS.:_ towre _1635-69_
  • bones _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ corpse _B_, _HN_, _O'F_,
  • _W_]
  • _A lame begger._
  • I am unable, yonder begger cries,
  • To stand, or move; if he say true, hee _lies_.
  • [A lame begger. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ A beggar. _HN:_
  • _no title_, _P:_ Zoppo. _O'F_, _W_]
  • _Cales_ and _Guyana_.
  • If you from spoyle of th'old worlds farthest end
  • To the new world your kindled valors bend,
  • What brave examples then do prove it trew
  • That one things end doth still beginne a new.
  • [Cales and Guyana. _O'F:_ Calez _&c._ _W:_ _first printed in
  • Gosse's_ Life and Letters of John Donne (1899)]
  • _Sir Iohn Wingefield._
  • Beyond th'old Pillers many have travailed
  • Towards the Suns cradle, and his throne, and bed:
  • A fitter Piller our Earle did bestow
  • In that late Island; for he well did know
  • Farther then Wingefield no man dares to goe.
  • [Sir Iohn Wingefield. _Ed:_ Il Cavalliere Gio: Wingef: _W:_
  • On Cavallero Wingfield. _O'F:_ _first printed in Gosse's_ Life
  • and Letters of John Donne (1899)]
  • [2 throne _W:_ grave _O'F_]
  • [4 late _W:_ Lady _O'F_]
  • _A selfe accuser._
  • Your mistris, that you follow whores, still taxeth you:
  • 'Tis strange that she should thus confesse it, though'it be true.
  • [A selfe accuser. _1633-69:_ A Mistrisse. _HN:_ _no title_,
  • _B_, _O'F_, _W_]
  • [2 that] _om._ _HN_, _O'F_, _W_
  • thus] _om._ _HN_, _O'F_, _W_
  • it] _om._ _HN_, _O'F_]
  • _A licentious person._
  • Thy sinnes and haires may no man equall call,
  • For, as thy sinnes increase, thy haires doe fall.
  • [A licentious person. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • Whore. _HN:_ _no title_, _O'F_, _RP31_, _W_]
  • [1 Thy] His _and so throughout_, _RP31_]
  • _Antiquary._
  • If in his Studie he hath so much care
  • To'hang all old strange things, let his wife beware.
  • [Antiquary. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _P_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W:_
  • Hammon. _HN:_ _no title_, _Bur_, _Cy_, _O'F:_ Epigram. _S96_]
  • [1 he hath so much _1633-69:_ he have such _A18_, _N_, _TC:_
  • Hamon hath such _B_, _Cy_, _HN_ (have), _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [2 strange _om._ _B_, _HN_, _O'F_ all _om. Bur_]
  • _Disinherited._
  • Thy father all from thee, by his last Will,
  • Gave to the poore; Thou hast good title still.
  • [Disinherited. _1633-69:_ One disinherited. _HN:_ _no title_,
  • _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _W_]
  • [1 Will, _Ed:_ Will _1633-69_]
  • _Phryne._
  • Thy flattering picture, _Phryne_, is like thee,
  • Onely in this, that you both painted be.
  • [Phryne. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title_,
  • _O'F_]
  • [1 like thee,] like to thee, _1650-69_]
  • _An obscure writer._
  • _Philo_, with twelve yeares study, hath beene griev'd
  • To be understood; when will hee be beleev'd?
  • [An obscure writer. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no
  • title_, _O'F_]
  • [1 griev'd _Ed:_ griev'd, _1633-69_]
  • [2 To be _Ed:_ To'be _1633-69_
  • understood; _Ed:_ understood, _1633-69_
  • beleev'd?] beleev'd. _1633_]
  • _Klockius._
  • _Klockius_ so deeply hath sworne, ne'r more to come
  • In bawdie house, that hee dares not goe home.
  • [Klockius. _HN:_ _no title_, _1633-69_, _Bur_, _O'F_]
  • [1 _Klockius_] Rawlings _Bur_]
  • [2 In bawdie] In a bawdie _HN_]
  • _Raderus._
  • Why this man gelded _Martiall_ I muse,
  • Except himselfe alone his tricks would use,
  • As _Katherine_, for the Courts sake, put downe Stewes.
  • [Raderus. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCD:_ Randerus. _TCC:_
  • Martial: castrat_us_. _W_]
  • [1 _Martiall_ I muse, _1633-54:_ _Martiall_, I amuse, _1669_]
  • _Mercurius Gallo-Belgicus._
  • Like _Esops_ fellow-slaves, O _Mercury_,
  • Which could do all things, thy faith is; and I
  • Like _Esops_ selfe, which nothing; I confesse
  • I should have had more faith, if thou hadst lesse;
  • Thy credit lost thy credit: 'Tis sinne to doe,
  • In this case, as thou wouldst be done unto,
  • To beleeve all: Change thy name: thou art like
  • _Mercury_ in stealing, but lyest like a _Greeke_.
  • [Mercurius Gallo-Belgicus. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [8 but lyest _1633-69:_ and lyest _B_, _W_]
  • _Ralphius._
  • Compassion in the world againe is bred:
  • _Ralphius_ is sick, the broker keeps his bed.
  • [Ralphius. _HN:_ _no title_, _1633-69_, _O'F_]
  • _The Lier._
  • Thou in the fields walkst out thy supping howers,
  • And yet thou swear'st thou hast supp'd like a king:
  • Like Nebuchadnezar perchance with grass and flowers,
  • A sallet worse then Spanish dieting.
  • [The Lier. _HN:_ _no title_, _B_, _Bur_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _W_]
  • [2 swear'st _HN_, _W:_ say'st _B_, _Cy_, _O'F_]
  • [3 grass] hearbes _Bur_
  • supp'd like] supp'd and like _HN_]
  • ELEGIES.
  • ELEGIE I.
  • _Iealosie._
  • Fond woman, which would'st have thy husband die,
  • And yet complain'st of his great jealousie;
  • If swolne with poyson, hee lay in' his last bed,
  • His body with a sere-barke covered,
  • Drawing his breath, as thick and short, as can 5
  • The nimblest crocheting Musitian,
  • Ready with loathsome vomiting to spue
  • His Soule out of one hell, into a new,
  • Made deafe with his poore kindreds howling cries,
  • Begging with few feign'd teares, great legacies, 10
  • Thou would'st not weepe, but jolly,'and frolicke bee,
  • As a slave, which to morrow should be free;
  • Yet weep'st thou, when thou seest him hungerly
  • Swallow his owne death, hearts-bane jealousie.
  • O give him many thanks, he'is courteous, 15
  • That in suspecting kindly warneth us.
  • Wee must not, as wee us'd, flout openly,
  • In scoffing ridles, his deformitie;
  • Nor at his boord together being fatt,
  • With words, nor touch, scarce lookes adulterate. 20
  • Nor when he swolne, and pamper'd with great fare,
  • Sits downe, and snorts, cag'd in his basket chaire,
  • Must wee usurpe his owne bed any more,
  • Nor kisse and play in his house, as before.
  • Now I see many dangers; for that is 25
  • His realme, his castle, and his diocesse.
  • But if, as envious men, which would revile
  • Their Prince, or coyne his gold, themselves exile
  • Into another countrie,'and doe it there,
  • Wee play'in another house, what should we feare? 30
  • There we will scorne his houshold policies,
  • His seely plots, and pensionary spies,
  • As the inhabitants of Thames right side
  • Do Londons Major; or Germans, the Popes pride.
  • [Elegie I. Iealosie. _1635-54:_ Elegie I. _1633 and 1669:_
  • _no title or_ Elegie (_numbered variously, according to scheme
  • adopted_) _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [1 woman,] woman _1633_]
  • [4 sere-barke _1633-54_, _B_, _Cy_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _W:_ sere-cloth _1669_, _D_, _P:_ sore barke _A18_, _A25_,
  • _JC_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [10 few] some few _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [12 free; _Ed:_ free, _1633-69:_ free. _D_]
  • [16 us. _1633-35:_ us, _1639-69_]
  • [21 great _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _S_, _TC_, _W:_ high _1669_, _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ his
  • _Cy_
  • fare, _Ed:_ fare _1633-69_]
  • [25 Now ... dangers;] Now do I see my danger; _1669_
  • that _all MSS.:_ it _1633-69_]
  • [26 diocesse] Diocys _D:_ Diocis _W_]
  • [27-29 (as envious ... do it there,) _1669_]
  • [30 another] anothers _1669_ We into some third place retired
  • were _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [34 Major; _1650-54:_ Major, _1633-39:_ Mayor; _1669_]
  • ELEGIE II.
  • _The Anagram._
  • Marry, and love thy _Flavia_, for, shee
  • Hath all things, whereby others beautious bee,
  • For, though her eyes be small, her mouth is great,
  • Though they be Ivory, yet her teeth be jeat,
  • Though they be dimme, yet she is light enough, 5
  • And though her harsh haire fall, her skinne is rough;
  • What though her cheeks be yellow, her haire's red,
  • Give her thine, and she hath a maydenhead.
  • These things are beauties elements, where these
  • Meet in one, that one must, as perfect, please. 10
  • If red and white and each good quality
  • Be in thy wench, ne'r aske where it doth lye.
  • In buying things perfum'd, we aske; if there
  • Be muske and amber in it, but not where.
  • Though all her parts be not in th'usuall place, 15
  • She'hath yet an Anagram of a good face.
  • If we might put the letters but one way,
  • In the leane dearth of words, what could wee say?
  • When by the Gamut some Musitions make
  • A perfect song, others will undertake, 20
  • By the same Gamut chang'd, to equall it.
  • Things simply good, can never be unfit.
  • She's faire as any, if all be like her,
  • And if none bee, then she is singular.
  • All love is wonder; if wee justly doe 25
  • Account her wonderfull, why not lovely too?
  • Love built on beauty, soone as beauty, dies,
  • Chuse this face, chang'd by no deformities.
  • Women are all like Angels; the faire be
  • Like those which fell to worse; but such as shee, 30
  • Like to good Angels, nothing can impaire:
  • 'Tis lesse griefe to be foule, then to have beene faire.
  • For one nights revels, silke and gold we chuse,
  • But, in long journeyes, cloth, and leather use.
  • Beauty is barren oft; best husbands say, 35
  • There is best land, where there is foulest way.
  • Oh what a soveraigne Plaister will shee bee,
  • If thy past sinnes have taught thee jealousie!
  • Here needs no spies, nor eunuches; her commit
  • Safe to thy foes; yea, to a Marmosit. 40
  • When Belgiaes citties, the round countries drowne,
  • That durty foulenesse guards, and armes the towne:
  • So doth her face guard her; and so, for thee,
  • Which, forc'd by businesse, absent oft must bee,
  • Shee, whose face, like clouds, turnes the day to night, 45
  • Who, mightier then the sea, makes Moores seem white,
  • Who, though seaven yeares, she in the Stews had laid,
  • A Nunnery durst receive, and thinke a maid,
  • And though in childbeds labour she did lie,
  • Midwifes would sweare, 'twere but a tympanie, 50
  • Whom, if shee accuse her selfe, I credit lesse
  • Then witches, which impossibles confesse,
  • Whom Dildoes, Bedstaves, and her Velvet Glasse
  • Would be as loath to touch as Joseph was:
  • One like none, and lik'd of none, fittest were, 55
  • For, things in fashion every man will weare.
  • [Eleg. II. The Anagram. _1635-54:_ Elegie II. _1633_, _1669:_
  • Elegie. (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [4 they] theirs _1669_, _S96_
  • teeth be _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec:_ teeth are _A18_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [6 hair fall] hair's foul _1669_
  • is rough _1633_, _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_, _W:_ is tough
  • _1635-54_, _O'F_, _Chambers_]
  • [16 an Anagram] the Anagrams _1669_]
  • [18 the _1633:_ that _1635-69_
  • words _1633-69_, _A25_, _B_, _L74_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _TC:_ letters _D_, _Cy_, _H49_, _W_]
  • [22 unfit. _D:_ unfit; _1633-69_]
  • [28 deformities.] deformities; _1633_]
  • [29 faire] fairer _S_, _S96_]
  • [35 say,] say, _1633_]
  • [37 bee,] bee _1633_]
  • [41-2 When Belgiaes ... towne: _1633-54:_ Like Belgia's cities
  • when the Country is drown'd, That ... towns; _1669:_ Like
  • Belgia's cities the round country drowns, That ... towns,
  • _Chambers:_ _MSS._ _agree with 1633-54_, _but before_
  • countries _read variously_ round (_A18_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _TC_, _W_), lowe
  • (_B_), foul (_O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _which read_ country drowns
  • ... towns)]
  • [49 childbeds _1633-54_, _Lec_, _W:_ childbirths _1669_,
  • _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [52 confesse, _Ed:_ confesse. _1633-69_]
  • [53-4 Whom ... Joseph was: _1669 and all MSS_ [or a Velvet
  • _1669_]: _om._ _1633-54_]
  • ELEGIE III.
  • _Change._
  • Although thy hand and faith, and good workes too,
  • Have seal'd thy love which nothing should undoe,
  • Yea though thou fall backe, that apostasie
  • Confirme thy love; yet much, much I feare thee.
  • Women are like the Arts, forc'd unto none, 5
  • Open to'all searchers, unpriz'd, if unknowne.
  • If I have caught a bird, and let him flie,
  • Another fouler using these meanes, as I,
  • May catch the same bird; and, as these things bee,
  • Women are made for men, not him, nor mee. 10
  • Foxes and goats; all beasts change when they please,
  • Shall women, more hot, wily, wild then these,
  • Be bound to one man, and did Nature then
  • Idly make them apter to'endure then men?
  • They'are our clogges, not their owne; if a man bee 15
  • Chain'd to a galley, yet the galley'is free;
  • Who hath a plow-land, casts all his seed corne there,
  • And yet allowes his ground more corne should beare;
  • Though Danuby into the sea must flow,
  • The sea receives the Rhene, Volga, and Po. 20
  • By nature, which gave it, this liberty
  • Thou lov'st, but Oh! canst thou love it and mee?
  • Likenesse glues love: and if that thou so doe,
  • To make us like and love, must I change too?
  • More then thy hate, I hate'it, rather let mee 25
  • Allow her change, then change as oft as shee,
  • And soe not teach, but force my'opinion
  • To love not any one, nor every one.
  • To live in one land, is captivitie,
  • To runne all countries, a wild roguery; 30
  • Waters stincke soone, if in one place they bide,
  • And in the vast sea are more putrifi'd:
  • But when they kisse one banke, and leaving this
  • Never looke backe, but the next banke doe kisse,
  • Then are they purest; Change'is the nursery 35
  • Of musicke, joy, life, and eternity.
  • [Eleg. III. Change. _1635-54:_ Elegie III. _1633_, _1669:_
  • _no title or_ Elegye (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [1 workes] word _1669_]
  • [4 Confirme] Confirms _1669_, _A25_, _L74_, _P_]
  • [5 Women] Women, _1633_
  • forc'd unto none] forbid to none _B_]
  • [8 these _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ those _1669_, _A18_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [11 Foxes and goats; all beasts _1633-54:_ Foxes, goats and
  • all beasts _1669_]
  • [13 did] bid _1669_]
  • [17 a plow-land] plow-lands _P_]
  • [18 corne] seed _P_]
  • [20 Rhene,] Rhine, _1669_
  • Po. _1633:_ Po, _1635-69_]
  • [21 liberty _1633:_ libertie. _1635-69_]
  • [23 and ... doe,] then if so thou do, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_,
  • _W_]
  • [24 like _i.e._ alike _as in A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [31 bide] abide _1669_]
  • [32 more putrifi'd _1633-39:_ more purifi'd _1650-54:_ worse
  • purifi'd _1669:_ worse putrifi'd _A18_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ worst
  • putrifi'd _B_, _H49_, _JC_]
  • ELEGIE IV.
  • _The Perfume._
  • Once, and but once found in thy company,
  • All thy suppos'd escapes are laid on mee;
  • And as a thiefe at barre, is question'd there
  • By all the men, that have beene rob'd that yeare,
  • So am I, (by this traiterous meanes surpriz'd) 5
  • By thy Hydroptique father catechiz'd.
  • Though he had wont to search with glazed eyes,
  • As though he came to kill a Cockatrice,
  • Though hee hath oft sworne, that hee would remove
  • Thy beauties beautie, and food of our love, 10
  • Hope of his goods, if I with thee were seene,
  • Yet close and secret, as our soules, we'have beene.
  • Though thy immortall mother which doth lye
  • Still buried in her bed, yet will not dye,
  • Takes this advantage to sleepe out day-light, 15
  • And watch thy entries, and returnes all night,
  • And, when she takes thy hand, and would seeme kind,
  • Doth search what rings, and armelets she can finde,
  • And kissing notes the colour of thy face,
  • And fearing least thou'art swolne, doth thee embrace; 20
  • To trie if thou long, doth name strange meates,
  • And notes thy palenesse, blushing, sighs, and sweats;
  • And politiquely will to thee confesse
  • The sinnes of her owne youths ranke lustinesse;
  • Yet love these Sorceries did remove, and move 25
  • Thee to gull thine owne mother for my love.
  • Thy little brethren, which like Faiery Sprights
  • Oft skipt into our chamber, those sweet nights,
  • And kist, and ingled on thy fathers knee,
  • Were brib'd next day, to tell what they did see: 30
  • The grim eight-foot-high iron-bound serving-man,
  • That oft names God in oathes, and onely than,
  • He that to barre the first gate, doth as wide
  • As the great Rhodian Colossus stride,
  • Which, if in hell no other paines there were, 35
  • Makes mee feare hell, because he must be there:
  • Though by thy father he were hir'd to this,
  • Could never witnesse any touch or kisse.
  • But Oh, too common ill, I brought with mee
  • That, which betray'd mee to my enemie: 40
  • A loud perfume, which at my entrance cryed
  • Even at thy fathers nose, so were wee spied.
  • When, like a tyran King, that in his bed
  • Smelt gunpowder, the pale wretch shivered.
  • Had it beene some bad smell, he would have thought 45
  • That his owne feet, or breath, that smell had wrought.
  • But as wee in our Ile emprisoned,
  • Where cattell onely,'and diverse dogs are bred,
  • The pretious Vnicornes, strange monsters call,
  • So thought he good, strange, that had none at all. 50
  • I taught my silkes, their whistling to forbeare,
  • Even my opprest shoes, dumbe and speechlesse were,
  • Onely, thou bitter sweet, whom I had laid
  • Next mee, mee traiterously hast betraid,
  • And unsuspected hast invisibly 55
  • At once fled unto him, and staid with mee.
  • Base excrement of earth, which dost confound
  • Sense, from distinguishing the sicke from sound;
  • By thee the seely Amorous sucks his death
  • By drawing in a leprous harlots breath; 60
  • By thee, the greatest staine to mans estate
  • Falls on us, to be call'd effeminate;
  • Though you be much lov'd in the Princes hall,
  • There, things that seeme, exceed substantiall;
  • Gods, when yee fum'd on altars, were pleas'd well 65
  • Because you'were burnt, not that they lik'd your smell;
  • You'are loathsome all, being taken simply alone,
  • Shall wee love ill things joyn'd, and hate each one?
  • If you were good, your good doth soone decay;
  • And you are rare, that takes the good away. 70
  • All my perfumes, I give most willingly
  • To'embalme thy fathers corse; What? will hee die?
  • [Eleg. IV. The Perfume. _1635-54:_ Elegie IV. _1633_, _1669:_
  • Elegie. (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_, _C_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_,
  • _W:_ Discovered by a Perfume. _B:_ _no title_, _Cy_, _HN_]
  • [2 suppos'd escapes] supposed scapes _1669_, _P_]
  • [4 By] For _P_]
  • [7-8 _1635-69 and MSS._ _generally:_ _om._ _1633_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_]
  • [9 hath] have _A18_, _A25_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [15 Takes] Take _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _P_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [21 To trie _&c._ _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _S_ (dost long): And to
  • trie _&c._ _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_
  • (longest), _TC_
  • meates, _1635-69:_ meates. _1633_]
  • [22 blushing _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _JC_, _N_, _TC:_ blushes
  • _1669:_ blushings _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _L74_, _Lec_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _W_]
  • [29 ingled] dandled _1669_]
  • [30 see: _1635-69:_ see. _1633_]
  • [31 grim eight-foot-high iron-bound _Ed:_
  • grim-eight-foot-high-iron-bound _1633-69_]
  • [37 to _1633-69:_ for _MSS._]
  • [38 kisse.] kisse; _1633_]
  • [40 my _1633:_ mine _1635-69_]
  • [44 Smelt] Smells _1669_ shivered. _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _TC_, _W:_ shivered; _1633-69:_ shivered, _Chambers and
  • Grolier. See note_]
  • [46 that smell] the smell _1669_]
  • [49 monsters _Ed:_ monsters, _1633-69_]
  • [50 good,] sweet _1669_]
  • [53 bitter sweet, _1633-39:_ bitter-sweet, _1650-69_]
  • [60 breath; _1650-69:_ breath, _1633-39_]
  • [64 substantiall; _Ed:_ substantiall. _1633-69_]
  • [66 you'were] you'er _1669_
  • smell; _1635-39:_ smell, _1633_, _1669:_ smel _1650-54_]
  • [71 All] And _Chambers_]
  • ELEGIE V.
  • _His Picture._
  • Here take my Picture; though I bid farewell,
  • Thine, in my heart, where my soule dwels, shall dwell.
  • 'Tis like me now, but I dead, 'twill be more
  • When wee are shadowes both, then'twas before.
  • When weather-beaten I come backe; my hand, 5
  • Perhaps with rude oares torne, or Sun beams tann'd,
  • My face and brest of hairecloth, and my head
  • With cares rash sodaine stormes, being o'rspread,
  • My body'a sack of bones, broken within,
  • And powders blew staines scatter'd on my skinne; 10
  • If rivall fooles taxe thee to'have lov'd a man,
  • So foule, and course, as, Oh, I may seeme than,
  • This shall say what I was: and thou shalt say,
  • Doe his hurts reach mee? doth my worth decay?
  • Or doe they reach his judging minde, that hee 15
  • Should now love lesse, what hee did love to see?
  • That which in him was faire and delicate,
  • Was but the milke, which in loves childish state
  • Did nurse it: who now is growne strong enough
  • To feed on that, which to disused tasts seemes tough. 20
  • [Eleg. V. His Picture. _1635-54:_ Elegie V. _1633_, _1669:_
  • Elegye. (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W:_
  • The Picture. _P:_ Travelling he leaves his Picture with his
  • mystris. _B_]
  • [1 Picture; ... farewell, _Ed:_ Picture, ... farewell; _1633:_
  • _rest semicolon or colon after each_]
  • [8 With cares rash sodaine stormes, being o'rspread, _1633_,
  • _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ With cares rash, cruel, sudden storms
  • o'erspread _P:_ With cares rash-sudden cruel-storms o'erprest
  • _B:_ With cares rash sudden storms o'erpressed _S_, _S96:_
  • With cares rash sudden storms o'erspread _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec:_ With cares rash sodaine horiness o'erspread _A25_,
  • _JC_, _W:_ With cares harsh sodaine horinesse o'rspread,
  • _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [16 now love lesse, _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ like and love
  • less _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [19 nurse] nourish _A18_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_
  • strong] tough _P_]
  • [20 disused _Ed:_ disus'd _1633-39_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_,
  • _W:_ weake _1650-69_
  • tough.] rough. _P_]
  • ELEGIE VI.
  • Oh, let mee not serve so, as those men serve
  • Whom honours smoakes at once fatten and sterve;
  • Poorely enrich't with great mens words or lookes;
  • Nor so write my name in thy loving bookes
  • As those Idolatrous flatterers, which still 5
  • Their Princes stiles, with many Realmes fulfill
  • Whence they no tribute have, and where no sway.
  • Such services I offer as shall pay
  • Themselves, I hate dead names: Oh then let mee
  • Favorite in Ordinary, or no favorite bee. 10
  • When my Soule was in her owne body sheath'd,
  • Nor yet by oathes betroth'd, nor kisses breath'd
  • Into my Purgatory, faithlesse thee,
  • Thy heart seem'd waxe, and steele thy constancie:
  • So, carelesse flowers strow'd on the waters face, 15
  • The curled whirlepooles suck, smack, and embrace,
  • Yet drowne them; so, the tapers beamie eye
  • Amorously twinkling, beckens the giddie flie,
  • Yet burnes his wings; and such the devill is,
  • Scarce visiting them, who are intirely his. 20
  • When I behold a streame, which, from the spring,
  • Doth with doubtfull melodious murmuring,
  • Or in a speechlesse slumber, calmely ride
  • Her wedded channels bosome, and then chide
  • And bend her browes, and swell if any bough 25
  • Do but stoop downe, or kisse her upmost brow;
  • Yet, if her often gnawing kisses winne
  • The traiterous banke to gape, and let her in,
  • She rusheth violently, and doth divorce
  • Her from her native, and her long-kept course, 30
  • And rores, and braves it, and in gallant scorne,
  • In flattering eddies promising retorne,
  • She flouts the channell, who thenceforth is drie;
  • Then say I; that is shee, and this am I.
  • Yet let not thy deepe bitternesse beget 35
  • Carelesse despaire in mee, for that will whet
  • My minde to scorne; and Oh, love dull'd with paine
  • Was ne'r so wise, nor well arm'd as disdaine.
  • Then with new eyes I shall survay thee,'and spie
  • Death in thy cheekes, and darknesse in thine eye. 40
  • Though hope bred faith and love; thus taught, I shall
  • As nations do from Rome, from thy love fall.
  • My hate shall outgrow thine, and utterly
  • I will renounce thy dalliance: and when I
  • Am the Recusant, in that resolute state, 45
  • What hurts it mee to be'excommunicate?
  • [Eleg. VI. _1635-69:_ Elegie VII. _1633_ (Elegie VI. _being_
  • Sorrow who to this house _&c._ _See_ Epicedes _&c._, _p._
  • 287): Elegie. (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [2 fatten] flatter _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [3 or] and _A18_, _Cy_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [6 stiles, _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ style _A25_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _Chambers and Grosart_
  • with _all MSS., Chambers and Grosart:_ which (_probably by
  • confusion of_ w^{ch} _and_ w^{th}) _1633-69_
  • Realmes] names _1669_]
  • [7 where] bear _1669_]
  • [14 constancie: _1635-69:_ constancie. _1633_]
  • [24 then _1633_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_
  • there _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _Cy_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _TC_, _Chambers_]
  • [26 upmost _1633 and most MSS:_ utmost _1635-69_, _O'F_,
  • _Chambers_ brow; _Ed:_ brow: _1633-39:_ brow. _1650-69_]
  • [28 banke _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _S_, _TC_, _W:_ banks
  • _1633-69_, _Lec_, _O'F_]
  • [33 the _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ her _1635-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_
  • who _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _JC_, _H49_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ which _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [37 Oh,] Ah, _1669_]
  • [39 thee,'] _om. 1669_]
  • [40 eye. _Ed:_ eye; _1633-54:_ eye: _1669:_ eye, _Chambers_]
  • [41 Though ... love; _1633:_ Though ... breed ... love:
  • _1635-39:_ Though ... breed ... love _1650-69_ (Through ...
  • _1669_)]
  • [42 fall. _1633-35:_ fall _1639-69_]
  • [43 outgrow] o'ergrow _Cy_, _P_]
  • ELEGIE VII.
  • Natures lay Ideot, I taught thee to love,
  • And in that sophistrie, Oh, thou dost prove
  • Too subtile: Foole, thou didst not understand
  • The mystique language of the eye nor hand:
  • Nor couldst thou judge the difference of the aire 5
  • Of sighes, and say, this lies, this sounds despaire:
  • Nor by the'eyes water call a maladie
  • Desperately hot, or changing feaverously.
  • I had not taught thee then, the Alphabet
  • Of flowers, how they devisefully being set 10
  • And bound up, might with speechlesse secrecie
  • Deliver arrands mutely, and mutually.
  • Remember since all thy words us'd to bee
  • To every suitor; _I_, _if my friends agree_;
  • Since, household charmes, thy husbands name to teach, 15
  • Were all the love trickes, that thy wit could reach;
  • And since, an houres discourse could scarce have made
  • One answer in thee, and that ill arraid
  • In broken proverbs, and torne sentences.
  • Thou art not by so many duties his, 20
  • That from the worlds Common having sever'd thee,
  • Inlaid thee, neither to be seene, nor see,
  • As mine: who have with amorous delicacies
  • Refin'd thee'into a blis-full Paradise.
  • Thy graces and good words my creatures bee; 25
  • I planted knowledge and lifes tree in thee,
  • Which Oh, shall strangers taste? Must I alas
  • Frame and enamell Plate, and drinke in Glasse?
  • Chafe waxe for others seales? breake a colts force
  • And leave him then, beeing made a ready horse? 30
  • [Elegie VII. _1635-69:_ Elegie VIII. _1633:_ Elegye.
  • (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [2 Oh, ... prove] Oh, how ... prove _1669_]
  • [6 despaire: _1635-69:_ despaire. _1633_]
  • [7 call _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_ (_corrected from_ know), _P_, _TC_,
  • _W:_ know _1635-69:_ cast _S_, _Chambers and Grosart_]
  • [10 they devisefully being set] their devise in being set
  • _Cy_, _P_]
  • [12 arrands _1633:_ errands _1635-69:_ meet errands _B_]
  • [14 _agree_; _Ed:_ _agree_. _1633-69_]
  • [21-2 That ... nor see,] _in brackets 1669_]
  • [24 Paradise] paradise _1633_]
  • [25 words _1633-54_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _W:_ works _1669_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _TC_
  • bee; _Ed:_ bee, _1633-69_]
  • [26 thee, _1633:_ thee: _1635-69_]
  • [28 Glasse? _Ed:_ glasse. _1633-69_]
  • ELEGIE VIII.
  • _The Comparison._
  • As the sweet sweat of Roses in a Still,
  • As that which from chaf'd muskats pores doth trill,
  • As the Almighty Balme of th'early East,
  • Such are the sweat drops of my Mistris breast,
  • And on her her skin such lustre sets, 5
  • They seeme no sweat drops, but pearle coronets.
  • Ranke sweaty froth thy Mistresse's brow defiles,
  • Like spermatique issue of ripe menstruous boiles,
  • Or like the skumme, which, by needs lawlesse law
  • Enforc'd, Sanserra's starved men did draw 10
  • From parboild shooes, and bootes, and all the rest
  • Which were with any soveraigne fatnes blest,
  • And like vile lying stones in saffrond tinne,
  • Or warts, or wheales, they hang upon her skinne.
  • Round as the world's her head, on every side, 15
  • Like to the fatall Ball which fell on Ide,
  • Or that whereof God had such jealousie,
  • As, for the ravishing thereof we die.
  • Thy _head_ is like a rough-hewne statue of jeat,
  • Where marks for eyes, nose, mouth, are yet scarce set; 20
  • Like the first Chaos, or flat seeming face
  • Of Cynthia, when th'earths shadowes her embrace.
  • Like Proserpines white beauty-keeping chest,
  • Or Joues best fortunes urne, is her faire brest.
  • Thine's like worme eaten trunkes, cloth'd in seals skin, 25
  • Or grave, that's dust without, and stinke within.
  • And like that slender stalke, at whose end stands
  • The wood-bine quivering, are her armes and hands.
  • Like rough bark'd elmboughes, or the russet skin
  • Of men late scurg'd for madnes, or for sinne, 30
  • Like Sun-parch'd quarters on the citie gate,
  • Such is thy tann'd skins lamentable state.
  • And like a bunch of ragged carrets stand
  • The short swolne fingers of thy gouty hand.
  • Then like the Chymicks masculine equall fire, 35
  • Which in the Lymbecks warme wombe doth inspire
  • Into th'earths worthlesse durt a soule of gold,
  • Such cherishing heat her best lov'd part doth hold.
  • Thine's like the dread mouth of a fired gunne,
  • Or like hot liquid metalls newly runne 40
  • Into clay moulds, or like to that Ætna
  • Where round about the grasse is burnt away.
  • Are not your kisses then as filthy, and more,
  • As a worme sucking an invenom'd sore?
  • Doth not thy fearefull hand in feeling quake, 45
  • As one which gath'ring flowers, still feares a snake?
  • Is not your last act harsh, and violent,
  • As when a Plough a stony ground doth rent?
  • So kisse good Turtles, so devoutly nice
  • Are Priests in handling reverent sacrifice, 50
  • And such in searching wounds the Surgeon is
  • As wee, when wee embrace, or touch, or kisse.
  • Leave her, and I will leave comparing thus,
  • She, and comparisons are odious.
  • [Eleg. VIII. The Comparison. _1635-54:_ Elegie VIII. _1669:_
  • Elegie. _1633:_ Elegie. (_numbered variously_) _A18_, _A25_,
  • _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [2 muskats] muskets _1669_]
  • [4 breast, _1635-69:_ breast. _1633_]
  • [5 _Ed: necke 1633-69 and MSS. See note_]
  • [6 coronets. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _M_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _TC:_ carcanets. _A25_, _C_, _JC_, _S_, _W:_
  • carolettes. _P_]
  • [8 boiles, _Ed:_ boiles. _1633-69:_ _in MSS. generally spelt
  • as pronounced_, biles _or_ byles]
  • [13 vile lying stones _1635-54 and MSS.:_ vile stones lying
  • _1633_, _1669_]
  • [14 they hang _A18_, _B_, _JC_, _L74_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_
  • (_altered to_ it), _S_, _TC_, _W:_ it hangs _1633-69_]
  • [19 a] _om._ _1635-39_]
  • [26 grave] grav'd _1669_
  • dust _1633-69_, _W:_ durt _A18_, _A25_, _JC_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [28 hands. _W:_ hands, _1633-69_]
  • [34 thy gouty hand. _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_, _W_ (hand; _1635-69_): her gouty
  • hand; _1633_, _JC_, _S:_ thy mistress hand; _1669_]
  • [37 durt _1635-69:_ part _1633_, _from next line_]
  • [46 feares] fear'd _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [48 when _1635-69 and MSS.:_ where _1633_]
  • [50 Are Priests ... sacrifice,] A Priest is in his handling
  • Sacrifice, _1669_]
  • [51 such _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ nice _1633-69_]
  • ELEGIE IX.
  • _The Autumnall_
  • No _Spring_, nor _Summer_ Beauty hath such grace,
  • As I have seen in one _Autumnall_ face.
  • Yong _Beauties_ force our love, and that's a _Rape_,
  • This doth but _counsaile_, yet you cannot scape.
  • If t'were a _shame_ to love, here t'were no _shame_, 5
  • _Affection_ here takes _Reverences_ name.
  • Were her first yeares the _Golden Age_; That's true,
  • But now shee's _gold_ oft tried, and ever new.
  • That was her torrid and inflaming time,
  • This is her tolerable _Tropique clyme_. 10
  • Faire eyes, who askes more heate then comes from hence,
  • He in a fever wishes pestilence.
  • Call not these wrinkles, _graves_; If _graves_ they were,
  • They were _Loves graves_; for else he is no where.
  • Yet lies not Love _dead_ here, but here doth sit 15
  • Vow'd to this trench, like an _Anachorit_.
  • And here, till hers, which must be his _death_, come,
  • He doth not digge a _Grave_, but build a _Tombe_.
  • Here dwells he, though he sojourne ev'ry where,
  • In _Progresse_, yet his standing house is here. 20
  • Here, where still _Evening_ is; not _noone_, nor _night_;
  • Where no _voluptuousnesse_, yet all _delight_.
  • In all her words, unto all hearers fit,
  • You may at _Revels_, you at _Counsaile_, sit.
  • This is loves timber, youth his under-wood; 25
  • There he, as wine in _Iune_, enrages blood,
  • Which then comes seasonabliest, when our tast
  • And appetite to other things, is past.
  • _Xerxes_ strange _Lydian_ love, the _Platane_ tree,
  • Was lov'd for age, none being so large as shee, 30
  • Or else because, being yong, nature did blesse
  • Her youth with ages glory, _Barrennesse_.
  • If we love things long sought, _Age_ is a thing
  • Which we are fifty yeares in compassing.
  • If transitory things, which soone decay, 35
  • _Age_ must be lovelyest at the latest day.
  • But name not _Winter-faces_, whose skin's slacke;
  • Lanke, as an unthrifts purse; but a soules sacke;
  • Whose _Eyes_ seeke light within, for all here's shade;
  • Whose _mouthes_ are holes, rather worne out, then made; 40
  • Whose every tooth to a severall place is gone,
  • To vexe their soules at _Resurrection_;
  • Name not these living _Deaths-heads_ unto mee,
  • For these, not _Ancient_, but _Antique_ be.
  • I hate extreames; yet I had rather stay 45
  • With _Tombs_, then _Cradles_, to weare out a day.
  • Since such loves naturall lation is, may still
  • My love descend, and journey downe the hill,
  • Not panting after growing beauties, so,
  • I shall ebbe out with them, who home-ward goe. 50
  • [Eleg. IX. The Autumnall. _1635-54:_ Elegie. The Autumnall.
  • _1633:_ Elegie IX. _1669:_ Elegie. _A18, N, TCC, TCD:_ Elegie
  • Autumnall. _D, H40, H49, JC, Lec:_ An autumnall face: On the
  • Ladie S^r Edward Herbart mothers Ladie Danvers. _B:_ On the
  • Lady Herbert afterwards Danvers. _O'F:_ Widdow. _M_, _P:_ A
  • Paradox of an ould Woman. _S:_ Elegie Autumnall on the Lady
  • Shandoys. _S96: no title, L74_]
  • [1 _Summer 1633: Summers 1635-69_]
  • [2 face. _Ed:_ face, _1633-69_]
  • [3 our love, _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S:_ our Loves, _1669:_
  • your love, _1635-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _H40_, _L74_, _M_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [6 _Affection_ ... takes _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ _Affections_
  • ... take _1633-69_, _JC_, _O'F_]
  • [8 shee's _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_
  • they'are _1633_]
  • [10 tolerable _1633_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S:_ habitable
  • _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _L74_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [14 for _1633:_ or _1635-69_]
  • [15 Love] love _1633_]
  • [22 Where] Where's _O'F_, _S_]
  • [23 unto all] to all her _P_]
  • [24 _Counsaile_, _Ed:_ _counsaile_, _1633-54:_ _counsails_
  • _1669_]
  • [26 enrages] bringes _D_, _H49:_ breeds _Lec_]
  • [27 seasonabliest, _1633:_ seasonablest, _1635-69_]
  • [28 past.] past; _1633_]
  • [30 large _1633:_ old _1635-69_]
  • [37 not] noe _several MSS._]
  • [38 soules sacke; _1633_, _1669_, _and MSS.:_ fooles sack;
  • _1635-54_]
  • [40 made; _Ed:_ made _1633-54:_ made, _1669_]
  • [42 their soules] the soul _1669_]
  • [43 _Deaths-heads_ _1633:_ _Death-heads_ _1635-69_,
  • _Chambers:_ death-shades _H40_]
  • [44 _Ancient, ... Antique_ _1633_, _1669_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_
  • Ancients, ... Antiques _1635-54_, _B_, _O'F_, _S:_ ancient ...
  • antiques _A18_, _A25_, _H40_, _L74_, _M_, _N_, _TC_
  • be. _Ed:_ be; _1633_]
  • [46 a] the _1669_, _M_, _P_]
  • [47 naturall lation _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H40_,
  • _H49_, _L74_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_ (_sometimes thus_,
  • natural-lation): motion naturall _1633:_ naturall station
  • _1635-69_, _Lec_, _O'F_]
  • [50 ebbe out _1633:_ ebbe on _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _TC_]
  • ELEGIE X.
  • _The Dreame._
  • Image of her whom I love, more then she,
  • Whose faire impression in my faithfull heart,
  • Makes mee her _Medall_, and makes her love mee,
  • As Kings do coynes, to which their stamps impart
  • The value: goe, and take my heart from hence, 5
  • Which now is growne too great and good for me:
  • _Honours_ oppresse weake spirits, and our sense
  • Strong objects dull; the more, the lesse wee see.
  • When you are gone, and _Reason_ gone with you,
  • Then _Fantasie_ is Queene and Soule, and all; 10
  • She can present joyes meaner then you do;
  • Convenient, and more proportionall.
  • So, if I dreame I have you, I have you,
  • For, all our joyes are but fantasticall.
  • And so I scape the paine, for paine is true; 15
  • And sleepe which locks up sense, doth lock out all.
  • After a such fruition I shall wake,
  • And, but the waking, nothing shall repent;
  • And shall to love more thankfull Sonnets make,
  • Then if more _honour_, _teares_, and _paines_ were spent. 20
  • But dearest heart, and dearer image stay;
  • Alas, true joyes at best are _dreame_ enough;
  • Though you stay here you passe too fast away:
  • For even at first lifes _Taper_ is a snuffe.
  • Fill'd with her love, may I be rather grown 25
  • Mad with much _heart_, then _ideott_ with none.
  • [Eleg. X. The Dreame. _1635-54:_ Elegie X. _1669:_ Elegie.
  • _1633:_ Picture. _S96:_ Elegie. _or no title_, _A18_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [7 sense] sense, _1633_]
  • [8 dull; _1635-69:_ dull, _1633_]
  • [16 out] up _B_, _P_, _S_]
  • [17 a such _1633-54:_ such a _1669_]
  • [22 _dreame_] _dreams_ _1669_]
  • ELEGIE XI.
  • _The Bracelet._
  • _Vpon the losse of his Mistresses Chaine, for which he made
  • satisfaction._
  • Not that in colour it was like thy haire,
  • For Armelets of that thou maist let me weare:
  • Nor that thy hand it oft embrac'd and kist,
  • For so it had that good, which oft I mist:
  • Nor for that silly old moralitie, 5
  • That as these linkes were knit, our love should bee:
  • Mourne I that I thy seavenfold chaine have lost;
  • Nor for the luck sake; but the bitter cost.
  • O, shall twelve righteous Angels, which as yet
  • No leaven of vile soder did admit; 10
  • Nor yet by any way have straid or gone
  • From the first state of their Creation;
  • Angels, which heaven commanded to provide
  • All things to me, and be my faithfull guide;
  • To gaine new friends, t'appease great enemies; 15
  • To comfort my soule, when I lie or rise;
  • Shall these twelve innocents, by thy severe
  • Sentence (dread judge) my sins great burden beare?
  • Shall they be damn'd, and in the furnace throwne,
  • And punisht for offences not their owne? 20
  • They save not me, they doe not ease my paines,
  • When in that hell they'are burnt and tyed in chains.
  • Were they but Crownes of France, I cared not,
  • For, most of these, their naturall Countreys rot
  • I think possesseth, they come here to us, 25
  • So pale, so lame, so leane, so ruinous;
  • And howsoe'r French Kings most Christian be,
  • Their Crownes are circumcis'd most Iewishly.
  • Or were they Spanish Stamps, still travelling,
  • That are become as Catholique as their King, 30
  • Those unlickt beare-whelps, unfil'd pistolets
  • That (more than Canon shot) availes or lets;
  • Which negligently left unrounded, looke
  • Like many angled figures, in the booke
  • Of some great Conjurer that would enforce 35
  • Nature, as these doe justice, from her course;
  • Which, as the soule quickens head, feet and heart,
  • As streames, like veines, run through th'earth's every part,
  • Visit all Countries, and have slily made
  • Gorgeous _France_, ruin'd, ragged and decay'd; 40
  • _Scotland_, which knew no State, proud in one day:
  • And mangled seventeen-headed _Belgia_.
  • Or were it such gold as that wherewithall
  • Almighty _Chymiques_ from each minerall,
  • Having by subtle fire a soule out-pull'd; 45
  • Are dirtely and desperately gull'd:
  • I would not spit to quench the fire they'are in,
  • For, they are guilty of much hainous Sin.
  • But, shall my harmlesse angels perish? Shall
  • I lose my guard, my ease, my food, my all? 50
  • Much hope which they should nourish will be dead,
  • Much of my able youth, and lustyhead
  • Will vanish; if thou love let them alone,
  • For thou wilt love me lesse when they are gone;
  • And be content that some lowd squeaking Cryer 55
  • Well-pleas'd with one leane thred-bare groat, for hire,
  • May like a devill roare through every street;
  • And gall the finders conscience, if they meet.
  • Or let mee creepe to some dread Conjurer,
  • That with phantastique scheames fils full much paper; 60
  • Which hath divided heaven in tenements,
  • And with whores, theeves, and murderers stuft his rents,
  • So full, that though hee passe them all in sinne,
  • He leaves himselfe no roome to enter in.
  • But if, when all his art and time is spent, 65
  • Hee say 'twill ne'r be found; yet be content;
  • Receive from him that doome ungrudgingly,
  • Because he is the mouth of destiny.
  • Thou say'st (alas) the gold doth still remaine,
  • Though it be chang'd, and put into a chaine; 70
  • So in the first falne angels, resteth still
  • Wisdome and knowledge; but,'tis turn'd to ill:
  • As these should doe good works; and should provide
  • Necessities; but now must nurse thy pride.
  • And they are still bad angels; Mine are none; 75
  • For, forme gives being, and their forme is gone:
  • Pitty these Angels; yet their dignities
  • Passe Vertues, Powers, and Principalities.
  • But, thou art resolute; Thy will be done!
  • Yet with such anguish, as her onely sonne 80
  • The Mother in the hungry grave doth lay,
  • Vnto the fire these Martyrs I betray.
  • Good soules, (for you give life to every thing)
  • Good Angels, (for good messages you bring)
  • Destin'd you might have beene to such an one, 85
  • As would have lov'd and worship'd you alone:
  • One that would suffer hunger, nakednesse,
  • Yea death, ere he would make your number lesse.
  • But, I am guilty of your sad decay;
  • May your few fellowes longer with me stay. 90
  • But ô thou wretched finder whom I hate
  • So, that I almost pitty thy estate:
  • Gold being the heaviest metal amongst all,
  • May my most heavy curse upon thee fall:
  • Here fetter'd, manacled, and hang'd in chains, 95
  • First mayst thou bee; then chaind to hellish paines;
  • Or be with forraine gold brib'd to betray
  • Thy Countrey, and faile both of that and thy pay.
  • May the next thing thou stoop'st to reach, containe
  • Poyson, whose nimble fume rot thy moist braine; 100
  • Or libels, or some interdicted thing,
  • Which negligently kept, thy ruine bring.
  • Lust-bred diseases rot thee; and dwell with thee
  • Itching desire, and no abilitie.
  • May all the evils that gold ever wrought; 105
  • All mischiefes that all devils ever thought;
  • Want after plenty; poore and gouty age;
  • The plagues of travellers; love; marriage
  • Afflict thee, and at thy lives last moment,
  • May thy swolne sinnes themselves to thee present. 110
  • But, I forgive; repent thee honest man:
  • Gold is Restorative, restore it then:
  • But if from it thou beest loath to depart,
  • Because 'tis cordiall, would twere at thy heart.
  • [Elegie XI. _&c._ _Ed.:_ Eleg. XII. The Bracelet. _&c._ _1635_
  • (Eleg. XI. _being_ Death, _for which see p._ 284): Eleg. XII.
  • Vpon _&c._ _1639-54_ (Eleg. IV. _1650-54, a misprint_): Elegie
  • XII. _1669:_ Elegie (_numbered variously_). The Bracelett.
  • _or_ The Chaine. _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W_]
  • [2 For ... weare:] Armelets of that thou maist still let me
  • weare: _1669_]
  • [6 were knit, _1635-69:_ are knit _Cy:_ are tyde _A25_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _R212_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_
  • were tyde _L74_
  • love] loves _1669_]
  • [11 way _1635-69:_ taynt _S96_, _O'F_, _W:_ taynts _B:_ fault
  • _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _S_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [15 great] old _1669_]
  • [16 rise; _Ed:_ rise. _1635-69_]
  • [22 chains. _Ed.:_ chains: _1635-69_]
  • [24 these _1635-54:_ them _1669_
  • their naturall Countreys _Cy_, _O'F:_ their Countreys naturall
  • _1635-54_, _P:_ their naturall Countrey _1669, and rest of
  • MSS._]
  • [26 ruinous; _Ed:_ ruinous. _1635-69_]
  • [28 Iewishly. _Ed:_ Iewishly; _1635-69_]
  • [35 great] dread _1669_]
  • [36 course; _Ed:_ course. _1635-69_]
  • [38 streames, _Ed:_ streames _1635-69_]
  • [40 ruin'd, ragged and decay'd; _1669, and MSS., but end stop
  • varies:_ ruin'd: ragged and decay'd _1635:_ ruin'd: ragged and
  • decay'd, _1639-54_]
  • [42 _Belgia._ _Ed:_ _Belgia:_ _1635-69_]
  • [45 soule] Mercury _B_]
  • [47 they'are in, _1635-69:_ therein, _Cy_, _P:_ they were in,
  • _rest of MSS._]
  • [51 dead, _Ed:_ dead. _1635-69_]
  • [52 lustyhead _Ed:_ lusty head _1635-69_]
  • [53 vanish; _Ed:_ vanish, _1635-69_
  • if thou love let them alone, _1635-39:_ if thou Love let them
  • alone, _1650-69:_ if thou, Love, let them alone; _Grolier_
  • (_conjecturing_ atone)]
  • [54-5 gone; And _Ed:_ gone, And _1635-69_, _Cy_, _P:_ gone.
  • Oh, _rest of MSS._]
  • [58 conscience, if they meet. _1669 and MSS.:_ conscience, if
  • hee meet. _1635-54_, _JC_, _L74_, _P_]
  • [60 scheames _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_
  • scenes _1635-69_, _Cy_, _L74_, _P_, _TCD_]
  • [63 passe] place _1669_]
  • [65 _new par. 1635-69_ But _1635-69_, _Cy_, _P:_ And _rest of
  • MSS._]
  • [66 yet _1635-69_, _Cy_, _P:_ Oh _rest of MSS._]
  • [67 that _1635-54_, _Cy_, _P:_ the _1669 and rest of MSS._]
  • [70 chaine; _Ed:_ chaine, _1635-69_]
  • [74 pride. _Ed:_ pride, _1635-69_]
  • [76 being, _Ed:_ being: _1635-69_]
  • [77 Angels; yet _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ Angels
  • yet; _1635-69_, _W_]
  • [79 done! _Ed:_ done; _1635-39:_ done: _1650-54:_ done?
  • _1669_]
  • [90 few fellowes] few-fellowes _1635-69_]
  • [92 So, that _1635-69_, _Cy_, _P:_ So much that _A25_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_ (as), _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _S96_ (as), _TCD_,
  • _W_ (as): So much _B_
  • estate] state _D_, _H49_, _&c._]
  • [93 metal amongst all,] amongst metals all, _1669_, _Cy_]
  • [95 Here] Her _1639_]
  • [98 that _MSS.:_ it _1635-69_
  • thy] _om. 1669_]
  • [104 Itching] Itchy _MSS._]
  • [105 evils that gold ever _1635-69_, _P:_ hurt that ever gold
  • hath _rest of MSS._]
  • [106 mischiefes _all MSS.:_ mischiefe _1635-69_]
  • [108 love; marriage _1635-54_, _Cy_, _P:_ love and marriage
  • _1669_, _and rest of MSS._]
  • [109 at] that _1669_]
  • [110 thee] thou _1669_]
  • [113 But if from it ... depart, _1635-54_, _Cy_, _P:_ But if
  • that from it ... part, _1669:_ Or if with it ... depart _rest
  • of MSS._]
  • ELEGIE XII.
  • _His parting from her._
  • Since she must go, and I must mourn, come Night,
  • Environ me with darkness, whilst I write:
  • Shadow that hell unto me, which alone
  • I am to suffer when my Love is gone.
  • Alas the darkest Magick cannot do it, 5
  • Thou and greate Hell to boot are shadows to it.
  • Should _Cinthia_ quit thee, _Venus_, and each starre,
  • It would not forme one thought dark as mine are.
  • I could lend thee obscureness now, and say,
  • Out of my self, There should be no more Day, 10
  • Such is already my felt want of sight,
  • Did not the fires within me force a light.
  • Oh Love, that fire and darkness should be mixt,
  • Or to thy Triumphs soe strange torments fixt?
  • Is't because thou thy self art blind, that wee 15
  • Thy Martyrs must no more each other see?
  • Or tak'st thou pride to break us on the wheel,
  • And view old Chaos in the Pains we feel?
  • Or have we left undone some mutual Right,
  • Through holy fear, that merits thy despight? 20
  • No, no. The falt was mine, impute it to me,
  • Or rather to conspiring destinie,
  • Which (since I lov'd for forme before) decreed,
  • That I should suffer when I lov'd indeed:
  • And therefore now, sooner then I can say, 25
  • I saw the golden fruit, 'tis rapt away.
  • Or as I had watcht one drop in a vast stream,
  • And I left wealthy only in a dream.
  • Yet Love, thou'rt blinder then thy self in this,
  • To vex my Dove-like friend for my amiss: 30
  • And, where my own sad truth may expiate
  • Thy wrath, to make her fortune run my fate:
  • So blinded Justice doth, when Favorites fall,
  • Strike them, their house, their friends, their followers all.
  • Was't not enough that thou didst dart thy fires 35
  • Into our blouds, inflaming our desires,
  • And made'st us sigh and glow, and pant, and burn,
  • And then thy self into our flame did'st turn?
  • Was't not enough, that thou didst hazard us
  • To paths in love so dark, so dangerous: 40
  • And those so ambush'd round with houshold spies,
  • And over all, thy husbands towring eyes
  • That flam'd with oylie sweat of jealousie:
  • Yet went we not still on with Constancie?
  • Have we not kept our guards, like spie on spie? 45
  • Had correspondence whilst the foe stood by?
  • Stoln (more to sweeten them) our many blisses
  • Of meetings, conference, embracements, kisses?
  • Shadow'd with negligence our most respects?
  • Varied our language through all dialects, 50
  • Of becks, winks, looks, and often under-boards
  • Spoak dialogues with our feet far from our words?
  • Have we prov'd all these secrets of our Art,
  • Yea, thy pale inwards, and thy panting heart?
  • And, after all this passed Purgatory, 55
  • Must sad divorce make us the vulgar story?
  • First let our eyes be rivited quite through
  • Our turning brains, and both our lips grow to:
  • Let our armes clasp like Ivy, and our fear
  • Freese us together, that we may stick here, 60
  • Till Fortune, that would rive us, with the deed
  • Strain her eyes open, and it make them bleed:
  • For Love it cannot be, whom hitherto
  • I have accus'd, should such a mischief doe.
  • Oh Fortune, thou'rt not worth my least exclame, 65
  • And plague enough thou hast in thy own shame.
  • Do thy great worst, my friend and I have armes,
  • Though not against thy strokes, against thy harmes.
  • Rend us in sunder, thou canst not divide
  • Our bodies so, but that our souls are ty'd, 70
  • And we can love by letters still and gifts,
  • And thoughts and dreams; Love never wanteth shifts.
  • I will not look upon the quickning Sun,
  • But straight her beauty to my sense shall run;
  • The ayre shall note her soft, the fire most pure; 75
  • Water suggest her clear, and the earth sure.
  • Time shall not lose our passages; the Spring
  • How fresh our love was in the beginning;
  • The Summer how it ripened in the eare;
  • And Autumn, what our golden harvests were. 80
  • The Winter I'll not think on to spite thee,
  • But count it a lost season, so shall shee.
  • And dearest Friend, since we must part, drown night
  • With hope of Day, burthens well born are light.
  • Though cold and darkness longer hang somewhere, 85
  • Yet _Phoebus_ equally lights all the Sphere.
  • And what he cannot in like Portions pay,
  • The world enjoyes in Mass, and so we may.
  • Be then ever your self, and let no woe
  • Win on your health, your youth, your beauty: so 90
  • Declare your self base fortunes Enemy,
  • No less by your contempt then constancy:
  • That I may grow enamoured on your mind,
  • When my own thoughts I there reflected find.
  • For this to th'comfort of my Dear I vow, 95
  • My Deeds shall still be what my words are now;
  • The Poles shall move to teach me ere I start;
  • And when I change my Love, I'll change my heart;
  • Nay, if I wax but cold in my desire,
  • Think, heaven hath motion lost, and the world, fire: 100
  • Much more I could, but many words have made
  • That, oft, suspected which men would perswade;
  • Take therefore all in this: I love so true,
  • As I will never look for less in you.
  • [Elegie. XII. _&c._ _Ed:_ Eleg. XIIII _&c._ _1635-54_ (Eleg.
  • XIII. _being_ Come, Fates, _&c._, _p._ 407): Elegie XIIII.
  • _1669:_ At her Departure. _A25:_ At his Mistris departure.
  • _B:_ Elegie. _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD_ (_II_)]
  • [1 Night, _Ed:_ night _1635-69_]
  • [4 Love] soule _1635-54_]
  • [5-44 _omit_, _1635-54_, _A25_, _B_]
  • [6 Thou and greate Hell _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ And that
  • great Hell _1669_
  • to boot are _1669_, _H40_, _O'F:_ are nought but _P_, _S96_]
  • [7 thee, _Ed:_ thee _1669_]
  • [9 thee _H40:_ them _1669_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [10 Day, _Ed:_ Day. _1669_]
  • [11 felt want _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ self-want,
  • _1669_
  • sight, _Ed:_ sight _1669_]
  • [12 fires _H40_, _S96_, _TCD:_ fire _1669_, _P_]
  • [14 Or] Are _S96:_ And _TCD_
  • soe _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ such _1669_]
  • [17 the _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ thy _1669_]
  • [20 Through holy fear, that merits (causes _S96_) thy despight
  • (meriteth thy spight _P_) _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_
  • That thus with parting thou seek'st us to spight? _1669_]
  • [21 was _H40_, _S96:_ is _1669_, _P_, _TCD_]
  • [23 Which ... decreed, _H40_, _O'F_, _S96:_ Which (since I
  • lov'd) for me before decreed, _1669_, _P_, _TCD:_ Which,
  • since I lov'd in jest before, decreed _H-K_, _which Chambers
  • follows_]
  • [25 now, sooner _all the MSS.:_ sooner now _1669_
  • rapt] wrapt _1669_]
  • [27 a vast _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ the vast _1669_]
  • [29 thy self] myself _Chambers_]
  • [31 my own _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ one _1669_
  • sad _1669:_ glad _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [32 fate: _Ed:_ fate. _1669_]
  • [33 blinded] blindest _H40_]
  • [34 followers _H40_, _P_, _TCD:_ favourites _1669_, _S96_]
  • [37 glow _H40_, _S96_, _P_, _TCD:_ blow _1669_]
  • [38 flame _H40_, _S96_, _P_, _TCD:_ flames _1669_]
  • [40 so dangerous _H40_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ and dangerous
  • _1669_]
  • [42 all, _Ed:_ all _1669_
  • towring _1669_, _TCD:_ towred _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ lowering
  • _Grolier_
  • the towred husbands eyes _H40:_ the Loured, husbandes eyes
  • _RP31_]
  • [43 That flam'd with oylie _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_
  • Inflam'd with th'ouglie _1669_
  • jealousie: _Ed:_ jealousie, _1669_]
  • [44 with _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ in _1669_]
  • [45 Have we not kept our guards, _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_,
  • _TCD:_ Have we for this kept guards, _1669_
  • on _1669:_ o'r _1635-54_]
  • [49 most _1635-69_, _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ best
  • _1669_]
  • [50 our] thy _RP31_]
  • [52 from our words? _1669:_ from words? _1635-54_]
  • [53 these secrets _MSS.:_ the secrets _1635-69_
  • our] thy _RP31_]
  • [54 Yea ... panting heart? _1635-69_, _A25:_ Yea thy pale
  • colours inward as thy heart? _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [56 sad] rude _P_, _TCD_]
  • [57-66 _om._ _1635-54_, _A25_, _B_]
  • [58 brains] beams _P:_ brain _Chambers_]
  • [61 Fortune, _Ed:_ fortune, _1669_
  • would rive us, with _H40_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TCD:_ would ruine us
  • with _1669_]
  • [62 her _H40:_ his _1669_
  • it] yet _1669_
  • bleed: _Ed:_ bleed. _1669_]
  • [65 Oh Fortune,] Oh fortune, _1669_, _S96:_ And Fortune _H40_,
  • _P_]
  • [66 shame. _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ name. _1669_]
  • [67 Do thy great worst _&c._ _1669:_ Fortune, doe thy worst
  • _&c._ _1635-54_ (_after_ 56 the vulgar story?)
  • armes, _1635-69_, _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ charmes _H-K_
  • (_Grosart and Chambers_)]
  • [69 Rend us in sunder, _1669 and MSS.:_ Bend us, in sunder
  • _1635-54_]
  • [72 shifts. _1635:_ shifts, _1639-69_]
  • [76 Water _H40_, _P_, _TCD:_ Waters _1635-69_, _A25_, _S96_
  • sure. _Ed:_ sure; _1635-69_]
  • [77 Time] Times _H40_, _TCD_
  • Spring _Ed:_ spring _1635-69_]
  • [79 ripened in the eare; _B_, _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_
  • ripened in the yeare; _1635:_ inripened the yeare; _1639-69_]
  • [83-94 _omit_ _1635-54_, _A25_, _B_]
  • [85 Though _H40_, _P_, _TCD:_ The _1669_, _S96_]
  • [87 he ... Portions _Ed:_ he ... portions _H40:_ he ...
  • portion _O'F_, _P_, _TCD:_ we ... Portion _1669:_ he can't in
  • like proportion _H-K_ (_Grosart_)]
  • [88 enjoyes] yet joys _H40_]
  • [89 ever your] your fayrest _H40_, _TCD_]
  • [92 by your contempt then constancy: _H40_, _S96:_ be your
  • contempt then constancy: _O'F_, _H-K_ (_Grosart_), _P_, _TCD:_
  • be your contempt then her inconstancy: _1669_]
  • [94 there reflected _H40_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ here
  • neglected _1669:_ there neglected _H-K_ (_Grosart, probably
  • wrongly_)]
  • [95-104 _om. TCD_]
  • [95 For _H40, S96:_ And _1635-69_]
  • [96 my words are now; _H40, P:_ my deeds are now; _1635-69,
  • O'F, S96:_ my thoughts are now; _A25_]
  • [102 oft, _1633-54:_ oft _1669_
  • would _1635-54, A25, B, H40, O'F, S96: _ most _1669_]
  • ELEGIE XIII.
  • _Iulia._
  • Harke newes, ô envy, thou shalt heare descry'd
  • My _Iulia_; who as yet was ne'r envy'd.
  • To vomit gall in slander, swell her vaines
  • With calumny, that hell it selfe disdaines,
  • Is her continuall practice; does her best, 5
  • To teare opinion even out of the brest
  • Of dearest friends, and (which is worse than vilde)
  • Sticks jealousie in wedlock; her owne childe
  • Scapes not the showres of envie, To repeate
  • The monstrous fashions, how, were, alive, to eate 10
  • Deare reputation. Would to God she were
  • But halfe so loath to act vice, as to heare
  • My milde reproofe. Liv'd _Mantuan_ now againe,
  • That fœmall Mastix, to limme with his penne
  • This she _Chymera_, that hath eyes of fire, 15
  • Burning with anger, anger feeds desire,
  • Tongued like the night-crow, whose ill boding cries
  • Give out for nothing but new injuries,
  • Her breath like to the juice in _Tenarus_
  • That blasts the springs, though ne'r so prosperous, 20
  • Her hands, I know not how, us'd more to spill
  • The food of others, then her selfe to fill.
  • But oh her minde, that _Orcus_, which includes
  • Legions of mischiefs, countlesse multitudes
  • Of formlesse curses, projects unmade up, 25
  • Abuses yet unfashion'd, thoughts corrupt,
  • Mishapen Cavils, palpable untroths,
  • Inevitable errours, self-accusing oaths:
  • These, like those Atoms swarming in the Sunne,
  • Throng in her bosome for creation. 30
  • I blush to give her halfe her due; yet say,
  • No poyson's halfe so bad as _Iulia_.
  • [Elegie XIII. _&c. Ed:_ Eleg. XV. _&c. 1635-54:_ Elegie XV.
  • _1669:_ Iulia. _B:_ Elegy. Iulia. _O'F_]
  • [5 practice; _Ed:_ practice, _1635-69_]
  • [7 vilde) _Ed:_ vile) _1635-69:_ vilde _is the regular spelling
  • of this word in the Donne MSS._]
  • [8 in wedlock;] in the sheets of wedlock; _B_]
  • [10 how, _1635:_ how; _1639-69_]
  • [That fœmall Mastix, _1635:_ _1639-69 and Chambers drop
  • comma. But see note_]
  • [18 injuries, _1635-39:_ injuries. _1650-69_]
  • [20 prosperous, _Ed:_ prosperous. _1635-69_]
  • [24 mischiefs _O'F:_ mischiefe, _1635-69_]
  • [28 oaths: _B_, _H-K_ (_Grosart_): loathes: _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [31 give but half _B:_ give half her _O'F_
  • yet say,] only this say, _B:_ but this say _O'F_]
  • ELEGIE XIV.
  • _A Tale of a Citizen and his Wife._
  • I sing no harme good sooth to any wight,
  • To Lord or foole, Cuckold, begger or knight,
  • To peace-teaching Lawyer, Proctor, or brave
  • Reformed or reduced Captaine, Knave,
  • Officer, Iugler, or Iustice of peace, 5
  • Iuror or Iudge; I touch no fat sowes grease,
  • I am no Libeller, nor will be any,
  • But (like a true man) say there are too many.
  • I feare not _ore tenus_; for my tale,
  • Nor Count nor Counsellour will redd or pale. 10
  • A Citizen and his wife the other day
  • Both riding on one horse, upon the way
  • I overtooke, the wench a pretty peate,
  • And (by her eye) well fitting for the feate.
  • I saw the lecherous Citizen turne backe 15
  • His head, and on his wifes lip steale a smacke,
  • Whence apprehending that the man was kinde,
  • Riding before, to kisse his wife behinde,
  • To get acquaintance with him I began
  • To sort discourse fit for so fine a man: 20
  • I ask'd the number of the Plaguy Bill,
  • Ask'd if the Custome Farmers held out still,
  • Of the Virginian plot, and whether Ward
  • The traffique of the Iland seas had marr'd,
  • Whether the Brittaine _Burse_ did fill apace, 25
  • And likely were to give th'Exchange disgrace;
  • Of new-built _Algate_, and the _More-field_ crosses,
  • Of store of Bankerouts, and poore Merchants losses
  • I urged him to speake; But he (as mute
  • As an old Courtier worne to his last suite) 30
  • Replies with onely yeas and nayes; At last
  • (To fit his element) my theame I cast
  • On Tradesmens gaines; that set his tongue agoing:
  • Alas, good sir (quoth he) _There is no doing
  • In Court nor City now_; she smil'd and I, 35
  • And (in my conscience) both gave him the lie
  • In one met thought: but he went on apace,
  • And at the present time with such a face
  • He rail'd, as fray'd me; for he gave no praise,
  • To any but my Lord of _Essex_ dayes; 40
  • Call'd those the age of action; true (quoth Hee)
  • There's now as great an itch of bravery,
  • And heat of taking up, but cold lay downe,
  • For, put to push of pay, away they runne;
  • Our onely City trades of hope now are 45
  • Bawd, Tavern-keeper, Whore and Scrivener;
  • The much of Privileg'd kingsmen, and the store
  • Of fresh protections make the rest all poore;
  • In the first state of their Creation,
  • Though many stoutly stand, yet proves not one 50
  • A righteous pay-master. Thus ranne he on
  • In a continued rage: so void of reason
  • Seem'd his harsh talke, I sweat for feare of treason.
  • And (troth) how could I lesse? when in the prayer
  • For the protection of the wise Lord Major, 55
  • And his wise brethrens worships, when one prayeth,
  • He swore that none could say Amen with faith.
  • To get him off from what I glowed to heare,
  • (In happy time) an Angel did appeare,
  • The bright Signe of a lov'd and wel-try'd Inne, 60
  • Where many Citizens with their wives have bin
  • Well us'd and often; here I pray'd him stay,
  • To take some due refreshment by the way.
  • Looke how hee look'd that hid the gold (his hope)
  • And at's returne found nothing but a Rope, 65
  • So he on me, refus'd and made away,
  • Though willing she pleaded a weary day:
  • I found my misse, struck hands, and praid him tell
  • (To hold acquaintance still) where he did dwell;
  • He barely nam'd the street, promis'd the Wine, 70
  • But his kinde wife gave me the very Signe.
  • [Elegie XIV. _&c._ _Ed:_ Eleg. XVI. A Tale _&c._ _1635-54:_
  • Elegie XVI. _1669:_ Elegie XV. _O'F:_ _no title, B_]
  • [2 or foole,] to fool, _1669_]
  • [5 Iugler, _1635-39:_ Iudge, _1650-69_]
  • [9 _tenus;_ _Ed:_ _tenus_, _1635-69_]
  • [10 will redd or pale. _1669_, _B_, _O'F_ (shall): will looke
  • redd or pale. _1635-54_]
  • [14 feate. _Ed:_ feate, _1635-69_]
  • [16 steale] seale _O'F_]
  • [21 Plaguy _1669_, _B_, _O'F:_ Plaguing _1635-54_]
  • [22 Custome] custome _1635_]
  • [24 Iland _Ed:_ Iland _1635-54:_ Midland _1669_, _O'F:_ the
  • land, the seas _B_, _but later hand has inserted_ mid _above
  • the line:_ Island _Chambers and Grolier_]
  • [27 _More-field_] Moorefields _B_]
  • [32 To fit] To hit _O'F_]
  • [33 agoing: _Ed:_ agoing, _1635-69_]
  • [35 _In ... now_; _Ed:_ _roman_ _1635-69_]
  • [38 time _1669:_ times _O'F_]
  • [41 those ... (quoth Hee) _1669_, _B_, _O'F:_ that ... (quoth
  • I) _1635-54_]
  • [46 Bawd, ... Scrivener; _B_, _O'F:_ Bawds, Tavernkeepers,
  • Whores and Scriveners, _1635-54:_ Bawds, Tavernkeepers, Whore
  • and Scrivener _1669_]
  • [47 kingsmen, and the store _1669_, _B_, _O'F_ (kingsman):
  • kinsmen, and store _1635-54_]
  • [58 him off _O'F:_ off him _1669:_ him _1635-54_]
  • [61 have bin _B_, _O'F:_ had beene, _1635-69_]
  • [64 the gold (his hope)] his gold, his hope _1669_]
  • [65 at's _1669:_ at _1635-54_]
  • [66 on _1669_, _B:_ at _1635-54_
  • me,] me: _1635-54_]
  • [67 day: _1669_, _B_, _O'F:_ stay. _1635-39:_ stay: _1650-54_]
  • [69 dwell; _1635:_ dwell _1639-54:_ dwell, _1669_]
  • ELEGIE XV.
  • _The Expostulation._
  • To make the doubt cleare, that no woman's true,
  • Was it my fate to prove it strong in you?
  • Thought I, but one had breathed purest aire,
  • And must she needs be false because she's faire?
  • Is it your beauties marke, or of your youth, 5
  • Or your perfection, not to study truth?
  • Or thinke you heaven is deafe, or hath no eyes?
  • Or those it hath, smile at your perjuries?
  • Are vowes so cheape with women, or the matter
  • Whereof they are made, that they are writ in water, 10
  • And blowne away with winde? Or doth their breath
  • (Both hot and cold at once) make life and death?
  • Who could have thought so many accents sweet
  • Form'd into words, so many sighs should meete
  • As from our hearts, so many oathes, and teares 15
  • Sprinkled among, (all sweeter by our feares
  • And the divine impression of stolne kisses,
  • That seal'd the rest) should now prove empty blisses?
  • Did you draw bonds to forfet? signe to breake?
  • Or must we reade you quite from what you speake, 20
  • And finde the truth out the wrong way? or must
  • Hee first desire you false, would wish you just?
  • O I prophane, though most of women be
  • This kinde of beast, my thought shall except thee;
  • My dearest love, though froward jealousie, 25
  • With circumstance might urge thy'inconstancie,
  • Sooner I'll thinke the Sunne will cease to cheare
  • The teeming earth, and _that_ forget to beare,
  • Sooner that rivers will runne back, or Thames
  • With ribs of Ice in June would bind his streames, 30
  • Or Nature, by whose strength the world endures,
  • Would change her course, before you alter yours.
  • But O that treacherous breast to whom weake you
  • Did trust our Counsells, and wee both may rue,
  • Having his falshood found too late, 'twas hee 35
  • That made me _cast_ you guilty, and you me,
  • Whilst he, black wretch, betray'd each simple word
  • Wee spake, unto the cunning of a third.
  • Curst may hee be, that so our love hath slaine,
  • And wander on the earth, wretched as _Cain_, 40
  • Wretched as hee, and not deserve least pitty;
  • In plaguing him, let misery be witty;
  • Let all eyes shunne him, and hee shunne each eye,
  • Till hee be noysome as his infamie;
  • May he without remorse deny God thrice, 45
  • And not be trusted more on his Soules price;
  • And after all selfe torment, when hee dyes,
  • May Wolves teare out his heart, Vultures his eyes,
  • Swine eate his bowels, and his falser tongue
  • That utter'd all, be to some Raven flung, 50
  • And let his carrion coarse be a longer feast
  • To the Kings dogges, then any other beast.
  • Now have I curst, let us our love revive;
  • In mee the flame was never more alive;
  • I could beginne againe to court and praise, 55
  • And in that pleasure lengthen the short dayes
  • Of my lifes lease; like Painters that do take
  • Delight, not in made worke, but whiles they make;
  • I could renew those times, when first I saw
  • Love in your eyes, that gave my tongue the law 60
  • To like what you lik'd; and at maskes and playes
  • Commend the selfe same Actors, the same wayes;
  • Aske how you did, and often with intent
  • Of being officious, be impertinent;
  • All which were such soft pastimes, as in these 65
  • Love was as subtilly catch'd, as a disease;
  • But being got it is a treasure sweet,
  • Which to defend is harder then to get:
  • And ought not be prophan'd on either part,
  • For though'tis got by _chance_, 'tis kept by _art_. 70
  • [Elegie XV. _Ed:_ Eleg. XVII. The Expostulation. _1635-54:_
  • Elegie XVII. _1669:_ Elegie. _1633_, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _HN_,
  • _M_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _RP31_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _Jonson's_
  • Underwoods]
  • [2 strong] full _Und_]
  • [3 purest] the purer _Und_]
  • [6 Or your _1633-69:_ Or of your _H40_]
  • [8 it hath,] she hath _B_, _H40_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [12 (Both hot and cold at once) _RP31:_ Both ... at once,
  • _Und:_ (Both ... cold) at once _1633-69_, _S96:_ Both heate
  • and coole at once _M_
  • make] threat _Und_]
  • [14 Form'd into] Tun'd to our _Und_]
  • [15 As] Blowne _Und_]
  • [16-18 (all sweeter ... the rest) _1633_, _B_, _Cy_, _M_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _RP31:_ (all sweetend _&c._ _1635_, _which does
  • not complete the bracket:_ (all sweetend by our fears) _&c._
  • _1639-69_, _L74_ (sweeter), _P_ (sweeter), _S96_ (sweetned)]
  • [22 wish] have _P_]
  • [24 This kinde of beast,] The common Monster, _Und_
  • my thought _1633:_ my thoughts _1635-69_, _HN_, _S96_]
  • [25 though froward] how ever _RP31_, _Und_]
  • [26 thy'inconstancie,] the contrarie. _Und_]
  • [28 beare, _1633:_ beare: _1635-69_]
  • [30 would _1633_, _Und:_ will _1635-69_
  • streames, _Ed:_ streames; _1633-69_]
  • [32 yours.] yours; _1633_]
  • [34 trust _1633-69:_ drift _Chambers_]
  • [37 wretch] wrech _1633_]
  • [38 third. _Ed:_ third; _1633-69_]
  • [39 love] loves _RP31_]
  • [40 wretched as _Cain_, _1633-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _N_, _O'F:_
  • as wretched Cain, _P:_ as cursed Cain, _S:_ wretched on the
  • Earth, as Cain: _Und_]
  • [52 dogges, ... beast.] dogges; ... beast; _1633_]
  • [53 have I] I have _1669_
  • revive] receive _Und_]
  • [58 worke, _1633-39_, _most MSS.:_ works, _1650-69_, _S96_,
  • _Und_]
  • [61 and playes] or playes _Und_]
  • [64 be] grow _Und_]
  • [65 soft] lost _Und_]
  • ELEGIE XVI.
  • _On his Mistris._
  • By our first strange and fatall interview,
  • By all desires which thereof did ensue,
  • By our long starving hopes, by that remorse
  • Which my words masculine perswasive force
  • Begot in thee, and by the memory 5
  • Of hurts, which spies and rivals threatned me,
  • I calmly beg: But by thy fathers wrath,
  • By all paines, which want and divorcement hath,
  • I conjure thee, and all the oathes which I
  • And thou have sworne to seale joynt constancy, 10
  • Here I unsweare, and overswear them thus,
  • Thou shalt not love by wayes so dangerous.
  • Temper, ô faire Love, loves impetuous rage,
  • Be my true Mistris still, not my faign'd Page;
  • I'll goe, and, by thy kinde leave, leave behinde 15
  • Thee, onely worthy to nurse in my minde,
  • Thirst to come backe; ô if thou die before,
  • My soule from other lands to thee shall soare.
  • Thy (else Almighty) beautie cannot move
  • Rage from the Seas, nor thy love teach them love, 20
  • Nor tame wilde Boreas harshnesse; Thou hast reade
  • How roughly hee in peeces shivered
  • Faire Orithea, whom he swore he lov'd.
  • Fall ill or good, 'tis madnesse to have prov'd
  • Dangers unurg'd; Feed on this flattery, 25
  • That absent Lovers one in th'other be.
  • Dissemble nothing, not a boy, nor change
  • Thy bodies habite, nor mindes; bee not strange
  • To thy selfe onely; All will spie in thy face
  • A blushing womanly discovering grace; 30
  • Richly cloath'd Apes, are call'd Apes, and as soone
  • Ecclips'd as bright we call the Moone the Moone.
  • Men of France, changeable Camelions,
  • Spittles of diseases, shops of fashions,
  • Loves fuellers, and the rightest company 35
  • Of Players, which upon the worlds stage be,
  • Will quickly know thee, and no lesse, alas!
  • Th'indifferent Italian, as we passe
  • His warme land, well content to thinke thee Page,
  • Will hunt thee with such lust, and hideous rage, 40
  • As _Lots_ faire guests were vext. But none of these
  • Nor spungy hydroptique Dutch shall thee displease,
  • If thou stay here. O stay here, for, for thee
  • England is onely a worthy Gallerie,
  • To walke in expectation, till from thence 45
  • Our greatest King call thee to his presence.
  • When I am gone, dreame me some happinesse,
  • Nor let thy lookes our long hid love confesse,
  • Nor praise, nor dispraise me, nor blesse nor curse
  • Openly loves force, nor in bed fright thy Nurse 50
  • With midnights startings, crying out, oh, oh
  • Nurse, ô my love is slaine, I saw him goe
  • O'r the white Alpes alone; I saw him I,
  • Assail'd, fight, taken, stabb'd, bleed, fall, and die.
  • Augure me better chance, except dread _Iove_ 55
  • Thinke it enough for me to'have had thy love.
  • [Elegie XVI. _&c._ _Ed:_ Elegie on his Mistris. _1635-54
  • where, and in 1669, it appears among_ Funerall Elegies:
  • Elegie. _1669: among_ Elegies _with or without heading or
  • number_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W:_ _B heads_ His wife would
  • have gone as his page.]
  • [1 interview, _Ed:_ interview _1635-69_]
  • [3 starving] striving _1669_, _B_, _P:_ starvling _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [7 beg: _D:_ beg. _1635-69_
  • fathers _1635-69_, _O'F:_ Parents _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [11 Here I] I here _1669_]
  • [12 wayes _1635-54_, _O'F:_ means _1669, and rest of MSS._]
  • [14 still ... faign'd] _1669 om._ still _and reads_ faigned]
  • [18 My soule ... to thee] From other lands my soule towards
  • thee _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _M_(to), _N_,
  • _P_, _S_, _TC_, _W_
  • soare. _Ed:_ soare, _1635-69_]
  • [21 harshness] rashness _P_. _Compare_ Elegy V, 8]
  • [23 Faire Orithea] The fair Orithea _1669_]
  • [26 Lovers] friends _P_]
  • [28 mindes; _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _JC_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ minde,
  • _1635-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • [29 onely; _A18_, _D_, _N_, _TC:_ onely. _1635-69_]
  • [35 Loves fuellers,] Lyves fuellers, _1669_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _S96_, _P_]
  • [37 Will quickly know thee, and no lesse, alas! _1635-54_,
  • _O'F:_ Will too too quickly know thee; and alas, _1669:_ Will
  • quickly know thee, and know thee, and alas _A18_, _N_, _S_
  • (_omitting second_ and), _TCD_, _W:_ Will quickly know thee,
  • and thee, and alas _A25:_ Will quickly know thee, and alas
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _P_, _S96_, _TCC_]
  • [39 Page, _Ed:_ Page _1635-39_]
  • [40 hunt _1635-69_, _O'F:_ haunt _most MSS._]
  • [42 hydroptique] Aydroptique _1669_]
  • [46 greatest _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _P:_ greate _A18_, _A25_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TC_
  • call] doe call _A18_, _N_, _TC_
  • to] in to _A25_, _JC_, _S_]
  • [49 me, nor blesse] me; Blesse _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TC_, _W_]
  • ELEGIE XVII.
  • _Variety._
  • The heavens rejoyce in motion, why should I
  • Abjure my so much lov'd variety,
  • And not with many youth and love divide?
  • Pleasure is none, if not diversifi'd:
  • The sun that sitting in the chaire of light 5
  • Sheds flame into what else so ever doth seem bright,
  • Is not contented at one Signe to Inne,
  • But ends his year and with a new beginnes.
  • All things doe willingly in change delight,
  • The fruitfull mother of our appetite: 10
  • Rivers the clearer and more pleasing are,
  • Where their fair spreading streames run wide and farr;
  • And a dead lake that no strange bark doth greet,
  • Corrupts it self and what doth live in it.
  • Let no man tell me such a one is faire, 15
  • And worthy all alone my love to share.
  • Nature in her hath done the liberall part
  • Of a kinde Mistresse, and imploy'd her art
  • To make her loveable, and I aver
  • Him not humane that would turn back from her: 20
  • I love her well, and would, if need were, dye
  • To doe her service. But followes it that I
  • Must serve her onely, when I may have choice
  • Of other beauties, and in change rejoice?
  • The law is hard, and shall not have my voice. 25
  • The last I saw in all extreames is faire,
  • And holds me in the Sun-beames of her haire;
  • Her nymph-like features such agreements have
  • That I could venture with her to the grave:
  • Another's brown, I like her not the worse, 30
  • Her tongue is soft and takes me with discourse.
  • Others, for that they well descended are,
  • Do in my love obtain as large a share;
  • And though they be not fair, 'tis much with mee
  • To win their love onely for their degree. 35
  • And though I faile of my required ends,
  • The attempt is glorious and it self commends.
  • How happy were our Syres in ancient times,
  • Who held plurality of loves no crime!
  • With them it was accounted charity 40
  • To stirre up race of all indifferently;
  • Kindreds were not exempted from the bands:
  • Which with the Persian still in usage stands.
  • Women were then no sooner asked then won,
  • And what they did was honest and well done. 45
  • But since this title honour hath been us'd,
  • Our weake credulity hath been abus'd;
  • The golden laws of nature are repeald,
  • Which our first Fathers in such reverence held;
  • Our liberty's revers'd, our Charter's gone, 50
  • And we're made servants to opinion,
  • A monster in no certain shape attir'd,
  • And whose originall is much desir'd,
  • Formlesse at first, but goeing on it fashions,
  • And doth prescribe manners and laws to nations. 55
  • Here love receiv'd immedicable harmes,
  • And was dispoiled of his daring armes.
  • A greater want then is his daring eyes,
  • He lost those awfull wings with which he flies;
  • His sinewy bow, and those immortall darts 60
  • Wherewith he'is wont to bruise resisting hearts.
  • Onely some few strong in themselves and free
  • Retain the seeds of antient liberty,
  • Following that part of Love although deprest,
  • And make a throne for him within their brest, 65
  • In spight of modern censures him avowing
  • Their Soveraigne, all service him allowing.
  • Amongst which troop although I am the least,
  • Yet equall in perfection with the best,
  • I glory in subjection of his hand, 70
  • Nor ever did decline his least command:
  • For in whatever forme the message came
  • My heart did open and receive the same.
  • But time will in his course a point discry
  • When I this loved service must deny, 75
  • For our allegiance temporary is,
  • With firmer age returnes our liberties.
  • What time in years and judgement we repos'd,
  • Shall not so easily be to change dispos'd,
  • Nor to the art of severall eyes obeying; 80
  • But beauty with true worth securely weighing,
  • Which being found assembled in some one,
  • Wee'l love her ever, and love her alone.
  • [Elegie XVII. Variety. _Ed: printed for first time without
  • title in appendix to 1650 and so in 1669 and 1719:_ An Elegie.
  • _A10:_ Elegie 17^{the}. _JC_]
  • [1 motion, why _Ed:_ motion why, _1650-69_]
  • [3 love divide? _MSS.:_ lov'd divide? _1650-69_]
  • [4 diversifi'd: _Ed:_ diversifi'd _1650-69_]
  • [6 what else so ever doth seem _1650-69:_ what else is not so
  • _A10_]
  • [12 fair-spreading _1650-69_, _JC:_ broad silver _A10_
  • and farr; _A10_, _JC:_ and cleare; _1650-69_]
  • [14 it self and _1650-69:_ it self, kills _A10_]
  • [16 And only worthy to be past compare; _A10_]
  • [19 aver] ever _1650-69_]
  • [20 would turn back from _1650-69:_ could not fancy _A10_]
  • [24 Of other beauties, and in change rejoice? _A10:_ _om.
  • 1650-69_]
  • [25-36 _omitted in A10_]
  • [30 brown, _Ed:_ brown _1650-69_]
  • [32 are _JC:_ were _1650-69_]
  • [39 crime! _Ed:_ crime? _1650-69_]
  • [43 Persian _1650-54_, _JC:_ Persians _1669_, _A10_]
  • [46 title _A10_, _JC:_ little _1650-69_]
  • [50 liberty's _Ed:_ liberty _1650-69_, _JC_
  • revers'd, our _A10:_ revers'd and _1650-69_, _JC_]
  • [51 we're _A10:_ we _1650-69_, _JC_]
  • [53 whose originall _1650-69_, _JC:_ one whose origin _A10_]
  • [54 goeing on it fashions _A10:_ growing on it fashions _JC:_
  • growing on its fashions, _1650-69_]
  • [55 manners and laws to _1650-69_, _JC:_ Lawes, Manners unto
  • _A10_]
  • [57 armes. _A10:_ armes, _1650-69_]
  • [58 is _1650-69:_ of _A10_]
  • [61 bruise _1650-69_ wound _A10_
  • hearts. _Ed:_ hearts; _1650-69_]
  • [63 seeds of antient _1650-69_, _JC:_ seed of pristine _A10_]
  • [64 Love] love _1650-69_]
  • [70 of his _1650-69:_ under's _A10_]
  • [71 Nor ... decline _1650-69:_ Never declining from _A10_]
  • [72-7 _omitted in A10_]
  • [73 same. _Ed:_ same: _1650-69:_ flame _JC_]
  • [75 deny, _Ed:_ deny. _1650-69_]
  • [79 dispos'd, _Ed:_ dispos'd _1650-69_]
  • [80 obeying; _Ed:_ obeying, _1650-69_]
  • [81 securely _1650-69:_ unpartially _A10_]
  • [82 being _1650-69:_ having _A10_
  • one, _Ed:_ one _1650-69_]
  • [83 Wee'l love her ever, _Ed:_ Wee'l leave her ever,
  • _1650-69_, _JC:_ Would love for ever, _A10_]
  • ELEGIE XVIII.
  • _Loves Progress._
  • Who ever loves, if he do not propose
  • The right true end of love, he's one that goes
  • To sea for nothing but to make him sick:
  • Love is a bear-whelp born, if we o're lick
  • Our love, and force it new strange shapes to take, 5
  • We erre, and of a lump a monster make.
  • Were not a Calf a monster that were grown
  • Face'd like a man, though better then his own?
  • Perfection is in unitie: preferr
  • One woman first, and then one thing in her. 10
  • I, when I value gold, may think upon
  • The ductilness, the application,
  • The wholsomness, the ingenuitie,
  • From rust, from soil, from fire ever free:
  • But if I love it, 'tis because 'tis made 15
  • By our new nature (Use) the soul of trade.
  • All these in women we might think upon
  • (If women had them) and yet love but one.
  • Can men more injure women then to say
  • They love them for that, by which they're not they? 20
  • Makes virtue woman? must I cool my bloud
  • Till I both be, and find one wise and good?
  • May barren Angels love so. But if we
  • Make love to woman; virtue is not she:
  • As beauty'is not nor wealth: He that strayes thus 25
  • From her to hers, is more adulterous,
  • Then if he took her maid. Search every spheare
  • And firmament, our _Cupid_ is not there:
  • He's an infernal god and under ground,
  • With _Pluto_ dwells, where gold and fire abound: 30
  • Men to such Gods, their sacrificing Coles
  • Did not in Altars lay, but pits and holes.
  • Although we see Celestial bodies move
  • Above the earth, the earth we Till and love:
  • So we her ayres contemplate, words and heart, 35
  • And virtues; but we love the Centrique part.
  • Nor is the soul more worthy, or more fit
  • For love, then this, as infinite as it.
  • But in attaining this desired place
  • How much they erre; that set out at the face? 40
  • The hair a Forest is of Ambushes,
  • Of springes, snares, fetters and manacles:
  • The brow becalms us when 'tis smooth and plain,
  • And when 'tis wrinckled, shipwracks us again.
  • Smooth, 'tis a Paradice, where we would have 45
  • Immortal stay, and wrinkled 'tis our grave.
  • The Nose (like to the first Meridian) runs
  • Not 'twixt an East and West, but 'twixt two suns;
  • It leaves a Cheek, a rosie Hemisphere
  • On either side, and then directs us where 50
  • Upon the Islands fortunate we fall,
  • (Not faynte _Canaries_, but _Ambrosiall_)
  • Her swelling lips; To which when wee are come,
  • We anchor there, and think our selves at home,
  • For they seem all: there Syrens songs, and there 55
  • Wise Delphick Oracles do fill the ear;
  • There in a Creek where chosen pearls do swell,
  • The Remora, her cleaving tongue doth dwell.
  • These, and the glorious Promontory, her Chin
  • Ore past; and the streight _Hellespont_ betweene 60
  • The _Sestos_ and _Abydos_ of her breasts,
  • (Not of two Lovers, but two Loves the neasts)
  • Succeeds a boundless sea, but yet thine eye
  • Some Island moles may scattered there descry;
  • And Sailing towards her _India_, in that way 65
  • Shall at her fair Atlantick Navell stay;
  • Though thence the Current be thy Pilot made,
  • Yet ere thou be where thou wouldst be embay'd,
  • Thou shalt upon another Forest set,
  • Where many Shipwrack, and no further get. 70
  • When thou art there, consider what this chace
  • Mispent by thy beginning at the face.
  • Rather set out below; practice my Art,
  • Some Symetry the foot hath with that part
  • Which thou dost seek, and is thy Map for that 75
  • Lovely enough to stop, but not stay at:
  • Least subject to disguise and change it is;
  • Men say the Devil never can change his.
  • It is the Emblem that hath figured
  • Firmness; 'tis the first part that comes to bed. 80
  • Civilitie we see refin'd: the kiss
  • Which at the face began, transplanted is,
  • Since to the hand, since to the Imperial knee,
  • Now at the Papal foot delights to be:
  • If Kings think that the nearer way, and do 85
  • Rise from the foot, Lovers may do so too;
  • For as free Spheres move faster far then can
  • Birds, whom the air resists, so may that man
  • Which goes this empty and Ætherial way,
  • Then if at beauties elements he stay. 90
  • Rich Nature hath in women wisely made
  • Two purses, and their mouths aversely laid:
  • They then, which to the lower tribute owe,
  • That way which that Exchequer looks, must go:
  • He which doth not, his error is as great, 95
  • As who by Clyster gave the Stomack meat.
  • [Elegie XVIII. _&c._ _Ed:_ Elegie XVIII. _1669, where it is
  • first included among the Elegies. It had already been printed
  • in_ Wit and Drollery. By Sir J. M., J. S., Sir W. D., J. D.,
  • and the most refined Wits of the Age. _1661. It appears in
  • A18, A25, B, Cy, D, H49, Lec, N, O'F, S, S96, TC, with title_
  • Loves Progress., _or_ Elegie. on Loves Progresse., _or with no
  • title_]
  • [4 Love is a _1669:_ And Love's a _MSS._]
  • [5 strange _1661 and MSS.:_ strong _1669_]
  • [11 I,] I _1669_]
  • [14 ever _1669:_ for ever _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [16 (our new nature) use, _1661_]
  • [17 these _1669 and MSS.:_ this _1661_, _Cy_, _P_, _Chambers_]
  • [20 them] _om. 1661_]
  • [25 beauty'is not _1661 and MSS.:_ beauties no _1669_
  • thus] thus: _1669_]
  • [27 Then if he took] Then he that took _1661_, _B_ (takes),
  • _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_
  • spheare] sphear _1669_]
  • [30 abound: _Ed:_ abound, _1669_]
  • [32 in _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC:_ on _1669_,
  • _A25_
  • holes.] holes: _1669_]
  • [38 infinite] infinit _1669_]
  • [40 erre _1661-69_, _S_, _S96:_ stray _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC_]
  • [42 springes, _H49 and some MSS.:_ springs, _1669_]
  • [46 and _1661_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC:_ but _1669_
  • our _1661_, _MSS.:_ a _1669_]
  • [47 first Meridian _1661 and MSS.:_ sweet Meridian _1669_.]
  • [52-3 (Not ... Ambrosiall) ... lips _&c._ _1661 and MSS._
  • (_not always with brackets and sometimes with_ No _for_ Not
  • _and_ Canary): Not ... Ambrosiall. Unto her swelling lips when
  • we are come, _1669_]
  • [55 For they seem all: there _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TC:_ For they sing all their _1661_,
  • _Cy_, _P_]
  • [57 There _1661 and MSS.:_ Then _1669_
  • swell, _Ed:_ swell _1669_]
  • [58 Rhemora _1669_]
  • [59 the glorious Promontory,] _brackets and no comma, 1669_]
  • [60 Ore past; ... betweene _1661 and MSS.:_ Being past the
  • Straits of _Hellespont_ between _1669_]
  • [62 Loves] loves _1669_]
  • [63 yet] that _D, H49, Lec, and other MSS._]
  • [65 Sailing] Sailng _1669_]
  • [66 Navell] Naval _1669_]
  • [67 thence _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ there _1661-9_, _N_(?): hence _P_
  • thy _all MSS.:_ the _1661-9_]
  • [68 wouldst _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ shouldst _1669_]
  • [70 many _1669:_ some doe _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_]
  • [73 my _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TCD:_ thy _Chambers:_ thine _A18_, _TCC_]
  • [80 the] _bis 1669_]
  • [81-2 Civilitie, we see, refin'd the kisse Which at the face
  • begonne, transplanted is _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [83 Imperial] imperial _1669_]
  • [86 too;] too. _1669_]
  • [90 elements _1661 and MSS.:_ enemies _1669_]
  • [91 hath] _Chambers omits_]
  • [93 owe,] owe _1669_]
  • [96 Clyster gave _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC:_ glister
  • gives _1669_]
  • ELEGIE XIX.
  • _Going to Bed._
  • Come, Madam, come, all rest my powers defie,
  • Until I labour, I in labour lie.
  • The foe oft-times having the foe in sight,
  • Is tir'd with standing though he never fight.
  • Off with that girdle, like heavens Zone glittering, 5
  • But a far fairer world incompassing.
  • Unpin that spangled breastplate which you wear,
  • That th'eyes of busie fooles may be stopt there.
  • Unlace your self, for that harmonious chyme,
  • Tells me from you, that now it is bed time. 10
  • Off with that happy busk, which I envie,
  • That still can be, and still can stand so nigh.
  • Your gown going off, such beautious state reveals,
  • As when from flowry meads th'hills shadow steales.
  • Off with that wyerie Coronet and shew 15
  • The haiery Diademe which on you doth grow:
  • Now off with those shooes, and then safely tread
  • In this loves hallow'd temple, this soft bed.
  • In such white robes, heaven's Angels us'd to be
  • Receavd by men; Thou Angel bringst with thee 20
  • A heaven like Mahomets Paradise; and though
  • Ill spirits walk in white, we easly know,
  • By this these Angels from an evil sprite,
  • Those set our hairs, but these our flesh uprigh
  • Licence my roaving hands, and let them go, 25
  • Before, behind, between, above, below.
  • O my America! my new-found-land,
  • My kingdome, safliest when with one man man'd,
  • My Myne of precious stones, My Emperie,
  • How blest am I in this discovering thee! 30
  • To enter in these bonds, is to be free;
  • Then where my hand is set, my seal shall be.
  • Full nakedness! All joyes are due to thee,
  • As souls unbodied, bodies uncloth'd must be,
  • To taste whole joyes. Gems which you women use 35
  • Are like Atlanta's balls, cast in mens views,
  • That when a fools eye lighteth on a Gem,
  • His earthly soul may covet theirs, not them.
  • Like pictures, or like books gay coverings made
  • For lay-men, are all women thus array'd; 40
  • Themselves are mystick books, which only wee
  • (Whom their imputed grace will dignifie)
  • Must see reveal'd. Then since that I may know;
  • As liberally, as to a Midwife, shew
  • Thy self: cast all, yea, this white lynnen hence, 45
  • There is no pennance due to innocence.
  • To teach thee, I am naked first; why than
  • What needst thou have more covering then a man.
  • [Elegie XIX. _&c. Ed: in 1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W_
  • Appeared in 1669 edition after the Elegies, unnumbered but
  • with the heading_ To his Mistris going to Bed. _The MSS.
  • include it among the Elegies either with no heading, or
  • simply_ Elegye, _or numbered according to the scheme adopted:
  • B gives title which I have adopted as consistent with other
  • titles_]
  • [4 he _1669:_ they _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [5 glittering] glistering _MSS._]
  • [8 That I may see my shrine that shines so fair. _Cy_, _P_]
  • [10 it is _1669:_ 'tis your _MSS._]
  • [11 which] whom _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _S_, _TC_,
  • _W_]
  • [14 from _MSS.:_ through _1669_
  • shadow] shadows _1669_]
  • [16 Diademe ... grow: _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC:_ Diadem which on your
  • head doth grow: _1669:_ Diadems which on you do grow. _S_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [17 Now ... shooes, _1669_, _JC_, _W:_ Off ... shoes _A18_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC:_ Off with those hose and shoes
  • _S_
  • safely _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_,
  • _W:_ softly _1669_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _P_]
  • [20 Receavd by men; Thou _all MSS.:_ Reveal'd to men; thou
  • _1669_]
  • [21 Paradise; _Ed:_ Paradice, _1669_]
  • [22 Ill _1669_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ All _B, O'F, P, and Chambers' conjecture_
  • spirits _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _S:_ angels
  • _O'F_, _S96_
  • white, _Ed:_ white; _1669_]
  • [26 below. _Ed:_ below, _1669_]
  • [28 kingdome, _MSS.:_ Kingdom's _1669_
  • safeliest _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC:_ safest, _1669_
  • man'd, _Ed:_ man'd. _1669_]
  • [29 stones, _Ed:_ stones: _1669_]
  • [30 How blest am I _all MSS.:_ How am I blest _1669_
  • this _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _TC_, _W:_ thus _1669_, _A25_, _L74_, _S_
  • discovering] discovery _B_, _O'F_
  • thee! _Ed:_ thee? _1669_
  • be.] be, _1669_]
  • [35 Gems] Jems _1669: and so_ 37]
  • [36 like _1669:_ as _MSS._
  • balls, _MSS.:_ ball: _1669_]
  • [38 covet _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TC_, _W:_ court _1669_, _Cy_, _P_, _S_, _S96_
  • theirs, _A18_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ those _S:_ that, _1669_, _B_,
  • _O'F_
  • them.] them: _1669_]
  • [39 pictures, _Ed:_ pictures _1669_
  • made _Ed:_ made, _1669_]
  • [40 lay-men, _Ed:_ lay-men _1669_
  • array'd; _Ed:_ arrayed _1669_]
  • [41 Themselves ... only wee _A18_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_
  • Themselves are only mystick books, which we, _1669_, _B_]
  • [43 see] be _A18_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC_
  • reveal'd] revealed _1669_]
  • [44 a _all MSS.:_ thy _1669_
  • Midwife, _Ed:_ Midwife _1669_]
  • [45 hence, _Ed:_ hence _1669_]
  • [46 pennance due to innocence. _1669_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S:_ pennance, much less innocence; _A18_, _A25_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [47 thee, _Ed:_ thee _1669_
  • first; _Ed:_ first, _1669_]
  • ELEGIE XX.
  • _Loves Warre._
  • Till I have peace with thee, warr other men,
  • And when I have peace, can I leave thee then?
  • All other Warrs are scrupulous; Only thou
  • O fayr free Citty, maist thyselfe allowe
  • To any one: In Flanders, who can tell 5
  • Whether the Master presse; or men rebell?
  • Only we know, that which all Ideots say,
  • They beare most blows which come to part the fray.
  • France in her lunatique giddines did hate
  • Ever our men, yea and our God of late; 10
  • Yet she relyes upon our Angels well,
  • Which nere returne; no more then they which fell.
  • Sick Ireland is with a strange warr possest
  • Like to an Ague; now raging, now at rest;
  • Which time will cure: yet it must doe her good 15
  • If she were purg'd, and her head vayne let blood.
  • And Midas joyes our Spanish journeys give,
  • We touch all gold, but find no food to live.
  • And I should be in the hott parching clyme,
  • To dust and ashes turn'd before my time. 20
  • To mew me in a Ship, is to inthrall
  • Mee in a prison, that weare like to fall;
  • Or in a Cloyster; save that there men dwell
  • In a calme heaven, here in a swaggering hell.
  • Long voyages are long consumptions, 25
  • And ships are carts for executions.
  • Yea they are Deaths; Is't not all one to flye
  • Into an other World, as t'is to dye?
  • Here let mee warr; in these armes lett mee lye;
  • Here lett mee parlee, batter, bleede, and dye. 30
  • Thyne armes imprison me, and myne armes thee;
  • Thy hart thy ransome is; take myne for mee.
  • Other men war that they their rest may gayne;
  • But wee will rest that wee may fight agayne.
  • Those warrs the ignorant, these th'experienc'd love, 35
  • There wee are alwayes under, here above.
  • There Engins farr off breed a just true feare,
  • Neere thrusts, pikes, stabs, yea bullets hurt not here.
  • There lyes are wrongs; here safe uprightly lye;
  • There men kill men, we'will make one by and by. 40
  • Thou nothing; I not halfe so much shall do
  • In these Warrs, as they may which from us two
  • Shall spring. Thousands wee see which travaile not
  • To warrs; But stay swords, armes, and shott
  • To make at home; And shall not I do then 45
  • More glorious service, staying to make men?
  • [Elegy XX _&c._ _Ed: First published in F. G. Waldron's_ A
  • Collection of Miscellaneous Poetry, 1802, _from a MS. dated
  • 1625; then by Sir J. Simeon in his_ Philobiblon Society
  • _volume of 1856. It is included among Donne's_ Elegies _in
  • A18, A25, B, Cy, D, H49, JC, L74, Lec, N, O'F, P, S, S96, TCC,
  • TCD, W. In B it has the title_ Making of Men. _The present
  • text is based on W_]
  • [7 all _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ most _JC_, _Chambers_]
  • [8 They beare most blows which (_or_ that) _A18_, _B_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ They must
  • bear blows, which _Chambers_]
  • [9 giddiness] guidings _Sim:_ giddinge _Wald_]
  • [11 well,] well _W_]
  • [13 a strange] straying _Sim_]
  • [16 head] dead _Sim_]
  • [19 the _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_,
  • _W:_ that _Chambers_, _A25_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_]
  • [24 swaggering] swaying _Chambers_]
  • [25 consumptions,] consumptions _W:_ _line omitted_, _Wald_]
  • [29 lye] _spelt_ ly
  • _W:_ _and so_ 30 dy]
  • [33 gayne;] gayne _W_]
  • [37 There] These _Sim_
  • and, that, with, which] _contracted throughout_, _W_]
  • HEROICALL EPISTLE.
  • _Sapho_ to _Philænis_.
  • Where is that holy fire, which _Verse_ is said
  • To have? is that inchanting force decai'd?
  • _Verse_ that drawes _Natures_ workes, from _Natures_ law,
  • Thee, her best worke, to her worke cannot draw.
  • Have my teares quench'd my old _Poetique_ fire; 5
  • Why quench'd they not as well, that of _desire_?
  • Thoughts, my mindes creatures, often are with thee,
  • But I, their maker, want their libertie.
  • Onely thine image, in my heart, doth sit,
  • But that is waxe, and fires environ it. 10
  • My fires have driven, thine have drawne it hence;
  • And I am rob'd of _Picture_, _Heart_, and _Sense_.
  • Dwells with me still mine irksome _Memory_,
  • Which, both to keepe, and lose, grieves equally.
  • That tells me'how faire thou art: Thou art so faire, 15
  • As, _gods_, when _gods_ to thee I doe compare,
  • Are grac'd thereby; And to make blinde men see,
  • What things _gods_ are, I say they'are like to thee.
  • For, if we justly call each silly _man_
  • A _litle world_, What shall we call thee than? 20
  • Thou art not soft, and cleare, and strait, and faire,
  • As _Down_, as _Stars_, _Cedars_, and _Lillies_ are,
  • But thy right hand, and cheek, and eye, only
  • Are like thy other hand, and cheek, and eye.
  • Such was my _Phao_ awhile, but shall be never, 25
  • As thou, wast, art, and, oh, maist be ever.
  • Here lovers sweare in their _Idolatrie_,
  • That I am such; but _Griefe_ discolors me.
  • And yet I grieve the lesse, least _Griefe_ remove
  • My beauty, and make me'unworthy of thy love. 30
  • Plaies some soft boy with thee, oh there wants yet
  • A mutuall feeling which should sweeten it.
  • His chinne, a thorny hairy unevennesse
  • Doth threaten, and some daily change possesse.
  • Thy body is a naturall _Paradise_, 35
  • In whose selfe, unmanur'd, all pleasure lies,
  • Nor needs _perfection_; why shouldst thou than
  • Admit the tillage of a harsh rough man?
  • Men leave behinde them that which their sin showes,
  • And are as theeves trac'd, which rob when it snows. 40
  • But of our dallyance no more signes there are,
  • Then _fishes_ leave in streames, or _Birds_ in aire.
  • And betweene us all sweetnesse may be had;
  • All, all that _Nature_ yields, or _Art_ can adde.
  • My two lips, eyes, thighs, differ from thy two, 45
  • But so, as thine from one another doe;
  • And, oh, no more; the likenesse being such,
  • Why should they not alike in all parts touch?
  • Hand to strange hand, lippe to lippe none denies;
  • Why should they brest to brest, or thighs to thighs? 50
  • Likenesse begets such strange selfe flatterie,
  • That touching my selfe, all seemes done to thee.
  • My selfe I embrace, and mine owne hands I kisse,
  • And amorously thanke my selfe for this.
  • Me, in my glasse, I call thee; But alas, 55
  • When I would kisse, teares dimme mine _eyes_, and _glasse_.
  • O cure this loving madnesse, and restore
  • Me to mee; thee, my _halfe_, my _all_, my _more_.
  • So may thy cheekes red outweare scarlet dye,
  • And their white, whitenesse of the _Galaxy_, 60
  • So may thy mighty, amazing beauty move
  • _Envy_'in all _women_, and in all _men_, _love_,
  • And so be _change_, and _sicknesse_, farre from thee,
  • As thou by comming neere, keep'st them from me.
  • [Heroicall Epistle.] _In 1633_ Sapho to Philaenis _follows
  • Basse's_ Epitaph upon Shakespeare, _and precedes_ The
  • Annuntiation and Passion. _In 1635 it was placed with some
  • other miscellaneous and dubious poems among the_ Letters to
  • severall Personages, _where it has appeared in all subsequent
  • editions. I have transferred it to the neighbourhood of
  • the_ Elegies _and given it the title which seems to describe
  • exactly the genre to which it belongs. In JC it is entitled_
  • Elegie 18_th._ _The other MSS. are A18, A25, O'F, N, P, TCC,
  • TCD. In A25, JC, and P, ll. 31-54 are omitted_]
  • [2 have? _1650-69:_ have, _1633-39_]
  • [3 workes, _1633-39:_ worke, _1650-69_, _O'F_]
  • [8 maker, _1635-69:_ maker; _1633_]
  • [17 thereby; And _1635-69:_ thereby. And _1633_, _some
  • copies_]
  • [22 As _Down_, _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ As dowves _P:_ As
  • downs _O'F_. _See note_
  • _Cedars_,] as Cedars, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [26 maist be ever. _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _TC:_ maist thou
  • be ever. _1635-69_, _O'F:_ shalt be for ever. _P:_ mayst thou
  • be for ever. _JC_]
  • [33 thorny hairy _1633-69:_ thorney-hairy _TCD:_ thorny, hairy
  • _modern edd._]
  • [40 are _Ed:_ are, _1633-69_]
  • [58 me to mee; thee, _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _JC_, _N_, _P_,
  • _TC_ (_generally_ mee, _in MSS.:_) me to mee; shee, _1633:_ me
  • to thee, thee _Chambers_
  • _halfe_,] harte _A25_, _JC_, _P_]
  • [59-60
  • So may thy cheekes outweare all scarlet dye
  • May blisse and thee be one eternallye _P:_ _om. JC_
  • ]
  • [61 mighty, amazing _Ed:_ mighty amazing _1633-69:_ almighty
  • amazing _P_]
  • EPITHALAMIONS,
  • _OR_
  • MARRIAGE SONGS.
  • _An Epithalamion, Or mariage Song on the Lady_ Elizabeth, _and_ Count
  • Palatine _being married on St._ Valentines _day._
  • I.
  • Haile Bishop Valentine, whose day this is,
  • All the Aire is thy Diocis,
  • And all the chirping Choristers
  • And other birds are thy Parishioners,
  • Thou marryest every yeare 5
  • The Lirique Larke, and the grave whispering Dove,
  • The Sparrow that neglects his life for love,
  • The household Bird, with the red stomacher,
  • Thou mak'st the black bird speed as soone,
  • As doth the Goldfinch, or the Halcyon; 10
  • The husband cocke lookes out, and straight is sped,
  • And meets his wife, which brings her feather-bed.
  • This day more cheerfully then ever shine,
  • This day, which might enflame thy self, Old Valentine.
  • II.
  • Till now, Thou warmd'st with multiplying loves 15
  • Two larkes, two sparrowes, or two Doves,
  • All that is nothing unto this,
  • For thou this day couplest two Phœnixes;
  • Thou mak'st a Taper see
  • What the sunne never saw, and what the Arke 20
  • (Which was of soules, and beasts, the cage, and park,)
  • Did not containe, one bed containes, through Thee,
  • Two Phœnixes, whose joyned breasts
  • Are unto one another mutuall nests,
  • Where motion kindles such fires, as shall give 25
  • Yong Phœnixes, and yet the old shall live.
  • Whose love and courage never shall decline,
  • But make the whole year through, thy day, O Valentine.
  • III.
  • Up then faire Phœnix Bride, frustrate the Sunne,
  • Thy selfe from thine affection 30
  • Takest warmth enough, and from thine eye
  • All lesser birds will take their Jollitie.
  • Up, up, faire Bride, and call,
  • Thy starres, from out their severall boxes, take
  • Thy Rubies, Pearles, and Diamonds forth, and make 35
  • Thy selfe a constellation, of them All,
  • And by their blazing, signifie,
  • That a Great Princess falls, but doth not die;
  • Bee thou a new starre, that to us portends
  • Ends of much wonder; And be Thou those ends. 40
  • Since thou dost this day in new glory shine,
  • May all men date Records, from this thy Valentine.
  • IIII.
  • Come forth, come forth, and as one glorious flame
  • Meeting Another, growes the same,
  • So meet thy Fredericke, and so 45
  • To an unseparable union growe.
  • Since separation
  • Falls not on such things as are infinite,
  • Nor things which are but one, can disunite,
  • You'are twice inseparable, great, and one; 50
  • Goe then to where the Bishop staies,
  • To make you one, his way, which divers waies
  • Must be effected; and when all is past,
  • And that you'are one, by hearts and hands made fast,
  • You two have one way left, your selves to'entwine, 55
  • Besides this Bishops knot, or Bishop Valentine.
  • V.
  • But oh, what ailes the Sunne, that here he staies,
  • Longer to day, then other daies?
  • Staies he new light from these to get?
  • And finding here such store, is loth to set? 60
  • And why doe you two walke,
  • So slowly pac'd in this procession?
  • Is all your care but to be look'd upon,
  • And be to others spectacle, and talke?
  • The feast, with gluttonous delaies, 65
  • Is eaten, and too long their meat they praise,
  • The masquers come too late, and'I thinke, will stay,
  • Like Fairies, till the Cock crow them away.
  • Alas, did not Antiquity assigne
  • A night, as well as day, to thee, O Valentine? 70
  • VI.
  • They did, and night is come; and yet wee see
  • Formalities retarding thee.
  • What meane these Ladies, which (as though
  • They were to take a clock in peeces,) goe
  • So nicely about the Bride; 75
  • A Bride, before a good night could be said,
  • Should vanish from her cloathes, into her bed,
  • As Soules from bodies steale, and are not spy'd.
  • But now she is laid; What though shee bee?
  • Yet there are more delayes, For, where is he? 80
  • He comes, and passes through Spheare after Spheare,
  • First her sheetes, then her Armes, then any where.
  • Let not this day, then, but this night be thine,
  • Thy day was but the eve to this, O Valentine.
  • VII.
  • Here lyes a shee Sunne, and a hee Moone here, 85
  • She gives the best light to his Spheare,
  • Or each is both, and all, and so
  • They unto one another nothing owe,
  • And yet they doe, but are
  • So just and rich in that coyne which they pay, 90
  • That neither would, nor needs forbeare, nor stay;
  • Neither desires to be spar'd, nor to spare,
  • They quickly pay their debt, and then
  • Take no acquittances, but pay again;
  • They pay, they give, they lend, and so let fall 95
  • No such occasion to be liberall.
  • More truth, more courage in these two do shine,
  • Then all thy turtles have, and sparrows, Valentine.
  • VIII.
  • And by this act of these two Phenixes
  • Nature againe restored is, 100
  • For since these two are two no more,
  • Ther's but one Phenix still, as was before.
  • Rest now at last, and wee
  • As Satyres watch the Sunnes uprise, will stay
  • Waiting, when your eyes opened, let out day, 105
  • Onely desir'd, because your face wee see;
  • Others neare you shall whispering speake,
  • And wagers lay, at which side day will breake,
  • And win by'observing, then, whose hand it is
  • That opens first a curtaine, hers or his; 110
  • This will be tryed to morrow after nine,
  • Till which houre, wee thy day enlarge, O Valentine.
  • [Epithalamions, _&c._ _1635-69:_ _no general title_, _1633_.
  • An Epithalamion, _&c._ _1633-69_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD_ (_most of the MSS. have
  • the full title but with slight verbal variations_)]
  • [13 shine, _Ed:_ shine. _1633-69_]
  • [14 enflame] enflãe _1633_]
  • [18 Phœnixes; _Ed:_ Phœnixes, _1633:_ Phœnixes.
  • _1635-69_]
  • [21 foules, _1633:_ fowle, _1635-69_]
  • [22 Thee, _1633_, _1650-69:_ Thee: _1635-39_]
  • [37 their blazing _1633-69_, _D_, _Lec:_ this blazing _A25_,
  • _B_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_ (_altered to_ their), _P_, _TCD_]
  • [40 ends. _1635-69:_ ends, _1633_]
  • [42 this thy _1633-54_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ this day _1669_, _A25_, _JC_, _Chambers_]
  • [46 growe. _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S96_, _TCD:_ goe, _1633-69_, _Lec_]
  • [49 disunite, _Grolier:_ disunite. _1633-69 and Chambers_]
  • [56 Bishops knot, or Bishop Valentine. _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_ (our), _S96_, _TC_ Bishops
  • knot, O Bishop Valentine. _1633-54:_ Bishops knot of Bishop
  • Valentine. _1669:_ Bishops knot, of Bishop Valentine.
  • _Chambers_]
  • [60 store, _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_
  • starres, _1635-69_, _O'F_, _Chambers_]
  • [67 come too late, _1633:_ come late, _1635-69_]
  • [70 O Valentine? _1633-54_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ old Valentine? _1669_]
  • [81 passes _1633-39:_ passeth _1650-69_
  • Spheare, _Ed:_ Spheare. _1633:_ Spheare: _1635-69_]
  • [82 where. _1650-69:_ where, _1633-39_]
  • [85 here, _1633-39_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD:_
  • there, _1650-69_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [91 stay;] stay, _1633_]
  • [92 spare, _1633-54:_ spare. _1669_]
  • [94 acquittances, _1635-69:_ acquittance, _1633_]
  • [96 such] _om._ _1669_]
  • [104 As ... uprise,] _brackets 1650-69_]
  • [105 day,] day. _1633_]
  • ECCLOGUE.
  • 1613. _December_ 26.
  • Allophanes _finding_ Idios _in the country in Christmas
  • time, reprehends his absence from court, at the mariage
  • Of the Earle of Sommerset_, Idios _gives an account of
  • his purpose therein, and of his absence thence_.
  • _Allophanes._
  • Vnseasonable man, statue of ice,
  • What could to countries solitude entice
  • Thee, in this yeares cold and decrepit time?
  • Natures instinct drawes to the warmer clime
  • Even small birds, who by that courage dare, 5
  • In numerous fleets, saile through their Sea, the aire.
  • What delicacie can in fields appeare,
  • Whil'st Flora'herselfe doth a freeze jerkin weare?
  • Whil'st windes do all the trees and hedges strip
  • Of leafes, to furnish roddes enough to whip 10
  • Thy madnesse from thee; and all springs by frost
  • Have taken cold, and their sweet murmure lost;
  • If thou thy faults or fortunes would'st lament
  • With just solemnity, do it in Lent;
  • At Court the spring already advanced is, 15
  • The Sunne stayes longer up; and yet not his
  • The glory is, farre other, other fires.
  • First, zeale to Prince and State; then loves desires
  • Burne in one brest, and like heavens two great lights,
  • The first doth governe dayes, the other nights. 20
  • And then that early light, which did appeare
  • Before the Sunne and Moone created were,
  • The Princes favour is defus'd o'r all,
  • From which all Fortunes, Names, and Natures fall;
  • Then from those wombes of starres, the Brides bright eyes, 25
  • At every glance, a constellation flyes,
  • And sowes the Court with starres, and doth prevent
  • In light and power, the all-ey'd firmament;
  • First her eyes kindle other Ladies eyes,
  • Then from their beames their jewels lusters rise, 30
  • And from their jewels torches do take fire,
  • And all is warmth, and light, and good desire;
  • Most other Courts, alas, are like to hell,
  • Where in darke plotts, fire without light doth dwell:
  • Or but like Stoves, for lust and envy get 35
  • Continuall, but artificiall heat;
  • Here zeale and love growne one, all clouds disgest,
  • And make our Court an everlasting East.
  • And can'st thou be from thence?
  • _Idios._ No, I am there.
  • As heaven, to men dispos'd, is every where, 40
  • So are those Courts, whose Princes animate,
  • Not onely all their house, but all their State.
  • Let no man thinke, because he is full, he hath all,
  • Kings (as their patterne, God) are liberall
  • Not onely in fulnesse, but capacitie, 45
  • Enlarging narrow men, to feele and see,
  • And comprehend the blessings they bestow.
  • So, reclus'd hermits often times do know
  • More of heavens glory, then a worldling can.
  • As man is of the world, the heart of man, 50
  • Is an epitome of Gods great booke
  • Of creatures, and man need no farther looke;
  • So is the Country of Courts, where sweet peace doth,
  • As their one common soule, give life to both,
  • I am not then from Court.
  • _Allophanes._
  • Dreamer, thou art. 55
  • Think'st thou fantastique that thou hast a part
  • In the East-Indian fleet, because thou hast
  • A little spice, or Amber in thy taste?
  • Because thou art not frozen, art thou warme?
  • Seest thou all good because thou seest no harme? 60
  • The earth doth in her inward bowels hold
  • Stuffe well dispos'd, and which would faine be gold,
  • But never shall, except it chance to lye,
  • So upward, that heaven gild it with his eye;
  • As, for divine things, faith comes from above, 65
  • So, for best civill use, all tinctures move
  • From higher powers; From God religion springs,
  • Wisdome, and honour from the use of Kings.
  • Then unbeguile thy selfe, and know with mee,
  • That Angels, though on earth employd they bee, 70
  • Are still in heav'n, so is hee still at home
  • That doth, abroad, to honest actions come.
  • Chide thy selfe then, O foole, which yesterday
  • Might'st have read more then all thy books bewray;
  • Hast thou a history, which doth present 75
  • A Court, where all affections do assent
  • Unto the Kings, and that, that Kings are just?
  • And where it is no levity to trust?
  • Where there is no ambition, but to'obey,
  • Where men need whisper nothing, and yet may; 80
  • Where the Kings favours are so plac'd, that all
  • Finde that the King therein is liberall
  • To them, in him, because his favours bend
  • To vertue, to the which they all pretend?
  • Thou hast no such; yet here was this, and more, 85
  • An earnest lover, wise then, and before.
  • Our little Cupid hath sued Livery,
  • And is no more in his minority,
  • Hee is admitted now into that brest
  • Where the Kings Counsells and his secrets rest. 90
  • What hast thou lost, O ignorant man?
  • _Idios._
  • I knew
  • All this, and onely therefore I withdrew.
  • To know and feele all this, and not to have
  • Words to expresse it, makes a man a grave
  • Of his owne thoughts; I would not therefore stay 95
  • At a great feast, having no Grace to say.
  • And yet I scap'd not here; for being come
  • Full of the common joy, I utter'd some;
  • Reade then this nuptiall song, which was not made
  • Either the Court or mens hearts to invade, 100
  • But since I'am dead, and buried, I could frame
  • No Epitaph, which might advance my fame
  • So much as this poore song, which testifies
  • I did unto that day some sacrifice.
  • EPITHALAMION.
  • I.
  • _The time of the Mariage_.
  • Thou art repriv'd old yeare, thou shalt not die, 105
  • Though thou upon thy death bed lye,
  • And should'st within five dayes expire,
  • Yet thou art rescu'd by a mightier fire,
  • Then thy old Soule, the Sunne,
  • When he doth in his largest circle runne. 110
  • The passage of the West or East would thaw,
  • And open wide their easie liquid jawe
  • To all our ships, could a Promethean art
  • Either unto the Northerne Pole impart
  • The fire of these inflaming eyes, or of this loving heart. 115
  • II.
  • _Equality of persons_.
  • But undiscerning Muse, which heart, which eyes,
  • In this new couple, dost thou prize,
  • When his eye as inflaming is
  • As hers, and her heart loves as well as his?
  • Be tryed by beauty, and than 120
  • The bridegroome is a maid, and not a man.
  • If by that manly courage they be tryed,
  • Which scornes unjust opinion; then the bride
  • Becomes a man. Should chance or envies Art
  • Divide these two, whom nature scarce did part? 125
  • Since both have both th'enflaming eyes, and both the loving heart.
  • III.
  • _Raysing of the Bridegroome_.
  • Though it be some divorce to thinke of you
  • Singly, so much one are you two,
  • Yet let me here contemplate thee,
  • First, cheerfull Bridegroome, and first let mee see, 130
  • How thou prevent'st the Sunne,
  • And his red foming horses dost outrunne,
  • How, having laid downe in thy Soveraignes brest
  • All businesses, from thence to reinvest
  • Them, when these triumphs cease, thou forward art 135
  • To shew to her, who doth the like impart,
  • The fire of thy inflaming eyes, and of thy loving heart.
  • IIII.
  • _Raising of the Bride._
  • But now, to Thee, faire Bride, it is some wrong,
  • To thinke thou wert in Bed so long,
  • Since Soone thou lyest downe first, tis fit 140
  • Thou in first rising should'st allow for it.
  • Pouder thy Radiant haire,
  • Which if without such ashes thou would'st weare,
  • Thou, which to all which come to looke upon,
  • Art meant for Phœbus, would'st be Phaëton. 145
  • For our ease, give thine eyes th'unusual part
  • Of joy, a Teare; so quencht, thou maist impart,
  • To us that come, thy inflaming eyes, to him, thy loving heart.
  • V.
  • _Her Apparrelling._
  • Thus thou descend'st to our infirmitie,
  • Who can the Sun in water see. 150
  • Soe dost thou, when in silke and gold,
  • Thou cloudst thy selfe; since wee which doe behold,
  • Are dust, and wormes, 'tis just
  • Our objects be the fruits of wormes and dust;
  • Let every Jewell be a glorious starre, 155
  • Yet starres are not so pure, as their spheares are.
  • And though thou stoope, to'appeare to us in part,
  • Still in that Picture thou intirely art,
  • Which thy inflaming eyes have made within his loving heart.
  • VI.
  • _Going to the Chappell._
  • Now from your Easts you issue forth, and wee, 160
  • As men which through a Cipres see
  • The rising sun, doe thinke it two,
  • Soe, as you goe to Church, doe thinke of you,
  • But that vaile being gone,
  • By the Church rites you are from thenceforth one. 165
  • The Church Triumphant made this match before,
  • And now the Militant doth strive no more;
  • Then, reverend Priest, who Gods Recorder art,
  • Doe, from his Dictates, to these two impart
  • All blessings, which are seene, or thought, by Angels eye
  • or heart. 170
  • VII.
  • _The Benediction._
  • Blest payre of Swans, Oh may you interbring
  • Daily new joyes, and never sing,
  • Live, till all grounds of wishes faile,
  • Till honor, yea till wisedome grow so stale,
  • That, new great heights to trie, 175
  • It must serve your ambition, to die;
  • Raise heires, and may here, to the worlds end, live
  • Heires from this King, to take thankes, you, to give,
  • Nature and grace doe all, and nothing Art.
  • May never age, or error overthwart 180
  • With any West, these radiant eyes, with any North, this heart.
  • VIII.
  • _Feasts and Revells._
  • But you are over-blest. Plenty this day
  • Injures; it causeth time to stay;
  • The tables groane, as though this feast
  • Would, as the flood, destroy all fowle and beast. 185
  • And were the doctrine new
  • That the earth mov'd, this day would make it true;
  • For every part to dance and revell goes.
  • They tread the ayre, and fal not where they rose.
  • Though six houres since, the Sunne to bed did part, 190
  • The masks and banquets will not yet impart
  • A sunset to these weary eyes, A Center to this heart.
  • IX.
  • _The Brides going to bed._
  • What mean'st thou Bride, this companie to keep?
  • To sit up, till thou faine wouldst sleep?
  • Thou maist not, when thou art laid, doe so. 195
  • Thy selfe must to him a new banquet grow,
  • And you must entertaine
  • And doe all this daies dances o'r againe.
  • Know that if Sun and Moone together doe
  • Rise in one point, they doe not set so too; 200
  • Therefore thou maist, faire Bride, to bed depart,
  • Thou art not gone, being gone; where e'r thou art,
  • Thou leav'st in him thy watchfull eyes, in him thy loving heart.
  • X.
  • _The Bridegroomes comming._
  • As he that sees a starre fall, runs apace,
  • And findes a gellie in the place, 205
  • So doth the Bridegroome hast as much,
  • Being told this starre is falne, and findes her such.
  • And as friends may looke strange,
  • By a new fashion, or apparrells change,
  • Their soules, though long acquainted they had beene, 210
  • These clothes, their bodies, never yet had seene;
  • Therefore at first shee modestly might start,
  • But must forthwith surrender every part,
  • As freely, as each to each before, gave either eye or heart.
  • XI.
  • _The good-night._
  • Now, as in Tullias tombe, one lampe burnt cleare, 215
  • Unchang'd for fifteene hundred yeare,
  • May these love-lamps we here enshrine,
  • In warmth, light, lasting, equall the divine.
  • Fire ever doth aspire,
  • And makes all like it selfe, turnes all to fire, 220
  • But ends in ashes, which these cannot doe,
  • For none of these is fuell, but fire too.
  • This is joyes bonfire, then, where loves strong Arts
  • Make of so noble individuall parts
  • One fire of foure inflaming eyes, and of two loving hearts. 225
  • _Idios._
  • As I have brought this song, that I may doe
  • A perfect sacrifice, I'll burne it too.
  • _Allophanes._
  • No S^{r}. This paper I have justly got,
  • For, in burnt incense, the perfume is not
  • His only that presents it, but of all; 230
  • What ever celebrates this Festivall
  • Is common, since the joy thereof is so.
  • Nor may your selfe be Priest: But let me goe,
  • Backe to the Court, and I will lay'it upon
  • Such Altars, as prize your devotion. 235
  • [ECCLOGUE. _&c._ _1633-69:_ _similarly_, _A18_, _A23_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [his absence thence. _1633, Lec:_ his Actions there.
  • _1635-69_, _A18_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ his absence then.
  • _D_, _S96_]
  • [2 countries] country _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [4 clime _1633-39:_ clime: _1650-69:_ clime. _D_]
  • [5 small _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _TC:_
  • smaller _1635-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [12 Have _1633:_ Having _1635-69_
  • murmure _A18_, _A23_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_
  • murmures _1633-69_]
  • [22 were, _Ed:_ were; _1633-69_]
  • [29 kindle] kindles _1633_]
  • [34 plotts, _1635-69_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _TC:_ places, _1633_, _1669_, _Lec_]
  • [37 disgest, _1633-39:_ digest, _1650-69_]
  • [39 there. _D:_ there _1633-69_]
  • [40 where, _1633:_ where: _1635-69_, _owing to the dropping of
  • stop in previous line_]
  • [42 State.] State, _1633_]
  • [54 one _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ own
  • _1635-69_, _Lec_]
  • [55 I am ... Court. _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_,
  • _S96_, _TC:_ And am I then from Court? _1635-69_
  • art. _1650-69:_ art, _1633-39_]
  • [57 East-Indian _A18_, _A23_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _TC:_ Indian _1633-69_]
  • [61 inward _A18_, _A23_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _TC:_ inner _1633-69_]
  • [75 present] represent _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [78 trust? _Ed:_ trust. _1633-39:_ trust, _1650-69_]
  • [84 pretend? _Ed:_ pretend. _1633-69_]
  • [85 more, _1633:_ more. _1635-69_]
  • [86 before. _1633-69:_ before, _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [92 withdrew.] withdrew _1633_]
  • [96 say. _1635-69:_ say, _1633_]
  • [98 joy, ... some; _Ed:_ joy; ... some, _1633:_ joy; ... some.
  • _1635-69_]
  • [EPITHALAMION. _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S96:_ _om. 1633-69_.
  • _See note_]
  • [107 expire,] expire _1633-39_]
  • [108 by _1633:_ from _1635-69_]
  • [121 man. _1669_, _D:_ man, _1633-39:_ man; _1650-54_]
  • [124 or] our _1669_]
  • [126 both th'enflaming eyes, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _TC:_ th'enflaming eye, _1633:_ the enflaming
  • eye, _1635-69_]
  • [128 Singly, _A18_, _A23_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_,
  • _TC:_ Single, _1633-69_, _Lec_]
  • [129 Yet let _A23_, _O'F:_ Let _1633-69_]
  • [141 should'st] should _1669_
  • it. _1635-69:_ it, _1633_]
  • [144 Thou, which _D:_ Thou, which, _1633:_ Thou which,
  • _1635-69_]
  • [145 Art _A18_, _B_, _S96_, _TCC:_ Are _1633_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ Wert _1635-69_, _O'F_
  • for] for, _1633_]
  • [Phaëton. _1635-69:_ Phaëton, _1633_]
  • [146 ease, ... eyes _1635-69:_ ease, ... eyes, _1633_]
  • [150 see. _1633-69:_ see; _Grolier_. _But see note_]
  • [157 stoope, ... us _1633-69:_ stoope, ... us, _1633_]
  • [167 more; _Ed:_ more, _1633:_ more. _1635-69_]
  • [170 or thought] Or thought _1633_]
  • [172 sing, _1633:_ sing: _1635-69_]
  • [178 you, yours, _A23_, _B_, _D_, _O'F_, _S96_
  • give, _1633:_ give. _1635-69_]
  • [179 Art. _Ed:_ Art, _1633-69_]
  • [194 wouldst] would _1669_]
  • [200 too; _Ed:_ too. _1635-69:_ to. _1633_]
  • [202 being gone; _Ed:_ being gone, _1633-39:_ being gone
  • _1650-69_]
  • [207 such. _1635-69:_ such, _1633_]
  • [211 seene; _Ed:_ seene. _1633-69_]
  • [214 eye] hand _1650-69_]
  • [215 burnt] burn _1669_]
  • [218 divine. _1635-69:_ divine; _1633_]
  • [230 all; _1635-69:_ all, _1633_]
  • _Epithalamion made at Lincolnes Inne._
  • The Sun-beames in the East are spred,
  • Leave, leave, faire Bride, your solitary bed,
  • No more shall you returne to it alone,
  • It nourseth sadnesse, and your bodies print,
  • Like to a grave, the yielding downe doth dint; 5
  • You and your other you meet there anon;
  • Put forth, put forth that warme balme-breathing thigh,
  • Which when next time you in these sheets wil smother,
  • There it must meet another,
  • Which never was, but must be, oft, more nigh; 10
  • Come glad from thence, goe gladder then you came,
  • _To day put on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • Daughters of London, you which bee
  • Our Golden Mines, and furnish'd Treasurie,
  • You which are Angels, yet still bring with you 15
  • Thousands of Angels on your mariage daies,
  • Help with your presence and devise to praise
  • These rites, which also unto you grow due;
  • Conceitedly dresse her, and be assign'd,
  • By you, fit place for every flower and jewell, 20
  • Make her for love fit fewell
  • As gay as Flora, and as rich as Inde;
  • So may shee faire, rich, glad, and in nothing lame,
  • _To day put on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • And you frolique Patricians, 25
  • Sonns of these Senators wealths deep oceans,
  • Ye painted courtiers, barrels of others wits,
  • Yee country men, who but your beasts love none,
  • Yee of those fellowships whereof hee's one,
  • Of study and play made strange Hermaphrodits, 30
  • Here shine; This Bridegroom to the Temple bring.
  • Loe, in yon path which store of straw'd flowers graceth,
  • The sober virgin paceth;
  • Except my sight faile, 'tis no other thing;
  • Weep not nor blush, here is no griefe nor shame, 35
  • _To day put on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • Thy two-leav'd gates faire Temple unfold,
  • And these two in thy sacred bosome hold,
  • Till, mystically joyn'd, but one they bee;
  • Then may thy leane and hunger-starved wombe 40
  • Long time expect their bodies and their tombe,
  • Long after their owne parents fatten thee.
  • All elder claimes, and all cold barrennesse,
  • All yeelding to new loves bee far for ever,
  • Which might these two dissever, 45
  • All wayes all th'other may each one possesse;
  • For, the best Bride, best worthy of praise and fame,
  • _To day puts on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • Oh winter dayes bring much delight,
  • Not for themselves, but for they soon bring night; 50
  • Other sweets wait thee then these diverse meats,
  • Other disports then dancing jollities,
  • Other love tricks then glancing with the eyes,
  • But that the Sun still in our halfe Spheare sweates;
  • Hee flies in winter, but he now stands still. 55
  • Yet shadowes turne; Noone point he hath attain'd,
  • His steeds nill bee restrain'd,
  • But gallop lively downe the Westerne hill;
  • Thou shalt, when he hath runne the worlds half frame,
  • _To night put on perfection, and a womans name_. 60
  • The amorous evening starre is rose,
  • Why then should not our amorous starre inclose
  • Her selfe in her wish'd bed? Release your strings
  • Musicians, and dancers take some truce
  • With these your pleasing labours, for great use 65
  • As much wearinesse as perfection brings;
  • You, and not only you, but all toyl'd beasts
  • Rest duly; at night all their toyles are dispensed;
  • But in their beds commenced
  • Are other labours, and more dainty feasts; 70
  • She goes a maid, who, least she turne the same,
  • _To night puts on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • Thy virgins girdle now untie,
  • And in thy nuptiall bed (loves altar) lye
  • A pleasing sacrifice; now dispossesse 75
  • Thee of these chaines and robes which were put on
  • T'adorne the day, not thee; for thou, alone,
  • Like vertue'and truth, art best in nakednesse;
  • This bed is onely to virginitie
  • A grave, but, to a better state, a cradle; 80
  • Till now thou wast but able
  • To be what now thou art; then that by thee
  • No more be said, _I may bee_, but, _I am_,
  • _To night put on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • Even like a faithfull man content, 85
  • That this life for a better should be spent,
  • So, shee a mothers rich stile doth preferre,
  • And at the Bridegroomes wish'd approach doth lye,
  • Like an appointed lambe, when tenderly
  • The priest comes on his knees t'embowell her; 90
  • Now sleep or watch with more joy; and O light
  • Of heaven, to morrow rise thou hot, and early;
  • This Sun will love so dearely
  • Her rest, that long, long we shall want her sight;
  • Wonders are wrought, for shee which had no maime, 95
  • _To night puts on perfection, and a womans name_.
  • [Epithalamion _&c._ _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_
  • Epithalamion on a Citizen. _A34_, _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96:_
  • _do._ of the La: Eliz: _P:_ Epithalamion. _W_]
  • [4 bodies _1635-69 and MSS.:_ body _1633_]
  • [8 smother, _1650-69:_ smother _1633-39_]
  • [17 presence _Ed:_ presence, _1633-69_. _See note_]
  • [22 faire, rich, glad, and in _A18_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ faire and
  • rich, in _1633-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [25 Patricians,] Patricians _1633_]
  • [26 Sonns of ... deep oceans, _Ed:_ Some of these Senators
  • wealths deep oceans, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ Sonnes of these
  • Senatours, wealths deep oceans _W:_ Sonnes of those Senatours,
  • wealths deepe oceans, _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_ (_but_
  • Senators _O'F_, _S96_). _See note_]
  • [29 those fellowships] that Fellowship _S96_]
  • [31 bring. _W:_ bring _1633-39:_ bring, _1650-69_]
  • [32 straw'd] strow'd _1669_]
  • [42 thee. _1635-69:_ thee; _1633_]
  • [46 All wayes _W:_ Alwaies, _1633:_ Alwayes, _1635-69_]
  • [49 Oh winter dayes _A34_, _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _W:_ Winter
  • dayes _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [53 eyes, _1635-69:_ eyes; _1633_]
  • [55 still. _W:_ still, _1633-69_]
  • [57 nill _W:_ will _1633-69 and rest of MSS.:_ _B inserts_
  • not. _See note_]
  • [59 runne the worlds halfe frame, _A34_, _B_, _S96_, _W:_
  • runne the Heavens halfe frame, _1635-69_, _O'F:_ come the
  • worlds half frame, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [60 _put_] _but_ _1633_]
  • [72 _puts_] _put_ _1669_]
  • [73 Thy virgins girdle _1633-69_, _W:_ The Virgin Girdle _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96:_ Thy Virgin girdle _P_]
  • [74 [loves alter] _1633-69_]
  • [76 were] wee _some copies of 1633_, _Grolier_]
  • [78 art] are _1669_]
  • [86 spent, _Ed:_ spent; _1633:_ spent: _1635-69_]
  • [95 maime, _1633_, _W:_ name, _1635-69_, _A18_, _A34_, _B_,
  • _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • SATYRES.
  • _Satyre I._
  • Away thou fondling motley humorist,
  • Leave mee, and in this standing woodden chest,
  • Consorted with these few bookes, let me lye
  • In prison, and here be coffin'd, when I dye;
  • Here are Gods conduits, grave Divines; and here 5
  • Natures Secretary, the Philosopher;
  • And jolly Statesmen, which teach how to tie
  • The sinewes of a cities mistique bodie;
  • Here gathering Chroniclers, and by them stand
  • Giddie fantastique Poëts of each land. 10
  • Shall I leave all this constant company,
  • And follow headlong, wild uncertaine thee?
  • First sweare by thy best love in earnest
  • (If thou which lov'st all, canst love any best)
  • Thou wilt not leave mee in the middle street, 15
  • Though some more spruce companion thou dost meet,
  • Not though a Captaine do come in thy way
  • Bright parcell gilt, with forty dead mens pay,
  • Not though a briske perfum'd piert Courtier
  • Deigne with a nod, thy courtesie to answer. 20
  • Nor come a velvet Justice with a long
  • Great traine of blew coats, twelve, or fourteen strong,
  • Wilt thou grin or fawne on him, or prepare
  • A speech to Court his beautious sonne and heire!
  • For better or worse take mee, or leave mee: 25
  • To take, and leave mee is adultery.
  • Oh monstrous, superstitious puritan,
  • Of refin'd manners, yet ceremoniall man,
  • That when thou meet'st one, with enquiring eyes
  • Dost search, and like a needy broker prize 30
  • The silke, and gold he weares, and to that rate
  • So high or low, dost raise thy formall hat:
  • That wilt consort none, untill thou have knowne
  • What lands hee hath in hope, or of his owne,
  • As though all thy companions should make thee 35
  • Jointures, and marry thy deare company.
  • Why should'st thou (that dost not onely approve,
  • But in ranke itchie lust, desire, and love
  • The nakednesse and barenesse to enjoy,
  • Of thy plumpe muddy whore, or prostitute boy) 40
  • Hate vertue, though shee be naked, and bare?
  • At birth, and death, our bodies naked are;
  • And till our Soules be unapparrelled
  • Of bodies, they from blisse are banished.
  • Mans first blest state was naked, when by sinne 45
  • Hee lost that, yet hee was cloath'd but in beasts skin,
  • And in this course attire, which I now weare,
  • With God, and with the Muses I conferre.
  • But since thou like a contrite penitent,
  • Charitably warn'd of thy sinnes, dost repent 50
  • These vanities, and giddinesses, loe
  • I shut my chamber doore, and come, lets goe.
  • But sooner may a cheape whore, who hath beene
  • Worne by as many severall men in sinne,
  • As are black feathers, or musk-colour hose, 55
  • Name her childs right true father, 'mongst all those:
  • Sooner may one guesse, who shall beare away
  • The Infanta of London, Heire to an India;
  • And sooner may a gulling weather Spie
  • By drawing forth heavens Scheme tell certainly 60
  • What fashioned hats, or ruffes, or suits next yeare
  • Our subtile-witted antique youths will weare;
  • Then thou, when thou depart'st from mee, canst show
  • Whither, why, when, or with whom thou wouldst go.
  • But how shall I be pardon'd my offence 65
  • That thus have sinn'd against my conscience?
  • Now we are in the street; He first of all
  • Improvidently proud, creepes to the wall,
  • And so imprisoned, and hem'd in by mee
  • Sells for a little state his libertie; 70
  • Yet though he cannot skip forth now to greet
  • Every fine silken painted foole we meet,
  • He them to him with amorous smiles allures,
  • And grins, smacks, shrugs, and such an itch endures,
  • As prentises, or schoole-boyes which doe know 75
  • Of some gay sport abroad, yet dare not goe.
  • And as fidlers stop lowest, at highest sound,
  • So to the most brave, stoops hee nigh'st the ground.
  • But to a grave man, he doth move no more
  • Then the wise politique horse would heretofore, 80
  • Or thou O Elephant or Ape wilt doe,
  • When any names the King of Spaine to you.
  • Now leaps he upright, Joggs me, & cryes, Do you see
  • Yonder well favoured youth? Which? Oh, 'tis hee
  • That dances so divinely; Oh, said I, 85
  • Stand still, must you dance here for company?
  • Hee droopt, wee went, till one (which did excell
  • Th'Indians, in drinking his Tobacco well)
  • Met us; they talk'd; I whispered, let'us goe,
  • 'T may be you smell him not, truely I doe; 90
  • He heares not mee, but, on the other side
  • A many-coloured Peacock having spide,
  • Leaves him and mee; I for my lost sheep stay;
  • He followes, overtakes, goes on the way,
  • Saying, him whom I last left, all repute 95
  • For his device, in hansoming a sute,
  • To judge of lace, pinke, panes, print, cut, and plight,
  • Of all the Court, to have the best conceit;
  • Our dull Comedians want him, let him goe;
  • But Oh, God strengthen thee, why stoop'st thou so? 100
  • Why? he hath travayld; Long? No; but to me
  • (Which understand none,) he doth seeme to be
  • Perfect French, and Italian; I replyed,
  • So is the Poxe; He answered not, but spy'd
  • More men of fort, of parts, and qualities; 105
  • At last his Love he in a windowe spies,
  • And like light dew exhal'd, he flings from mee
  • Violently ravish'd to his lechery.
  • Many were there, he could command no more;
  • Hee quarrell'd fought, bled; and turn'd out of dore 110
  • Directly came to mee hanging the head,
  • And constantly a while must keepe his bed.
  • [Satyre I. _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _P_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _W:_ Satyre the Second. _or_ Satyre 2. _A25_, _B_, _O'F:_
  • Satyre. _or_ A Satyre of Mr. John Donnes. _Cy_, _L74_, _S96:_
  • _no title_ (_but placed first_), _H51_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [1 fondling _1633_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TCD:_ changeling
  • _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _Q_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [5 conduits, ... Divines; _1650-69_, _Q:_ conduits; ...
  • Divines, _1633-39_]
  • [6 Is Natures Secretary, _1669_, _S96_
  • Philosopher; _Ed:_ Philosopher. _1633-39:_ Philosopher:
  • _1659-69_]
  • [7 jolly _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ wily _1635-69_,
  • _O'F:_ with _P_]
  • [12 headlong, wild uncertaine thee? _1633:_ _om. comma 1635-69
  • and Grolier_]
  • [13 love in earnest _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _H51_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_,
  • _W:_ love, here, in earnest _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [16 dost. meet,] doe meet. _H51_, _Q_, _W_]
  • [19 Not _1633-69_, _A25_, _Lec_, _P_, _Q:_ Nor _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W_
  • piert] neat _Q_]
  • [23 Wilt _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ Shalt _A25_,
  • _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _W_]
  • [24 heire! _Ed:_ heire? _1633-69_]
  • [25 or worse _1633-69_, _Cy_, _D_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _Q_, _TCD:_ and worse _A25_, _B_, _H49_, _H51_, _S96_, _W:_ or
  • for worse _P:_ and for worse _JC_]
  • [27 Oh monstrous,] A (_i.e._ Ah) _or_ O Monster, _B_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _W_]
  • [29 eyes _1635-69:_ eyes; _1633_]
  • [32 raise _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD:_ vaile _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W_
  • hat:] hate: _1633_]
  • [33 consort none,] consort with none, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_
  • untill] till _1669_]
  • [37-40 _brackets_ _1650-69_, _Q:_ that ... boy _1633:_ that
  • ... boy; _1635-39_]
  • [39 barenesse _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _Q_, _W:_ barrennesse _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [40 Of] of _1633:_ or _1633_, _1669:_ _om. 1635-54_]
  • [41 bare? _1635-69:_ bare, _1633_]
  • [45 first blest _1633-69_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TCD_, _W:_ first best _A25_, _B_, _H51_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _Q_, _S_]
  • [46 yet _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _Q_, _S_, _TCD:_ _om. 1635-69_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • [47 weare, _1650-69:_ weare _1633-39_]
  • [50 warn'd] warm'd _1633_]
  • [52 goe. _1635-69:_ goe, _1633_]
  • [54 Worne by] Worne out by _1650-69_]
  • [55 musk-colour _1633-35_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD_, _W:_ musk-coloured _1639-69_, _A25_, _P_, _Q_]
  • [58 The Infanta ... India; _Ed:_ The Infanta ... India,
  • _A25_, _O'F_, _Q:_ The infant ... India, _1633-54 and MSS.
  • generally:_ The Infantry of London, hence to India: _1669_]
  • [60 Scheme _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_,
  • _Q:_ schemes _L74_, _S:_ sceames _N:_ Sceanes _1633_, _Cy_,
  • _Lec_, _TCD:_ scene _P_]
  • [62 subtile-witted _D_, _H49:_ subtile wittied _1633-54_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _TCD:_ supple-witted _A25_, _JC_ (_altered to_
  • subtle), _H51_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ giddy-headed _1669_
  • youths] youth _1669_]
  • [63 depart'st from mee] depart'st from hence _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _H51_, _O'F_, _S_, _W:_ departest hence _A25_, _Q_, _S96_
  • canst _JC, Q:_ can _1633-69 and many MSS._]
  • [66 conscience?] conscience. _1633_]
  • [70 state] room _H51_
  • his _1635-69 and all MSS.:_ high _1633_, _Chambers_
  • libertie;] libertie, _1633_]
  • [73 them] then _1633_]
  • [78 stoops _1635-69_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _O'F_,
  • _Q:_ stoopeth _B_, _P:_ stoopt _1633_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD_
  • nigh'st the ground.] nighest ground. _D_, _H49_, _P_, _Q_,
  • _W_]
  • [81-2 _om. 1633_]
  • [84 youth? _1635-69:_ youth; _1633_
  • Oh,] Yea, _A25_, _B_, _H51_, _JC_, _Q_, _W_]
  • [86 here] so _H51_]
  • [89 us; _Ed:_ us: _1635-69:_ us, _1633_
  • whispered, let'us goe, _Ed:_ whispered, let us goe, _1633-54:_
  • whisperd, let us goe, _1669:_ whispered (letts goe) _Q_. _See
  • note_]
  • [90 'T may be] May be _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [94 goes on the way,] goes, on the way _D_, _H49_, _Q_(in),
  • _W_(in)]
  • [95 all repute _1635-69 and MSS. generally:_ s'all repute
  • _1633_, _Lec_]
  • [97 print, cut, and plight (pleite, _1635-39:_ pleit,
  • _1650-69_), _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ cut, print,
  • or pleate (pleight _&c._), _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _H51_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [100 stoop'st _1633_, _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD:_ stop'st. _1635-54_,
  • _O'F_]
  • [101 Why? he hath travayld; Long? No; but to me _S96:_ Why:
  • he hath travayld. Long? No: but to mee _W:_ Why, hee hath
  • travayl'd. Long? no. But to mee _H49:_ Why he hath travayld;
  • Longe? Noe: but to mee _JC:_ Why, he hath travailed (traveled
  • _1635-39_) long? no, but to me _1633-39:_ Why hath he
  • travelled long? no, but to me _1650-54_, _P:_ Why. He hath
  • travelled long; no, but to me _1669_. _See note_]
  • [102 understand] understood _1669:_ _brackets from Q_. _See
  • note_]
  • [105 and qualities;] of qualities; _Lec_, _P_, _Q_, _S96_]
  • [106 a] _om. 1669_]
  • [108 lechery. _1635-69 and MSS:_ liberty; _1633_]
  • [109 were there, _1633-39:_ there were, _1650-69_]
  • _Satyre II._
  • Sir; though (I thanke God for it) I do hate
  • Perfectly all this towne, yet there's one state
  • In all ill things so excellently best,
  • That hate, toward them, breeds pitty towards the rest.
  • Though Poëtry indeed be such a sinne 5
  • As I thinke that brings dearths, and Spaniards in,
  • Though like the Pestilence and old fashion'd love,
  • Ridlingly it catch men; and doth remove
  • Never, till it be sterv'd out; yet their state
  • Is poore, disarm'd, like Papists, not worth hate. 10
  • One, (like a wretch, which at Barre judg'd as dead,
  • Yet prompts him which stands next, and cannot reade,
  • And saves his life) gives ideot actors meanes
  • (Starving himselfe) to live by his labor'd sceanes;
  • As in some Organ, Puppits dance above 15
  • And bellows pant below, which them do move.
  • One would move Love by rithmes; but witchcrafts charms
  • Bring not now their old feares, nor their old harmes:
  • Rammes, and slings now are seely battery,
  • Pistolets are the best Artillerie. 20
  • And they who write to Lords, rewards to get,
  • Are they not like singers at doores for meat?
  • And they who write, because all write, have still
  • That excuse for writing, and for writing ill;
  • But hee is worst, who (beggarly) doth chaw 25
  • Others wits fruits, and in his ravenous maw
  • Rankly digested, doth those things out-spue,
  • As his owne things; and they are his owne, 'tis true,
  • For if one eate my meate, though it be knowne
  • The meate was mine, th'excrement is his owne: 30
  • But these do mee no harme, nor they which use
  • To out-doe Dildoes, and out-usure Jewes;
  • To out-drinke the sea, to out-sweare the Letanie;
  • Who with sinnes all kindes as familiar bee
  • As Confessors; and for whose sinfull sake, 35
  • Schoolemen new tenements in hell must make:
  • Whose strange sinnes, Canonists could hardly tell
  • In which Commandements large receit they dwell.
  • But these punish themselves; the insolence
  • Of Coscus onely breeds my just offence, 40
  • Whom time (which rots all, and makes botches poxe,
  • And plodding on, must make a calfe an oxe)
  • Hath made a Lawyer, which was (alas) of late
  • But a scarce Poët; jollier of this state,
  • Then are new benefic'd ministers, he throwes 45
  • Like nets, or lime-twigs, wheresoever he goes,
  • His title of Barrister, on every wench,
  • And wooes in language of the Pleas, and Bench:
  • A motion, Lady; Speake Coscus; I have beene
  • In love, ever since _tricesimo_ of the Queene, 50
  • Continuall claimes I have made, injunctions got
  • To stay my rivals suit, that hee should not
  • Proceed; spare mee; In Hillary terme I went,
  • You said, If I return'd next size in Lent,
  • I should be in remitter of your grace; 55
  • In th'interim my letters should take place
  • Of affidavits: words, words, which would teare
  • The tender labyrinth of a soft maids eare,
  • More, more, then ten Sclavonians scolding, more
  • Then when winds in our ruin'd Abbeyes rore. 60
  • When sicke with Poëtrie, and possest with muse
  • Thou wast, and mad, I hop'd; but men which chuse
  • Law practise for meere gaine, bold soule, repute
  • Worse then imbrothel'd strumpets prostitute.
  • Now like an owlelike watchman, hee must walke 65
  • His hand still at a bill, now he must talke
  • Idly, like prisoners, which whole months will sweare
  • That onely suretiship hath brought them there,
  • And to every suitor lye in every thing,
  • Like a Kings favourite, yea like a King; 70
  • Like a wedge in a blocke, wring to the barre,
  • Bearing-like Asses; and more shamelesse farre
  • Then carted whores, lye, to the grave Judge; for
  • Bastardy abounds not in Kings titles, nor
  • Symonie and Sodomy in Churchmens lives, 75
  • As these things do in him; by these he thrives.
  • Shortly (as the sea) hee will compasse all our land;
  • From Scots, to Wight; from Mount, to Dover strand.
  • And spying heires melting with luxurie,
  • Satan will not joy at their sinnes, as hee. 80
  • For as a thrifty wench scrapes kitching-stuffe,
  • And barrelling the droppings, and the snuffe,
  • Of wasting candles, which in thirty yeare
  • (Relique-like kept) perchance buyes wedding geare;
  • Peecemeale he gets lands, and spends as much time 85
  • Wringing each Acre, as men pulling prime.
  • In parchments then, large as his fields, hee drawes
  • Assurances, bigge, as gloss'd civill lawes,
  • So huge, that men (in our times forwardnesse)
  • Are Fathers of the Church for writing lesse. 90
  • These hee writes not; nor for these written payes,
  • Therefore spares no length; as in those first dayes
  • When Luther was profest, He did desire
  • Short _Pater nosters_, saying as a Fryer
  • Each day his beads, but having left those lawes, 95
  • Addes to Christs prayer, the Power and glory clause.
  • But when he sells or changes land, he'impaires
  • His writings, and (unwatch'd) leaves out, _ses heires_,
  • As slily as any Commenter goes by
  • Hard words, or sense; or in Divinity 100
  • As controverters, in vouch'd Texts, leave out
  • Shrewd words, which might against them cleare the doubt.
  • Where are those spred woods which cloth'd hertofore
  • Those bought lands? not built, nor burnt within dore.
  • Where's th'old landlords troops, and almes? In great hals 106
  • Carthusian fasts, and fulsome Bachanalls
  • Equally I hate; meanes blesse; in rich mens homes
  • I bid kill some beasts, but no Hecatombs,
  • None starve, none surfet so; But (Oh) we allow,
  • Good workes as good, but out of fashion now, 110
  • Like old rich wardrops; but my words none drawes
  • Within the vast reach of th'huge statute lawes.
  • [Satyre II.: _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_ (after C. B.
  • copy _in margin_), _JC_, _Lec_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ Satyre 3rd.
  • _A25:_ Law Satyre. _P:_ Satire. _or no title_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [2-3
  • _there is one_
  • All this towne perfectly yet in every state
  • _In all ill things so excellently best_
  • There are some found so villainously best, _H51_
  • All this towne perfectly yet everie state
  • Hath in't one found so villainously best _S96_
  • ]
  • [4 toward] towards _1669_ and _MSS._
  • them,] that _A25_
  • towards] toward _1653-54_
  • rest.] rest; _1633_]
  • [6 As I thinke that _1633:_ As I thinke That _1635-54:_ As,
  • I think, that _1669:_ As I'ame afraid brings _H51_ dearths,
  • _A25_, _H51_, _HN_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_, _W:_ dearth,
  • _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_]
  • [7 and] or _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [8 Ridlingly it _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_ It
  • riddlinglie _rest of MSS._]
  • [10 hate. _Ed:_ hate: _1633-69_]
  • [12 cannot _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ could not
  • _rest of MSS._]
  • [14 sceanes; _Ed:_ sceanes. _1633-69 and Chambers_]
  • [15 Organ _1633-54_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ Organs _1669
  • and rest of MSS._]
  • [16 move. _1633-69:_ move, _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [17 rithmes; _1633-69_, _Lec_, _Q_, _TCD:_ rimes; _A25_, _B_,
  • _Cy_ (rime), _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _W_]
  • [18 harmes: _Ed:_ harmes. _1633-69_]
  • [19 Rammes, and slings] Rimes and songs _P_]
  • [22 singers at doores _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_
  • Boyes singing at dore (_or_ dores) _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _H51_, _HN_, _JC_, _O'F_ (_corrected from_ singers), _P_, _Q_
  • (at a dore), _S_, _W:_ singers at mens dores _A25_]
  • [24 excuse] scuse _MSS._]
  • [32 To out-doe Dildoes, _1635-69, B, H51, L74, Lec, N, P, Q,
  • TCD:_ To out-doe ----; _1633:_ To out-swive dildoes _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _HN_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [33 Letanie; _Ed:_ Letanie, _1669 and all MSS.:_ ---- _1633:_
  • _simply omit_, _1635-39:_ gallant, he _1650-54_. _See note_]
  • [34 sinnes all kindes _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _H51_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_
  • sinnes of all kindes _1633_, _Cy_ (kind), _Lec, P_]
  • [35-6 sake, Schoolemen _1669:_ sake Schoolemen, _1633-54_]
  • [40 just _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ great _A25_,
  • _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _W:_ harts _JC_]
  • [43 Lawyer, _Ed:_ Lawyer; _1633-69_
  • which was (alas) of late _Ed:_ which was alas of late _1633:_
  • which, (alas) of late _1635-69_]
  • [44 a scarce _A25_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_, _JC_ (_altered in
  • margin_), _L74_, _Q_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ scarce a _1633-69_,
  • _D_, _Lec_, _P_
  • Poet; _1635-69:_ Poët, _1633_
  • this _1633-69:_ that _A25_, _Cy_, _H51_, _Q:_ his _HN_, _JC_,
  • _O'F_, _S_]
  • [49 Lady; _Ed:_ Lady, _1633:_ Lady. _1635-39:_ Lady: _1650-69_
  • Coscus; _1633:_ Coscus. _1635-69_]
  • [53 Proceed; _1669:_ Proceed, _1633-54_]
  • [54 return'd] Returne _1633_ next size _1633-69_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ this size _rest of MSS._]
  • [58 soft maids eare, _Ed:_ soft maids eare. _1633-54 and
  • MSS.:_ Maids soft ear _1669_]
  • [59 scolding] scolding's _1669_]
  • [60 rore.] rore; _1633_]
  • [63 gaine, bold soule, repute _Ed:_ gaine; bold soule repute
  • _1633-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_, _L74_, _P_,
  • _W:_ gayne (bold soule) repute: _Q:_ gain, bold souls repute
  • _1719 and Chambers:_ gayne, hold soule repute _A25_, _N_, _S_,
  • _TCD, and Lowell's conjecture in Grolier_. _See note_]
  • [68 That] The _Chambers_]
  • [69-70 _These lines represented by dashes_, _1633_]
  • [70 yea _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ or
  • _1635-69_]
  • [72 Bearing-like Asses; _Ed:_ Bearing like Asses, _1633-69 and
  • MSS._]
  • [73 whores, _1633-69:_ whores; _Chambers and Grolier_. _See
  • note_]
  • [74-5 _These lines represented by dashes_, _1633_]
  • [77 our land;] our land, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_,
  • _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_,
  • _W:_ the land; _1633-69_, _Q_]
  • [79 luxurie, _1633-69_, _A25_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_
  • (_corr. fr._ Gluttony), _P_, _Q_, _TCD:_ Gluttony _B_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _HN_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [80 will] would _A25_, _Q_]
  • [84 Relique-like _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ Reliquely _1633-69_, _Cy_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _P_
  • geare;] chear; _1669_ (_which brackets from_ 81 as _to end of_
  • 84), _Cy_]
  • [86 men] Maids _1669_]
  • [87 parchments _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _Q_,
  • _W:_ parchment _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCD_
  • his] the _1669_]
  • [98 _ses 1633-69_, _B_, _L74_, _Lec_, _Q_, _and other MSS.:_
  • his _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _P_
  • heires,] heires _1633_]
  • [99 As] And _1669_
  • by] by, _1633_]
  • [102 doubt.] doubt: _1633_]
  • [105 Where's _&c._ _Ed:_ Where's th'old landlords troops,
  • and almes, great hals? _1633_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_ (_but_ hals
  • _MSS._): Where the old landlords troops, and almes? In hals
  • _1635-69_, _L74_, _O'F:_ Where the old landlords troopes and
  • almes? In great halls _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_,
  • _HN_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W_ (_but the punctuation is very
  • irregular, and some have_ 's _after_ Where). _See note_]
  • [107 Equally I hate;] Equallie hate, _Q_
  • hate; _Ed:_ hate, _1633:_ hate. _1635-69_
  • meanes bless; _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD_, _W:_ Meane's blest.
  • _1635-69_, _Cy_, _S_, _S96_ (_altered to_ is blest). _See
  • note_]
  • [111 in wardrops; _1633:_ wardrobes. _1635-69_]
  • [112 statute lawes. _1633-54 and all MSS.:_ statutes jawes.
  • _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • _Satyre III._
  • Kinde pitty chokes my spleene; brave scorn forbids
  • Those teares to issue which swell my eye-lids;
  • I must not laugh, nor weepe sinnes, and be wise,
  • Can railing then cure these worne maladies?
  • Is not our Mistresse faire Religion, 5
  • As worthy of all our Soules devotion,
  • As vertue was to the first blinded age?
  • Are not heavens joyes as valiant to asswage
  • Lusts, as earths honour was to them? Alas,
  • As wee do them in meanes, shall they surpasse 10
  • Us in the end, and shall thy fathers spirit
  • Meete blinde Philosophers in heaven, whose merit
  • Of strict life may be imputed faith, and heare
  • Thee, whom hee taught so easie wayes and neare
  • To follow, damn'd? O if thou dar'st, feare this; 15
  • This feare great courage, and high valour is.
  • Dar'st thou ayd mutinous Dutch, and dar'st thou lay
  • Thee in ships woodden Sepulchers, a prey
  • To leaders rage, to stormes, to shot, to dearth?
  • Dar'st thou dive seas, and dungeons of the earth? 20
  • Hast thou couragious fire to thaw the ice
  • Of frozen North discoueries? and thrise
  • Colder then Salamanders, like divine
  • Children in th'oven, fires of Spaine, and the line,
  • Whose countries limbecks to our bodies bee, 25
  • Canst thou for gaine beare? and must every hee
  • Which cryes not, Goddesse, to thy Mistresse, draw,
  • Or eate thy poysonous words? courage of straw!
  • O desperate coward, wilt thou seeme bold, and
  • To thy foes and his (who made thee to stand 30
  • Sentinell in his worlds garrison) thus yeeld,
  • And for forbidden warres, leave th'appointed field?
  • Know thy foes: The foule Devill (whom thou
  • Strivest to please,) for hate, not love, would allow
  • Thee faine, his whole Realme to be quit; and as 35
  • The worlds all parts wither away and passe,
  • So the worlds selfe, thy other lov'd foe, is
  • In her decrepit wayne, and thou loving this,
  • Dost love a withered and worne strumpet; last,
  • Flesh (it selfes death) and joyes which flesh can taste, 40
  • Thou loveft; and thy faire goodly soule, which doth
  • Give this flesh power to taste joy, thou dost loath.
  • Seeke true religion. O where? Mirreus
  • Thinking her unhous'd here, and fled from us,
  • Seekes her at Rome; there, because hee doth know 45
  • That shee was there a thousand yeares agoe,
  • He loves her ragges so, as wee here obey
  • The statecloth where the Prince sate yesterday.
  • Crantz to such brave Loves will not be inthrall'd,
  • But loves her onely, who at Geneva is call'd 50
  • Religion, plaine, simple, sullen, yong,
  • Contemptuous, yet unhansome; As among
  • Lecherous humors, there is one that judges
  • No wenches wholsome, but course country drudges.
  • Graius stayes still at home here, and because 55
  • Some Preachers, vile ambitious bauds, and lawes
  • Still new like fashions, bid him thinke that shee
  • Which dwels with us, is onely perfect, hee
  • Imbraceth her, whom his Godfathers will
  • Tender to him, being tender, as Wards still 60
  • Take such wives as their Guardians offer, or
  • Pay valewes. Carelesse Phrygius doth abhorre
  • All, because all cannot be good, as one
  • Knowing some women whores, dares marry none.
  • Graccus loves all as one, and thinkes that so 65
  • As women do in divers countries goe
  • In divers habits, yet are still one kinde,
  • So doth, so is Religion; and this blind-
  • nesse too much light breeds; but unmoved thou
  • Of force must one, and forc'd but one allow; 70
  • And the right; aske thy father which is shee,
  • Let him aske his; though truth and falshood bee
  • Neare twins, yet truth a little elder is;
  • Be busie to seeke her, beleeve mee this,
  • Hee's not of none, nor worst, that seekes the best. 75
  • To adore, or scorne an image, or protest,
  • May all be bad; doubt wisely; in strange way
  • To stand inquiring right, is not to stray;
  • To sleepe, or runne wrong, is. On a huge hill,
  • Cragged, and steep, Truth stands, and hee that will 80
  • Reach her, about must, and about must goe;
  • And what the hills suddennes resists, winne so;
  • Yet strive so, that before age, deaths twilight,
  • Thy Soule rest, for none can worke in that night.
  • To will, implyes delay, therefore now doe: 85
  • Hard deeds, the bodies paines; hard knowledge too
  • The mindes indeavours reach, and mysteries
  • Are like the Sunne, dazling, yet plaine to all eyes.
  • Keepe the truth which thou hast found; men do not stand
  • In so ill case here, that God hath with his hand 90
  • Sign'd Kings blanck-charters to kill whom they hate,
  • Nor are they Vicars, but hangmen to Fate.
  • Foole and wretch, wilt thou let thy Soule be tyed
  • To mans lawes, by which she shall not be tryed
  • At the last day? Oh, will it then boot thee 95
  • To say a Philip, or a Gregory,
  • A Harry, or a Martin taught thee this?
  • Is not this excuse for mere contraries,
  • Equally strong? cannot both sides say so?
  • That thou mayest rightly obey power, her bounds know; 100
  • Those past, her nature, and name is chang'd; to be
  • Then humble to her is idolatrie.
  • As streames are, Power is; those blest flowers that dwell
  • At the rough streames calme head, thrive and do well,
  • But having left their roots, and themselves given 105
  • To the streames tyrannous rage, alas, are driven
  • Through mills, and rockes, and woods, and at last, almost
  • Consum'd in going, in the sea are lost:
  • So perish Soules, which more chuse mens unjust
  • Power from God claym'd, then God himselfe to trust. 110
  • [Satyre III. _1633-69_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_ (_with title_
  • Of Religion.), _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ Satire the
  • 4th. _A25_, _Cy:_ Satyre the Second. _P:_ A Satire. _L74:_ _no
  • title_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [1 chokes] checks _1635-54:_ cheeks _1669_
  • eye-lids; _Ed:_ eye-lids, _1633-39:_ eyelids. _1650-69_]
  • [3 and] but _1669_]
  • [7 to _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ in _1633_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [9 honour was] honours were _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _S_]
  • [14 so easie wayes and neare _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _P_, _TCD:_ wayes easie and neere _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ wayes so easy and neere
  • _O'F_]
  • [15 this;] this. _1633_]
  • [16 is.] is; _1633_]
  • [17 Dutch, and dar'st _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_,
  • _TCD:_ Dutch? dar'st _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_,
  • _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _W_]
  • [22-3 discoueries? ... Salamanders, _Ed:_ discoueries, ...
  • Salamanders? _1633-69_]
  • [28 words?] words, _1633_]
  • [31 Sentinell _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_
  • Souldier _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _W_
  • his _1633-54:_ this _1669_, _A25_, _H51_, _P_, _Q_]
  • [32 forbidden _1633 and most MSS._ forbid _1635-69_, _H51_]
  • [33-4
  • Know thy foes; the foule Devell whom thou
  • Strivest to please _&c._
  • _H51_, _Q and generally_ (_but with varying punctuation and
  • sometimes_ foe), _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _W:_
  • Know thy foe, the soule devill h'is, whom thou
  • Strivest to please: for hate, not love, would allow
  • _1633_, _L74_ (is), _Lec_, _N_ (his), _S_ (is), _TCD_ (his):
  • Know thy foes: The foule devill, he, whom thou
  • Striv'st to please, for hate, not love, would allow
  • _1635-69_ (he, ... please, _bracketed, 1669_)
  • ]
  • [35 quit _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ ridd
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _W_]
  • [40 (it selfes death) _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _H51_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD_, _W:_ (it selfe death)
  • _1633_, _Cy_, _D_, _S_]
  • [42 loath.] loath; _1633_]
  • [44 here,] her, _1633_]
  • [45 Rome; _Ed:_ Rome, _1633-69_]
  • [47 He _1633_, _1669:_ And _1635-54_
  • her _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _W:_ the
  • _1633-69_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TCD_]
  • [49 Crantz _W:_ Crants _1633-54_, _A25_, _H51_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TCD:_ Grants _or_ Grauntes _1669_, _L74_, _O'F_, _P:_
  • Grant _Cy_, _D_, _H49:_ Crates _Q_]
  • [52 unhansome; _Ed:_ unhansome. _1633-69_]
  • [54 drudges.] drudges: _1633_]
  • [57 bid _or_ bidd _MSS.:_ bids _1633-69_]
  • [62 Prigas _H51:_ Phrygas _W:_ Phrigias _A25_]
  • [67 kinde, _Ed:_ kinde; _1633-69_]
  • [70 must ... but _in reverse order_ _Q_]
  • [73 is; _1633:_ is. _1635-69_]
  • [74 her, _1633:_ her; _1635-69_]
  • [77 wisely; _Ed:_ wisely, _1633-69_]
  • [78 stray; _1633-69_, _Cy_, _D_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ staye; _A25_, _B_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _P_,
  • _Q_]
  • [79 is. On] is: on _1633_
  • huge] high _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H51_, _O'F_, _Q_, _W_]
  • [80 Cragged, _1669_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ Cragg'd,
  • _1633-54_, _Lec:_ Ragged _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _W:_ Ruggued _H51_, _Q_]
  • [81 about must goe; _1633-54_, _O'F:_ about it goe; _1669:_
  • about goe, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _L74_, _N_, _P_,
  • _Q_, _W_]
  • [84 Soule _1633-69_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ minde _rest of
  • MSS._
  • that night. _Ed:_ that night, _1633_, _1669:_ the night.
  • _1635-54_]
  • [85 doe: _Ed:_ doe _1633_, _Chambers and Grolier:_ doe.
  • _1635-69_, _D_, _W_. _See note_]
  • [86 too _H51_, _S_, _W:_ _spelt_ to _1633-69_, _many MSS.:_ to
  • (_prep._) _Chambers_]
  • [88 eyes.] eyes; _1633_]
  • [90 In so ill (evil _H51_) case here, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ here
  • _om. 1633-69_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [94 mans _1633-69_, _A25_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_,
  • _TCD:_ mens _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _S_, _W_
  • not _om. 1635-54_]
  • [95 Oh, will it then boot thee _Ed:_ Will ... boot thee
  • _1633_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ Or ... boot thee _1635-69:_ Oh
  • will it then serve thee _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_,
  • _O'F_ (Or), _Q_, _S_, _W_]
  • [97 thee] me _1669_]
  • [99 strong? _Ed:_ strong _1633:_ strong; _1635-69_]
  • [101 is] are _1669_
  • chang'd;] chang'd _1633_
  • to be _Ed:_ to be, _1633-69_]
  • [102 idolatrie.] idolatrie; _1633_]
  • [103 is;] is, _1633_]
  • [104 do well _1633-69_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ prove well
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _H51_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_, _Q_,
  • _S_, _W_]
  • [106 alas,] alas _1633_]
  • [107 mills, and rockes, _1633_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ Mils,
  • rocks, _1635-69_, _and rest of MSS._]
  • _Satyr IIII._
  • Well; I may now receive, and die; My sinne
  • Indeed is great, but I have beene in
  • A Purgatorie, such as fear'd hell is
  • A recreation to, and scarse map of this.
  • My minde, neither with prides itch, nor yet hath been 5
  • Poyson'd with love to see, or to bee seene,
  • I had no suit there, nor new suite to shew,
  • Yet went to Court; But as Glaze which did goe
  • To'a Masse in jest, catch'd, was faine to disburse
  • The hundred markes, which is the Statutes curse; 10
  • Before he scapt, So'it pleas'd my destinie
  • (Guilty of my sin of going,) to thinke me
  • As prone to all ill, and of good as forget-
  • full, as proud, as lustfull, and as much in debt,
  • As vaine, as witlesse, and as false as they 15
  • Which dwell at Court, for once going that way.
  • Therefore I suffered this; Towards me did runne
  • A thing more strange, then on Niles slime, the Sunne
  • E'r bred; or all which into Noahs Arke came;
  • A thing, which would have pos'd Adam to name; 20
  • Stranger then seaven Antiquaries studies,
  • Then Africks Monsters, Guianaes rarities.
  • Stranger then strangers; One, who for a Dane,
  • In the Danes Massacre had sure beene slaine,
  • If he had liv'd then; And without helpe dies, 25
  • When next the Prentises'gainst Strangers rise.
  • One, whom the watch at noone lets scarce goe by,
  • One, to whom, the examining Justice sure would cry,
  • Sir, by your priesthood tell me what you are.
  • His cloths were strange, though coarse; and black, though bare; 30
  • Sleevelesse his jerkin was, and it had beene
  • Velvet, but'twas now (so much ground was seene)
  • Become Tufftaffatie; and our children shall
  • See it plaine Rashe awhile, then nought at all.
  • This thing hath travail'd, and saith, speakes all tongues 35
  • And only knoweth what to all States belongs.
  • Made of th'Accents, and best phrase of all these,
  • He speakes no language; If strange meats displease,
  • Art can deceive, or hunger force my tast,
  • But Pedants motley tongue, souldiers bumbast, 40
  • Mountebankes drugtongue, nor the termes of law
  • Are strong enough preparatives, to draw
  • Me to beare this: yet I must be content
  • With his tongue, in his tongue, call'd complement:
  • In which he can win widdowes, and pay scores, 45
  • Make men speake treason, cosen subtlest whores,
  • Out-flatter favorites, or outlie either
  • Jovius, or Surius, or both together.
  • He names mee, and comes to mee; I whisper, God!
  • How have I sinn'd, that thy wraths furious rod, 50
  • This fellow chuseth me? He saith, Sir,
  • I love your judgement; Whom doe you prefer,
  • For the best linguist? And I seelily
  • Said, that I thought Calepines Dictionarie;
  • Nay, but of men, most sweet Sir; Beza then, 55
  • Some other Jesuites, and two reverend men
  • Of our two Academies, I named; There
  • He stopt mee, and said; Nay, your Apostles were
  • Good pretty linguists, and so Panurge was;
  • Yet a poore gentleman, all these may passe 60
  • By travaile. Then, as if he would have sold
  • His tongue, he prais'd it, and such wonders told
  • That I was faine to say, If you'had liv'd, Sir,
  • Time enough to have beene Interpreter
  • To Babells bricklayers, sure the Tower had stood. 65
  • He adds, If of court life you knew the good,
  • You would leave lonenesse. I said, not alone
  • My lonenesse is, but Spartanes fashion,
  • To teach by painting drunkards, doth not last
  • Now; Aretines pictures have made few chast; 70
  • No more can Princes courts, though there be few
  • Better pictures of vice, teach me vertue;
  • He, like to a high stretcht lute string squeakt, O Sir,
  • 'Tis sweet to talke of Kings. At Westminster,
  • Said I, The man that keepes the Abbey tombes, 75
  • And for his price doth with who ever comes,
  • Of all our Harries, and our Edwards talke,
  • From King to King and all their kin can walke:
  • Your eares shall heare nought, but Kings; your eyes meet
  • Kings only; The way to it, is Kingstreet. 80
  • He smack'd, and cry'd, He's base, Mechanique, coarse,
  • So are all your Englishmen in their discourse.
  • Are not your Frenchmen neate? Mine? as you see,
  • I have but one Frenchman, looke, hee followes mee.
  • Certes they are neatly cloth'd; I, of this minde am, 85
  • Your only wearing is your Grogaram.
  • Not so Sir, I have more. Under this pitch
  • He would not flie; I chaff'd him; But as Itch
  • Scratch'd into smart, and as blunt iron ground
  • Into an edge, hurts worse: So, I (foole) found, 90
  • Crossing hurt mee; To fit my sullennesse,
  • He to another key, his stile doth addresse,
  • And askes, what newes? I tell him of new playes.
  • He takes my hand, and as a Still, which staies
  • A Sembriefe, 'twixt each drop, he nigardly, 95
  • As loth to enrich mee, so tells many a lye.
  • More then ten Hollensheads, or Halls, or Stowes,
  • Of triviall houshold trash he knowes; He knowes
  • When the Queene frown'd, or smil'd, and he knowes what
  • A subtle States-man may gather of that; 100
  • He knowes who loves; whom; and who by poyson
  • Hasts to an Offices reversion;
  • He knowes who'hath sold his land, and now doth beg
  • A licence, old iron, bootes, shooes, and egge-
  • shels to transport; Shortly boyes shall not play 105
  • At span-counter, or blow-point, but they pay
  • Toll to some Courtier; And wiser then all us,
  • He knowes what Ladie is not painted; Thus
  • He with home-meats tries me; I belch, spue, spit,
  • Looke pale, and sickly, like a Patient; Yet 110
  • He thrusts on more; And as if he'd undertooke
  • To say Gallo-Belgicus without booke
  • Speakes of all States, and deeds, that have been since
  • The Spaniards came, to the losse of Amyens.
  • Like a bigge wife, at sight of loathed meat, 115
  • Readie to travaile: So I sigh, and sweat
  • To heare this Makeron talke: In vaine; for yet,
  • Either my humour, or his owne to fit,
  • He like a priviledg'd spie, whom nothing can
  • Discredit, Libells now'gainst each great man. 120
  • He names a price for every office paid;
  • He saith, our warres thrive ill, because delai'd;
  • That offices are entail'd, and that there are
  • Perpetuities of them, lasting as farre
  • As the last day; And that great officers, 125
  • Doe with the Pirates share, and Dunkirkers.
  • Who wasts in meat, in clothes, in horse, he notes;
  • Who loves whores, who boyes, and who goats.
  • I more amas'd then Circes prisoners, when
  • They felt themselves turne beasts, felt my selfe then 130
  • Becomming Traytor, and mee thought I saw
  • One of our Giant Statutes ope his jaw
  • To sucke me in; for hearing him, I found
  • That as burnt venome Leachers do grow sound
  • By giving others their soares, I might growe 135
  • Guilty, and he free: Therefore I did shew
  • All signes of loathing; But since I am in,
  • I must pay mine, and my forefathers sinne
  • To the last farthing; Therefore to my power
  • Toughly and stubbornly I beare this crosse; But the'houre 140
  • Of mercy now was come; He tries to bring
  • Me to pay a fine to scape his torturing,
  • And saies, Sir, can you spare me; I said, willingly;
  • Nay, Sir, can you spare me a crowne? Thankfully I
  • Gave it, as Ransome; But as fidlers, still, 145
  • Though they be paid to be gone, yet needs will
  • Thrust one more jigge upon you: so did hee
  • With his long complementall thankes vexe me.
  • But he is gone, thankes to his needy want,
  • And the prerogative of my Crowne: Scant 150
  • His thankes were ended, when I, (which did see
  • All the court fill'd with more strange things then hee)
  • Ran from thence with such or more hast, then one
  • Who feares more actions, doth make from prison.
  • At home in wholesome solitarinesse 155
  • My precious soule began, the wretchednesse
  • Of suiters at court to mourne, and a trance
  • Like his, who dreamt he saw hell, did advance
  • It selfe on mee, Such men as he saw there,
  • I saw at court, and worse, and more; Low feare 160
  • Becomes the guiltie, not the accuser; Then,
  • Shall I, nones slave, of high borne, or rais'd men
  • Feare frownes? And, my Mistresse Truth, betray thee
  • To th'huffing braggart, puft Nobility?
  • No, no, Thou which since yesterday hast beene 165
  • Almost about the whole world, hast thou seene,
  • O Sunne, in all thy journey, Vanitie,
  • Such as swells the bladder of our court? I
  • Thinke he which made your waxen garden, and
  • Transported it from Italy to stand 170
  • With us, at London, flouts our Presence, for
  • Just such gay painted things, which no sappe, nor
  • Tast have in them, ours are; And naturall
  • Some of the stocks are, their fruits, bastard all.
  • 'Tis ten a clock and past; All whom the Mues, 175
  • Baloune, Tennis, Dyet, or the stewes,
  • Had all the morning held, now the second
  • Time made ready, that day, in flocks, are found
  • In the Presence, and I, (God pardon mee.)
  • As fresh, and sweet their Apparrells be, as bee 180
  • The fields they sold to buy them; For a King
  • Those hose are, cry the flatterers; And bring
  • Them next weeke to the Theatre to sell;
  • Wants reach all states; Me seemes they doe as well
  • At stage, as court; All are players; who e'r lookes 185
  • (For themselves dare not goe) o'r Cheapside books,
  • Shall finde their wardrops Inventory. Now,
  • The Ladies come; As Pirats, which doe know
  • That there came weak ships fraught with Cutchannel,
  • The men board them; and praise, as they thinke, well, 190
  • Their beauties; they the mens wits; Both are bought.
  • Why good wits ne'r weare scarlet gownes, I thought
  • This cause, These men, mens wits for speeches buy,
  • And women buy all reds which scarlets die.
  • He call'd her beauty limetwigs, her haire net; 195
  • She feares her drugs ill laid, her haire loose set.
  • Would not Heraclitus laugh to see Macrine,
  • From hat to shooe, himselfe at doore refine,
  • As if the Presence were a Moschite, and lift
  • His skirts and hose, and call his clothes to shrift, 200
  • Making them confesse not only mortall
  • Great staines and holes in them; but veniall
  • Feathers and dust, wherewith they fornicate:
  • And then by _Durers_ rules survay the state
  • Of his each limbe, and with strings the odds trye 205
  • Of his neck to his legge, and wast to thighe.
  • So in immaculate clothes, and Symetrie
  • Perfect as circles, with such nicetie
  • As a young Preacher at his first time goes
  • To preach, he enters, and a Lady which owes 210
  • Him not so much as good will, he arrests,
  • And unto her protests protests protests,
  • So much as at Rome would serve to have throwne
  • Ten Cardinalls into the Inquisition;
  • And whisperd by Jesu, so often, that A 215
  • Pursevant would have ravish'd him away
  • For saying of our Ladies psalter; But'tis fit
  • That they each other plague, they merit it.
  • But here comes Glorius that will plague them both,
  • Who, in the other extreme, only doth 220
  • Call a rough carelessenesse, good fashion;
  • Whose cloak his spurres teare; whom he spits on
  • He cares not, His ill words doe no harme
  • To him; he rusheth in, as if arme, arme,
  • He meant to crie; And though his face be as ill 225
  • As theirs which in old hangings whip Christ, still
  • He strives to looke worse, he keepes all in awe;
  • Jeasts like a licenc'd foole, commands like law.
  • Tyr'd, now I leave this place, and but pleas'd so
  • As men which from gaoles to execution goe, 230
  • Goe through the great chamber (why is it hung
  • With the seaven deadly sinnes?). Being among
  • Those Askaparts, men big enough to throw
  • Charing Crosse for a barre, men that doe know
  • No token of worth, but Queenes man, and fine 235
  • Living, barrells of beefe, flaggons of wine;
  • I shooke like a spyed Spie. Preachers which are
  • Seas of Wit and Arts, you can, then dare,
  • Drowne the sinnes of this place, for, for mee
  • Which am but a scarce brooke, it enough shall bee 240
  • To wash the staines away; Although I yet
  • With _Macchabees_ modestie, the knowne merit
  • Of my worke lessen: yet some wise man shall,
  • I hope, esteeme my writs Canonicall.
  • [Satyre IIII. _1633-69_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_ (anno 1594
  • _in margin_), _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ Mr. Dunns
  • first Satire. _A25:_ Another Satire by the same. J: D: _Cy_
  • (_where it is the third_): Satyre. _S96:_ _no title_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _TCD_ (_in L74 it is second, in N, TCD third in order_)]
  • [2 but I _1633_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ but yet I _1635-69_, _Cy_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_]
  • [4 A recreacion to, and scarse _Q:_ A recreation, and scant
  • _1633-69_, _and other MSS._]
  • [5 neither _1633-69:_ nor _some MSS. and Chambers, who wrongly
  • attributes to 1635-39_]
  • [8 Glaze _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _Lec:_ Glare _1635-69, and
  • rest of MSS._]
  • [9 To'a mass _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ To Masse _1633-69_, _Cy_, _Q_, _Lec_]
  • [10-11 curse; ... scapt, _1633-39:_ curse, ... scapt,
  • _1650-69_]
  • [12 of going, _1633_, _1669_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ in going, _1635-54_,
  • _A25_, _O'F_]
  • [14 as lustfull,] as _om. 1635-69 and many MSS._]
  • [16 at Court, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ in Court,
  • _1633-69_, _Lec_]
  • [18 Niles] Nilus _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [19 bred; _W:_ bred, _1633-69_
  • came; _W:_ came: _1633-69_]
  • [20 name; _W:_ name, _1633:_ name: _1635-69_]
  • [22 rarities. _W:_ rarities, _1633-69_]
  • [23 then strangers; _1633-69_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _HN_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD_, _W:_ then strangest. _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_ (_corr. from_ strangers), _S_]
  • [32 ground] the ground _HN_]
  • [35 This _1633:_ The _1635-69_ saith, _1633-54_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_ (sayeth), _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _Q_, _S_ (saith he), _TCD_, _W:_ faith, _1669_, _Chambers
  • and Grolier, without note_]
  • [36 belongs.] belongs, _1633_]
  • [37 th'Accents,] the antient, _HN:_ the ancients, (_prob. for_
  • ancientest, _but corrected to_ accents,) _L74_]
  • [38 no language; _A25_, _Q:_ one language; _1633-69_, _and
  • MSS. generally_]
  • [43 beare] hear _1669_
  • this: _Q:_ this, _1633-69_]
  • [44 With his tongue, _1669_, _Q:_ With his tongue: _1633-54_]
  • [47 or] and _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _W_]
  • [48 Surius,] Sleydon _O'F_ (_corrected to_ Surius), _Q:_
  • Snodons, _A25_. _See note_]
  • [51 chuseth] chaseth _P_, _Q_]
  • [55 Sir; _Ed:_ Sir. _1633-69_]
  • [56 Some other _HN:_ Some _1633-69 and most MSS.:_ two other
  • _S_]
  • [57 There _1633_ (T _faintly printed_): here _1635-69_]
  • [59 Good pretty _1633-69:_ Pretty good _Cy_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _S96_
  • Panurge _1635-54:_ Panirge _1633:_ Panurgus _1669_ (_omitting_
  • and), _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_]
  • [60 gentleman, all _Ed:_ gentleman; All _1633-69_]
  • [60-1 passe By travaile. _1633-54:_ pass. But travaile _1669_]
  • [62 prais'd _Ed:_ praised _1633-69_
  • wonders _1635-69 and most MSS.:_ words _1633_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [67 lonenesse. _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_,
  • _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _W:_ lonelinesse; _1633_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TCD_]
  • [68 lonenesse _1635-69_, _A25_, _&c.:_ lonelinesse _1633_,
  • _L74_, _&c._
  • fashion, _1633:_ fashion. _1635-69_]
  • [69 last _1633_, _1669_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _P_, _TCD_, _W:_ taste _1635-54_, _O'F_, _Q_ (tast), _S_,
  • _S96_]
  • [80 Kingstreet. _1633:_ Kingsstreet. _1635-39:_ Kings street.
  • _1650-69_]
  • [83 Mine? _1635-54 and MSS.:_ Fine, _1633:_ Mine, _1669_]
  • [84 Frenchman, _Ed:_ frenchman, _1633 and most MSS.:_ Sir,
  • _1635-69_, _Q:_ here, _Cy_]
  • [85-6 cloth'd; I, ... Grogaram. _Ed:_ cloth'd. I, ...
  • Grogaram; _1633:_ cloth'd. I, ... Grogaram. _1635-69_]
  • [86 your Grogaram _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ this
  • Grogaram _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_,
  • _S_, _W:_ the Grogaram _P_]
  • [89 ground _Ed:_ grown'd _1633:_ grownd _1635-69_]
  • [90 (foole)] _no bracket_ _1633_]
  • [92 addresse, _N_, _TCD:_ addresse. _1633:_ dresse. _1635-39_,
  • _D_, _W:_ dresse; _1650-69_]
  • [96 lye. _D_, _H49_, _W:_ lie, _1633-69_]
  • [98 trash he knowes; He knowes _D_, _H49_, _W:_ trash;
  • He knowes; He knowes _1633:_ trash. He knowes; He knowes
  • _1635-39:_ trash, He knowes; He knowes _1650-69_]
  • [101 loves; whom; _1633:_ loves; whom, _1635-54:_ loves, whom;
  • _1669:_ loves whom; _Chambers and Grolier_]
  • [104 and _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S96_, _TCD:_ or _A25_,
  • _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _W_]
  • [106 At blow-point or span-counter _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _HN_, _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _W_ they pay _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _HN_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_,
  • _W:_ shall pay _1633-69_, _JC_]
  • [108 what _1633-69_, _Cy_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ which
  • _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W_]
  • [109 tries _1633_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _L74_, _N_, _Q_,
  • _TCD_, _W:_ cloyes _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S:_ tyres _Cy_, _JC_,
  • _P_]
  • [111 thrusts on more; _1633-69_, _O'F:_ thrusts more; _A25_,
  • _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _P_, _Q_, _W:_ thrusts me more;
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TCD:_ thrusts me _P_
  • as if he'd undertooke _most MSS.:_ as if he'undertooke _1633_,
  • _N_, _TCD:_ as he'had undertooke _1635-69_]
  • [113 have] hath _1633_, _Lec_]
  • [117 this] his _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _TCD_, _W_
  • talke: In vaine; for _D_, _W_, _and other MSS.:_ talke in
  • vaine: For _1633_, _Q:_ talke, in vaine: For _1635-69_]
  • [123 entail'd, and that there _1633:_ entailed, and there
  • _1635-54:_ intailed and that there _1669_]
  • [128 whores, _Ed:_ Whores, _1633-69_]
  • [132 Statutes] Statues _1639_]
  • [133 in; for hearing him, _1669_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ in, for
  • hearing him, _1650-54:_ in, for hearing him. _1633-39_, _A25_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S_, _W_]
  • [134-6 (That ... free:) _represented by dashes in 1633_]
  • [134 venome _1635-54:_ venomous _1669:_ venomd _many MSS._]
  • [141 mercy now _1633-69:_ my redemption _Cy_, _P:_ redemption
  • now _Q_, _S_]
  • [145 Gave] Give _Cy_, _D_, _H49_]
  • [146 Though] Thou _1635_]
  • [152 more ... then] such ... as _1669_]
  • [154 make _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _Q_, _S96_, _W:_ haste _1633-69_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TCD_
  • (_from previous line_): _om. A25_
  • prison.] prison; _1633_]
  • [156 precious _1633_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ piteous
  • _1635-69 and rest of MSS._]
  • [159 on _1633_, _Cy_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _TCD:_ o'r _1635-69_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Q_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [162 nones] none _1669_]
  • [164 th'huffing braggart, _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_, _W_
  • (_but no commas in MSS._): huffing, braggart, _1633-54_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_ th'huffing, braggart, _1719_
  • Nobility?] Nobility. _1633_]
  • [169 your _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ yon _A25_, _B_,
  • _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _W:_ the _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [170 Transported _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _Q_,
  • _TCD:_ Transplanted _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _W_
  • to stand] to Strand _L74_ (stand _being struck through_), _S_]
  • [171 our Presence, _1633_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ our
  • Court here, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _Q_,
  • _S_, _W:_ our Courtiers, _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [173 are;] are, _1633_]
  • [178 are found _1633_, _1669:_ were found _1635-54_]
  • [179 I, (God pardon mee.) _1633:_ I. (God pardon mee.) _1635:_
  • I. (God pardon me) _1639-69:_ aye--God pardon me-- _Chambers_]
  • [180 their Apparrells] th'apparells _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _L74_, _W_]
  • [182 cry the flatterers; _1633:_ cry his flatterers;
  • _1635-54_, _P:_ cryes his flatterers; _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Q_, _S_, _W:_ cryes the flatterer; _1669_, _L74_ (flatterers
  • _is changed to_ flatterer), _Lec_ (flatterers)]
  • [185 players;] players, _1633_]
  • [187 wardrops _1633:_ wardrobes _1635-69_
  • Inventory.] Inventory; _1633_]
  • [188 doe know _1633-69_, _Lec_, _N_, _Q_, _TCD:_ did know
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [190 (as they think) _1669_]
  • [194 scarlets] scarlett _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_,
  • _W_]
  • [195 call'd] calls _A25_, _HN_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_]
  • [195-6 net; ... set.] net.... set; _1633_]
  • [198 hat] hat, _1633-54_]
  • [199 As if the Presence ... Moschite, _1633-69_, _Lec_ (_colon
  • 1635-69_): As the Presence ... Moschite, (_or_ Meschite,)
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _W:_
  • As the Queenes Presence ... Meschite, _D_, _H49:_ As if the
  • Queenes Presence ... meschite, _S_]
  • [203 fornicate:] fornicate. _1633_]
  • [204 survay _1633-69_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD:_ survayes
  • _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _S_, _W_]
  • [205 trye _Ed:_ tryes _1633-69 and MSS._]
  • [206 to thighe. _Ed:_ to thighes. _1633-69 and MSS.:_ to his
  • thighes. _Q_]
  • [211 he arrests, _1633-69_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ straight
  • arrests, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _W_]
  • [215 whisperd _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _TCD_, _W:_
  • whispers _1635-69_]
  • [216 Topcliffe would have ravish'd him quite away _JC, O'F, Q_
  • (_JC and O'F alter to_ Pursevant)]
  • [217 of _om. Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_,
  • _JC_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _W_]
  • [222 whom _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCD_, _W_: or whom _1635-69_,
  • _O'F_]
  • [223 He cares not, His _1633 and MSS._: He cares not hee.
  • His _1635-69_]
  • [224 rusheth] rushes _1639-69_]
  • [226 still _1635-69_, _Q_, _and other MSS._: yet
  • still _1633_, _L74_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [229 I leave] Ile leave _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _W_]
  • [230 men which from _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCD_, _W_: men from _1633-69_]
  • [232 sinnes?). Being _Ed_: sinnes) being _1633-39_:
  • sinnes?) being _1650-69_: _all the editions and some MSS.
  • close the sentence at_ 236 wine.]
  • [236 Living barrells of beefe, flaggons of wine. _1633-54_:
  • Living, barrels of beef, and flaggons of wine. _1669_]
  • [237 Spie.] Spie; _1633_]
  • [238 Seas of Wit and Arts, _B_, _Cy_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD_: Seas of Wits and Arts,
  • _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _S_: Seas of witt and art, _A25_, _HN_: Great
  • seas of witt and art, _O'F_, _S96_: Seas of all Wits
  • and Arts, _conj. Lowell_]
  • [239 Drowne] To drowne _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [240 Which] Who _MSS._ am but a scarce brooke, _1633_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_: am but a scant
  • brooke, _1635-69_: am a scant brooke, _B_, _HN_,
  • _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _W_: am a shallow
  • brooke, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [241 the _1633-69:_ their _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_ these _L74_, _N_, _TCD_
  • Although] though _1633 and MSS._]
  • [242 the knowne merit _1633-69_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _Q_,
  • _TCD:_ known _om. B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _L74_, _P_, _S_,
  • _W_]
  • [243 wise man] wise men _1650-69_, _B_, _HN_, _L74_, _P_,
  • _TCD_, _W_]
  • _Satyre V._
  • Thou shalt not laugh in this leafe, Muse, nor they
  • Whom any pitty warmes; He which did lay
  • Rules to make Courtiers, (hee being understood
  • May make good Courtiers, but who Courtiers good?)
  • Frees from the sting of jests all who in extreme 5
  • Are wreched or wicked: of these two a theame
  • Charity and liberty give me. What is hee
  • Who Officers rage, and Suiters misery
  • Can write, and jest? If all things be in all,
  • As I thinke, since all, which were, are, and shall 10
  • Bee, be made of the same elements:
  • Each thing, each thing implyes or represents.
  • Then man is a world; in which, Officers
  • Are the vast ravishing seas; and Suiters,
  • Springs; now full, now shallow, now drye; which, to 15
  • That which drownes them, run: These selfe reasons do
  • Prove the world a man, in which, officers
  • Are the devouring stomacke, and Suiters
  • The excrements, which they voyd. All men are dust;
  • How much worse are Suiters, who to mens lust 20
  • Are made preyes? O worse then dust, or wormes meat,
  • For they do eate you now, whose selves wormes shall eate.
  • They are the mills which grinde you, yet you are
  • The winde which drives them; and a wastfull warre
  • Is fought against you, and you fight it; they 25
  • Adulterate lawe, and you prepare their way
  • Like wittals; th'issue your owne ruine is.
  • Greatest and fairest Empresse, know you this?
  • Alas, no more then Thames calme head doth know
  • Whose meades her armes drowne, or whose corne o'rflow: 30
  • You Sir, whose righteousnes she loves, whom I
  • By having leave to serve, am most richly
  • For service paid, authoriz'd, now beginne
  • To know and weed out this enormous sinne.
  • O Age of rusty iron! Some better wit 35
  • Call it some worse name, if ought equall it;
  • The iron Age _that_ was, when justice was sold; now
  • Injustice is sold dearer farre. Allow
  • All demands, fees, and duties, gamsters, anon
  • The mony which you sweat, and sweare for, is gon 40
  • Into other hands: So controverted lands
  • Scape, like Angelica, the strivers hands.
  • If Law be in the Judges heart, and hee
  • Have no heart to resist letter, or fee,
  • Where wilt thou appeale? powre of the Courts below 45
  • Flow from the first maine head, and these can throw
  • Thee, if they sucke thee in, to misery,
  • To fetters, halters; But if the injury
  • Steele thee to dare complaine, Alas, thou go'st
  • Against the stream, when upwards: when thou art most 50
  • Heavy and most faint; and in these labours they,
  • 'Gainst whom thou should'st complaine, will in the way
  • Become great seas, o'r which, when thou shalt bee
  • Forc'd to make golden bridges, thou shalt see
  • That all thy gold was drown'd in them before; 55
  • All things follow their like, only who have may have more.
  • Judges are Gods; he who made and said them so,
  • Meant not that men should be forc'd to them to goe,
  • By meanes of Angels; When supplications
  • We send to God, to Dominations, 60
  • Powers, Cherubins, and all heavens Courts, if wee
  • Should pay fees as here, Daily bread would be
  • Scarce to Kings; so 'tis. Would it not anger
  • A Stoicke, a coward, yea a Martyr,
  • To see a Pursivant come in, and call 65
  • All his cloathes, Copes; Bookes, Primers; and all
  • His Plate, Challices; and mistake them away,
  • And aske a fee for comming? Oh, ne'r may
  • Faire lawes white reverend name be strumpeted,
  • To warrant thefts: she is established 70
  • Recorder to Destiny, on earth, and shee
  • Speakes Fates words, and but tells us who must bee
  • Rich, who poore, who in chaires, who in jayles:
  • Shee is all faire, but yet hath foule long nailes,
  • With which she scracheth Suiters; In bodies 75
  • Of men, so in law, nailes are th'extremities,
  • So Officers stretch to more then Law can doe,
  • As our nailes reach what no else part comes to.
  • Why barest thou to yon Officer? Foole, Hath hee
  • Got those goods, for which erst men bar'd to thee? 80
  • Foole, twice, thrice, thou hast bought wrong, and now hungerly
  • Beg'st right; But that dole comes not till these dye.
  • Thou had'st much, and lawes Urim and Thummim trie
  • Thou wouldst for more; and for all hast paper
  • Enough to cloath all the great Carricks Pepper. 85
  • Sell that, and by that thou much more shalt leese,
  • Then Haman, when he sold his Antiquities.
  • O wretch that thy fortunes should moralize
  • Esops fables, and make tales, prophesies.
  • Thou'art the swimming dog whom shadows cosened, 90
  • And div'st, neare drowning, for what's vanished.
  • [Satyre V. _1633-69_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_,
  • _Q_, _S_, _W:_ Satyre the third. _P:_ _no title_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _TCD_ (_in L74 it is third, in N, TCD fourth in order_)]
  • [1 shalt] shal _1669_]
  • [9 and] in _1669_]
  • [12 implyes _1635-69:_ _spelt_ employes _1633 and some MSS._
  • represents. _1635-69:_ represents, _1633_]
  • [13 Officers] Officers, _1633-69_]
  • [14 ravishing _1633-69:_ ravenous _Q:_ ravening _P_, _S_]
  • [19 voyd. All _1669:_ voyd; all _1633-54_
  • dust; _W:_ dust, _1633-69_]
  • [21 preyes? _1669:_ preyes. _1633-54_]
  • [26 their _1633_, _D_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ the
  • _1635-69_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_]
  • [27 wittals; _W:_ wittals, _1633-69_
  • is.] is; _1633_]
  • [33 authoriz'd, _1635-54:_ authorized, _1633:_ authoriz'd.
  • _1669_]
  • [35-6 Some ... equall it;] _in brackets_ _1635-54_]
  • [37-9
  • The iron Age _that_ was, when justice was sold, now
  • Injustice is sold deerer farre; allow
  • All demands, fees, and duties; gamsters, anon
  • _1633_, _D_, _JC_ (All claym'd fees), _Lec_, _N_, _Q_ (All
  • claym'd fees), _TCD_, _W_ (All claym'd fees):
  • The iron Age _that_ was, when justice was sold (now
  • Injustice is sold dearer) did allow
  • All claim'd fees and duties. Gamesters, anon
  • _1635-54_, _B_, _O'F_, _P_ (_the last two omit_ that was),
  • _Chambers (no italics):_
  • The iron Age was, when justice was sold, now
  • Injustice is sold dearer far, allow
  • All claim'd fees and duties, Gamesters, anon
  • _1669_
  • ]
  • [46 Flow] Flows _O'F_, _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [49 complaine,] complaine; _1633_
  • go'st] goest _1633-39_]
  • [50 when upwards: _1633-54_, _A25_, _B_, _D_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _Q_, _S_, _TCD_, _W_: upwards, _1669_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [52 the, _1633_: thy _1635-69_]
  • [56 only who have] only, who have, _1633_
  • more.] more _1633_]
  • [57 he ... so, _1633-54_: and he who made them so,
  • _1669_: he ... and cal'd (_changed to_ stil'd)
  • them so, _O'F_]
  • [58 that] _om. 1669_]
  • [59 supplications] supplication _1635-54_]
  • [61 Courts, _1635-69_, _B_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _W_: Court, _1633_,
  • _D_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TCD_]
  • [63 'tis. Would _1669_: 'tis, would _1633_: 'tis; Would
  • _1635-54_]
  • [68 aske _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _W_: lack _1633-54_, _Lec_
  • comming?] comming; _1633_]
  • [72 Speakes Fates words, and but tells us _&c._ _Q_,
  • _W_, _Chambers_: Speakes Fates words, and tells who
  • must bee _1633-69_]
  • [76 men,] men; _1633_
  • th'extremities, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ extremities, _1633:_
  • extremities. _1635-69_]
  • [78 comes to.] can come to. _Q_]
  • [80 which erst men bar'd _1635-69,_ _B_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_, _W:_
  • which men bared _1633_, _D_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ which men erst
  • bar'd _A25_, _L74_, _P_]
  • [85: great] _om. Q_
  • Carricks _1633-35:_ Charricks _1639-69_]
  • [87 Haman, _1633:_ Hammon, _1635-69_, _P:_ _MSS. generally vary
  • between_ Haman _and_ Hammond
  • when _1633_, _1669_, _D_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ if
  • _1635-54_, _A25_, _B_, _JC_, _O'F_, _Q_, _S_]
  • [90 Thou'art _Ed:_ Thou art _1633-69_
  • cosened,] cozeneth, _1669_]
  • [91 And _1633:_ Which _1635-69:_ Whoe _Q_
  • div'st, _1633-54_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ div'st _1669:_
  • div'dst _D_, _L74_, _Lec_ (_altered from_ div'st), _W:_ div'd
  • _A25_, _B_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S_ (_Grosart_), _Q_
  • what's vanished. _N:_ what vanished. _1633-54 and rest of
  • MSS.:_ what vanisheth. _1669_]
  • _Vpon Mr. Thomas Coryats Crudities._
  • Oh to what height will love of greatnesse drive
  • Thy leavened spirit, _Sesqui-superlative_?
  • Venice vast lake thou hadst seen, and would seek than
  • Some vaster thing, and found'st a Curtizan.
  • That inland Sea having discovered well, 5
  • A Cellar gulfe, where one might saile to hell
  • From Heydelberg, thou longdst to see: And thou
  • This Booke, greater then all, producest now.
  • Infinite worke, which doth so far extend,
  • That none can study it to any end. 10
  • 'Tis no one thing, it is not fruit nor roote;
  • Nor poorely limited with head or foot.
  • If man be therefore man, because he can
  • Reason, and laugh, thy booke doth halfe make man.
  • One halfe being made, thy modestie was such, 15
  • That thou on th'other half wouldst never touch.
  • When wilt thou be at full, great Lunatique?
  • Not till thou exceed the world? Canst thou be like
  • A prosperous nose-borne wenne, which sometimes growes
  • To be farre greater then the Mother-nose? 20
  • Goe then; and as to thee, when thou didst go,
  • _Munster_ did Townes, and _Gesner_ Authors show,
  • Mount now to _Gallo-belgicus_; appear
  • As deepe a States-man, as a Gazettier.
  • Homely and familiarly, when thou com'st back, 25
  • Talke of _Will. Conquerour_, and _Prester Iack_.
  • Go bashfull man, lest here thou blush to looke
  • Vpon the progresse of thy glorious booke,
  • To which both Indies sacrifices send;
  • The West sent gold, which thou didst freely spend, 30
  • (Meaning to see't no more) upon the presse.
  • The East sends hither her deliciousnesse;
  • And thy leaves must imbrace what comes from thence,
  • The Myrrhe, the Pepper, and the Frankincense.
  • This magnifies thy leaves; but if they stoope 35
  • To neighbour wares, when Merchants do unhoope
  • Voluminous barrels; if thy leaves do then
  • Convey these wares in parcels unto men;
  • If for vast Tons of Currans, and of Figs,
  • Of Medicinall and Aromatique twigs, 40
  • Thy leaves a better method do provide,
  • Divide to pounds, and ounces sub-divide;
  • If they stoope lower yet, and vent our wares,
  • Home-_manufactures_, to thick popular Faires,
  • If _omni-praegnant_ there, upon warme stalls, 45
  • They hatch all wares for which the buyer calls;
  • Then thus thy leaves we justly may commend,
  • That they all kinde of matter comprehend.
  • Thus thou, by means which th'Ancients never took,
  • A Pandect makest, and Vniversall Booke. 50
  • The bravest Heroes, for publike good,
  • Scattered in divers Lands their limbs and blood.
  • Worst malefactors, to whom men are prize,
  • Do publike good, cut in Anatomies;
  • So will thy booke in peeces; for a Lord 55
  • Which casts at Portescues, and all the board,
  • Provide whole books; each leafe enough will be
  • For friends to passe time, and keep company.
  • Can all carouse up thee? no, thou must fit
  • Measures; and fill out for the half-pint wit: 60
  • Some shall wrap pils, and save a friends life so,
  • Some shall stop muskets, and so kill a foe.
  • Thou shalt not ease the Criticks of next age
  • So much, at once their hunger to asswage:
  • Nor shall wit-pirats hope to finde thee lye 65
  • All in one bottome, in one Librarie.
  • Some Leaves may paste strings there in other books,
  • And so one may, which on another looks,
  • Pilfer, alas, a little wit from you;
  • [Sidenote *: I meane from
  • one page which shall paste
  • strings in a booke[1]]
  • But hardly[*] much; and yet I think this true; 70
  • As _Sibyls_ was, your booke is mysticall,
  • For every peece is as much worth as all.
  • Therefore mine impotency I confesse,
  • The healths which my braine bears must be far lesse:
  • Thy Gyant-wit'orethrowes me, I am gone; 75
  • And rather then read all, I would reade none.
  • _I. D._
  • [Footnote 1: I meane _&c._ _side-note in 1611_]
  • [Vpon Mr. _&c._ _1649_, _where it was placed with_ The Token
  • (_p._ 72_), _at the end of the_ Funerall Elegies: _appeared
  • originally in_ Coryats Crudities (_1611: see note_) _with
  • heading_ Incipit Joannes Donne.]
  • [2 leavened _1611:_ learned _1649-69 and mod. edd._]
  • [7 longdst _1611:_ long'st _1649-69_]
  • [19 sometimes.] sometime _1611_]
  • [24 Gazettier. _1611:_ Garretteir _1649-69_]
  • [28 booke,] booke. _1611_]
  • [37 barrels; _1649-69:_ barrels, _1611_]
  • [56 board, _1611:_ board _1649-69_]
  • _In eundem Macaronicon._
  • _Quot, dos haec_, +Linguists+ perfetti, _Disticha_ fairont,
  • _Tot_ cuerdos +States-men+, _hic_ livre fara _tuus_.
  • Es _sat_ a my l'honneur estre hic inteso; Car +I leave+
  • L'honra, de personne nestre creduto, _tibi_.
  • _Explicit Joannes Donne._
  • [In eundem _&c. 1611, concluding the above_]
  • * * * * *
  • [Illustration: JOHN DONNE, 1613
  • _Viri seraphici Joannis Donne Qua-
  • dragenarij Effigies vera, Qui post
  • eam ætatem Sacris initiatus Ec-
  • clesiæ S^{ti} Pauli Decanus obijt._
  • _Año { Do[~m] 1631º
  • { Ætatis suæ 59º_
  • ("A true portrait of that seraphic man John Donne at the age of 40;
  • he was later ordained into holy orders and died Dean of St Paul's
  • in the year of our Lord 1631 at the age of 59")
  • From the engraving prefixed to his son's edition of the _Letters to
  • Several Persons of Honour_ 1651, 1654]
  • * * * * *
  • LETTERS
  • TO SEVERALL PERSONAGES.
  • THE STORME.
  • To Mr. _Christopher Brooke_.
  • Thou which art I, ('tis nothing to be soe)
  • Thou which art still thy selfe, by these shalt know
  • Part of our passage; And, a hand, or eye
  • By _Hilliard_ drawne, is worth an history,
  • By a worse painter made; and (without pride) 5
  • When by thy judgment they are dignifi'd,
  • My lines are such: 'Tis the preheminence
  • Of friendship onely to'impute excellence.
  • England to whom we'owe, what we be, and have,
  • Sad that her sonnes did seeke a forraine grave 10
  • (For, Fates, or Fortunes drifts none can soothsay,
  • Honour and misery have one face and way.)
  • From out her pregnant intrailes sigh'd a winde
  • Which at th'ayres middle marble roome did finde
  • Such strong resistance, that it selfe it threw 15
  • Downeward againe; and so when it did view
  • How in the port, our fleet deare time did leese,
  • Withering like prisoners, which lye but for fees,
  • Mildly it kist our sailes, and, fresh and sweet,
  • As to a stomack sterv'd, whose insides meete, 20
  • Meate comes, it came; and swole our sailes, when wee
  • So joyd, as _Sara_'her swelling joy'd to see.
  • But 'twas but so kinde, as our countrimen,
  • Which bring friends one dayes way, and leave them then.
  • Then like two mighty Kings, which dwelling farre 25
  • Asunder, meet against a third to warre,
  • The South and West winds joyn'd, and, as they blew,
  • Waves like a rowling trench before them threw.
  • Sooner then you read this line, did the gale,
  • Like shot, not fear'd till felt, our sailes assaile; 30
  • And what at first was call'd a gust, the same
  • Hath now a stormes, anon a tempests name.
  • _Ionas_, I pitty thee, and curse those men,
  • Who when the storm rag'd most, did wake thee then;
  • Sleepe is paines easiest salue, and doth fullfill 35
  • All offices of death, except to kill.
  • But when I wakt, I saw, that I saw not;
  • I, and the Sunne, which should teach mee'had forgot
  • East, West, Day, Night, and I could onely say,
  • If'the world had lasted, now it had beene day. 40
  • Thousands our noyses were, yet wee'mongst all
  • Could none by his right name, but thunder call:
  • Lightning was all our light, and it rain'd more
  • Then if the Sunne had drunke the sea before.
  • Some coffin'd in their cabbins lye,'equally 45
  • Griev'd that they are not dead, and yet must dye;
  • And as sin-burd'ned soules from graves will creepe,
  • At the last day, some forth their cabbins peepe:
  • And tremblingly'aske what newes, and doe heare so,
  • Like jealous husbands, what they would not know. 50
  • Some sitting on the hatches, would seeme there,
  • With hideous gazing to feare away feare.
  • Then note they the ships sicknesses, the Mast
  • Shak'd with this ague, and the Hold and Wast
  • With a salt dropsie clog'd, and all our tacklings 55
  • Snapping, like too-high-stretched treble strings.
  • And from our totterd sailes, ragges drop downe so,
  • As from one hang'd in chaines, a yeare agoe.
  • Even our Ordinance plac'd for our defence,
  • Strive to breake loose, and scape away from thence. 60
  • Pumping hath tir'd our men, and what's the gaine?
  • Seas into seas throwne, we suck in againe;
  • Hearing hath deaf'd our saylers; and if they
  • Knew how to heare, there's none knowes what to say.
  • Compar'd to these stormes, death is but a qualme, 65
  • Hell somewhat lightsome, and the'Bermuda calme.
  • Darknesse, lights elder brother, his birth-right
  • Claims o'r this world, and to heaven hath chas'd light.
  • All things are one, and that one none can be,
  • Since all formes, uniforme deformity 70
  • Doth cover, so that wee, except God say
  • Another _Fiat_, shall have no more day.
  • So violent, yet long these furies bee,
  • That though thine absence sterve me,'I wish not thee.
  • [The Storme. To Mr. Christopher Brooke. _1633_ (_1635-69 add_
  • from the Iland voyage with the Earle of Essex): The Storme, A
  • Storme _or_ Storme; _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _TCD_, _W_: _some
  • add_ To Mr. C: B: _or a longer note to the same effect as
  • 1635-69:_ to S^r Basil Brooke _JC_, _S_]
  • [2 these _1633 and most MSS._: this _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [4 an _1633:_ a _1635-69_]
  • [7 such: _Ed:_ such. _1633-69_]
  • [11 soothsay, _1650-54:_ _spelt_ Southsay _1633-39:_ gainsay
  • _1669_]
  • [12 and way. _1633_, _1669:_ one way. _1635-54_]
  • [18 lye] laie _Q_]
  • [19 fresh _W:_ fresh, _1633-69_]
  • [20 As _W:_ As, _1633-69_]
  • [23 'twas _1650-69:_ 'twas, _1633-39_]
  • [30 fear'd] fear'd, _1633_]
  • [37 not; _Ed:_ not. _1633-69_]
  • [38 I, and the Sunne, _1633-69 and most MSS.:_ yea, and the
  • Sunne, _Q_]
  • [39 Day, Night, _D_, _W:_ day, night, _1633-69_
  • could onely say _1633-69:_ could but say _Cy_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Q_, _N_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ could then but say _O'F:_
  • could say _H49_, _Lec:_ should say _D_]
  • [40 lasted, now _1633_, _1669:_ lasted, yet _1635-54:_ Lasted
  • yet, _O'F_]
  • [42 his] this _1669_]
  • [44 before.] before; _1633_]
  • [46 dye; _Ed:_ dye. _1633-69_]
  • [47 graves _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ grave _1633-54_, _Cy_]
  • [49 tremblingly _1633_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TCD_, _W:_ trembling _1635-69_, _Cy_, _JC_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_]
  • [50 Like _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD_, _W:_ As _1635-69_]
  • [53 Then] There _1669_]
  • [54 this] an _1635-69_]
  • [56 too-high-stretched _1633_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD_, _W_ (_MS. spelling
  • generally_ to _and_ stretcht): too-too-high-stretch'd
  • _1635-54:_ to too-high-stretch'd _1669_, _B_, _O'F_]
  • [59 Even our Ordinance _1633 and MSS.:_ Yea even our Ordinance
  • _1635-69_]
  • [60 Strive _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _S_,
  • _TCD_, _W:_ Strives _1635-69_, _Chambers:_ Striv'd _A25_, _B_,
  • _Cy_]
  • [66 Hell] Hell's _S_
  • lightsome] light _B_, _Cy_
  • and the'Bermuda _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD_,
  • _W:_ and the Bermudas _B_, _Cy_, _HN_, _P_, _S_, _Q:_ the
  • Bermudas _1635-54_, _O'F:_ the _Bermuda's_ _1669_]
  • [67 elder _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_, _TCD_, _W:_ eldest _1633-69_, _B_,
  • _Lec_]
  • [68 Claims _1635-69 and MSS.:_ Claim'd _1633_ this _1633_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ the _1635-69_,
  • _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_]
  • THE CALME.
  • Our storme is past, and that storms tyrannous rage,
  • A stupid calme, but nothing it, doth swage.
  • The fable is inverted, and farre more
  • A blocke afflicts, now, then a storke before.
  • Stormes chafe, and soone weare out themselves, or us; 5
  • In calmes, Heaven laughs to see us languish thus.
  • As steady'as I can wish, that my thoughts were,
  • Smooth as thy mistresse glasse, or what shines there,
  • The sea is now. And, as the Iles which wee
  • Seeke, when wee can move, our ships rooted bee. 10
  • As water did in stormes, now pitch runs out:
  • As lead, when a fir'd Church becomes one spout.
  • And all our beauty, and our trimme, decayes,
  • Like courts removing, or like ended playes.
  • The fighting place now seamens ragges supply; 15
  • And all the tackling is a frippery.
  • No use of lanthornes; and in one place lay
  • Feathers and dust, to day and yesterday.
  • Earths hollownesses, which the worlds lungs are,
  • Have no more winde then the upper valt of aire. 20
  • We can nor lost friends, nor sought foes recover,
  • But meteorlike, save that wee move not, hover.
  • Onely the Calenture together drawes
  • Deare friends, which meet dead in great fishes jawes:
  • And on the hatches as on Altars lyes 25
  • Each one, his owne Priest, and owne Sacrifice.
  • Who live, that miracle do multiply
  • Where walkers in hot Ovens, doe not dye.
  • If in despite of these, wee swimme, that hath
  • No more refreshing, then our brimstone Bath, 30
  • But from the sea, into the ship we turne,
  • Like parboyl'd wretches, on the coales to burne.
  • Like _Bajazet_ encag'd, the shepheards scoffe,
  • Or like slacke sinew'd _Sampson_, his haire off,
  • Languish our ships. Now, as a Miriade 35
  • Of Ants, durst th'Emperours lov'd snake invade,
  • The crawling Gallies, Sea-goales, finny chips,
  • Might brave our Pinnaces, now bed-ridde ships.
  • Whether a rotten state, and hope of gaine,
  • Or to disuse mee from the queasie paine 40
  • Of being belov'd, and loving, or the thirst
  • Of honour, or faire death, out pusht mee first,
  • I lose my end: for here as well as I
  • A desperate may live, and a coward die.
  • Stagge, dogge, and all which from, or towards flies, 45
  • Is paid with life, or pray, or doing dyes.
  • Fate grudges us all, and doth subtly lay
  • A scourge,'gainst which wee all forget to pray,
  • He that at sea prayes for more winde, as well
  • Under the poles may begge cold, heat in hell. 50
  • What are wee then? How little more alas
  • Is man now, then before he was? he was
  • Nothing; for us, wee are for nothing fit;
  • Chance, or our selves still disproportion it.
  • Wee have no power, no will, no sense; I lye, 55
  • I should not then thus feele this miserie.
  • [The Calme. _1633-69:_ _similarly_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _Q_, _S_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [4 storke] stroke _1639_]
  • [7 can wish, that my _1633_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ could wish that my _Q:_
  • could wish my _1635-69_, _Chambers, who makes no note of 1633
  • reading_]
  • [9 the Iles _1633-69:_ these isles _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _Chambers (no note):_ those Iles _B_, _Cy_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _P_, _Q_, _TCD_]
  • [11 out: _1635-69:_ out _1633_]
  • [14 ended] ending _1669_]
  • [15 ragges] rage _1669_]
  • [17 No] Now _1669_]
  • [21 lost] lefte _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [24 jawes: _1633_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _Q_, _S_, _TCD:_ mawes, _1635-69_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [29 these,] this, _L74_, _Q_, _TCD_]
  • [30 our _1633_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _S_, _TCD:_ a _1635-69_, _A25_, _P_]
  • [33 shepheards _1650-69:_ sheepheards _1633-39_]
  • [37 Sea-goales, (_or_ gayles _&c._) _1633_, _1669_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _HN_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD:_ Sea-gulls,
  • _1635-54_, _O'F_, _Chambers:_ Sea-snayles, _B_, _JC_]
  • [38 our Pinnaces, now _1635-54_, _B_, _O'F:_ our venices, now
  • _1633_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _P_,
  • _Q_, _S_, _TCD:_ with _Vinice's_, our _1669_]
  • [40 Or] Or, _1633-69_]
  • [44 and a coward _1633_, _MSS.:_ and coward _1635-69:_ a
  • coward _P_, _S_]
  • [45 and all] and each _B_, _Q_, _S_]
  • [48 forget _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _P_, _S:_ forgot
  • _1669_, _A25_, _HN_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _Q_, _TCD_]
  • [50 poles] pole _JC_, _Q_]
  • [52-3 he was? he was Nothing; for us, wee are for nothing fit;
  • _1633_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TCD_ (_but MSS. have no stop after_
  • Nothing): he was, he was? Nothing; for us, wee are for nothing
  • fit; _1635-54:_ he was, he was? Nothing for us, we are for
  • nothing fit; _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _Q:_ _but the MSS. have not all got a
  • mark of interrogation or other stop after second_ he was. _See
  • note_]
  • To S^r _Henry Wotton_.
  • Sir, more then kisses, letters mingle Soules;
  • For, thus friends absent speake. This ease controules
  • The tediousnesse of my life: But for these
  • I could ideate nothing, which could please,
  • But I should wither in one day, and passe 5
  • To'a bottle'of Hay, that am a locke of Grasse.
  • Life is a voyage, and in our lifes wayes
  • Countries, Courts, Towns are Rockes, or Remoraes;
  • They breake or stop all ships, yet our state's such,
  • That though then pitch they staine worse, wee must touch. 10
  • If in the furnace of the even line,
  • Or under th'adverse icy poles thou pine,
  • Thou know'st two temperate Regions girded in,
  • Dwell there: But Oh, what refuge canst thou winne
  • Parch'd in the Court, and in the country frozen? 15
  • Shall cities, built of both extremes, be chosen?
  • Can dung and garlike be'a perfume? or can
  • A Scorpion and Torpedo cure a man?
  • Cities are worst of all three; of all three
  • (O knottie riddle) each is worst equally. 20
  • Cities are Sepulchers; they who dwell there
  • Are carcases, as if no such there were.
  • And Courts are Theaters, where some men play
  • Princes, some slaves, all to one end, and of one clay.
  • The Country is a desert, where no good, 25
  • Gain'd (as habits, not borne,) is understood.
  • There men become beasts, and prone to more evils;
  • In cities blockes, and in a lewd court, devills.
  • As in the first Chaos confusedly
  • Each elements qualities were in the'other three; 30
  • So pride, lust, covetize, being feverall
  • To these three places, yet all are in all,
  • And mingled thus, their issue incestuous.
  • Falshood is denizon'd. Virtue is barbarous.
  • Let no man say there, Virtues flintie wall 35
  • Shall locke vice in mee, I'll do none, but know all.
  • Men are spunges, which to poure out, receive,
  • Who know false play, rather then lose, deceive.
  • For in best understandings, sinne beganne,
  • Angels sinn'd first, then Devills, and then man. 40
  • Onely perchance beast sinne not; wretched wee
  • Are beasts in all, but white integritie.
  • I thinke if men, which in these places live
  • Durst looke for themselves, and themselves retrive,
  • They would like strangers greet themselves, seeing than 45
  • Utopian youth, growne old Italian.
  • Be thou thine owne home, and in thy selfe dwell;
  • Inne any where, continuance maketh hell.
  • And seeing the snaile, which every where doth rome,
  • Carrying his owne house still, still is at home, 50
  • Follow (for he is easie pac'd) this snaile,
  • Bee thine owne Palace, or the world's thy gaile.
  • And in the worlds sea, do not like corke sleepe
  • Upon the waters face; nor in the deepe
  • Sinke like a lead without a line: but as 55
  • Fishes glide, leaving no print where they passe,
  • Nor making sound; so closely thy course goe,
  • let men dispute, whether thou breathe, or no.
  • Onely'in this one thing, be no Galenist: To make
  • Courts hot ambitions wholesome, do not take 60
  • A dramme of Countries dulnesse; do not adde
  • Correctives, but as chymiques, purge the bad.
  • But, Sir, I advise not you, I rather doe
  • Say o'er those lessons, which I learn'd of you:
  • Whom, free from German schismes, and lightness 65
  • Of France, and faire Italies faithlesnesse,
  • Having from these suck'd all they had of worth,
  • And brought home that faith, which you carried forth,
  • I throughly love. But if my selfe, I'have wonne
  • To know my rules, I have, and you have 70
  • DONNE:
  • [To S^r Henry Wotton. _1633-69_ (Sir _1669_): _same or no
  • title_, _A18_, _A25_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ To M^r H. W. _B_, _W_
  • (_B adds_ J. D.). _See note_]
  • [4 I could invent nothing at all to please, _1669_]
  • [6 bottle] botle _1633_ To a lock of hay, that am a Bottle of
  • grass. _1669_]
  • [7 lifes _1633:_ lives _1635-69_]
  • [10 though ... worse, _in brackets 1650-69_]
  • [11 even _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ raging _1633-54:_
  • other _P:_ over _S_]
  • [12 poles _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _P_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _W:_ pole _1633-69_, _A18_, _HN_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [16 cities, ... extremes, _Ed:_ cities ... extremes _1633-69_]
  • [17 dung and garlike _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _TC_, _W_ (dung, _1633_): dung, or garlike
  • _1635-69_, _A25_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_ a perfume] a _om.
  • 1635-54_, _Chambers_]
  • [18 Scorpion _Ed:_ Scorpion, _1633-69_
  • and Torpedo _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ or Torpedo
  • _1633-69_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_.
  • _See note_]
  • [19 of all three _1633:_ of all three? _1635-69_]
  • [22 no such _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_,
  • _S_, _TC_, _W:_ none such _1635-69_, _O'F_, _P_
  • there were. _1635-69_, _A36_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S_, _W:_ they were. _1633_, _Lec:_ then were _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [24 and of one clay. _1633 and MSS. generally:_ of one clay.
  • _1635-39:_ of one day. _1650-54:_ and at one daye. _A25:_
  • Princes, some slaves, and all end in one day. _1669_]
  • [25-6
  • The Country is a desert, where no good,
  • Gain'd, as habits, not borne, is understood.
  • _1633_, _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _S96_, _TC_, _W_
  • The Country is a desert, where the good,
  • Gain'd inhabits not, borne, is not understood.
  • _1635-54_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_
  • The Country is a desert, where noe good
  • Gain'd doth inhabit, nor born's understood.
  • _A25_]
  • [27 more _1633_, _A25_, _W:_ meere _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _S96:_ men (_a slip for_ mere) _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ all
  • _1635-69_. _See note_]
  • [33 issue incestuous, _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TC_, _W:_ issue is incestuous. _1635-69_, _P_, _S:_
  • issues monsterous. _A25_]
  • [35 there] then _Lec_]
  • [44 for themselves, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ in themselves, _1633-69:_
  • into themselves, themselves retrive, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • [45 than] then _1663_]
  • [45-6 than ... Italian.] that ... Italianate. _Cy_, _P_]
  • [47 Be thou _1633_, _Lec:_ Be then _1635-69 and MSS._]
  • [50 home, _Ed:_ home. _1633:_ home: _1635-69_]
  • [52 gaile. _1635-69:_ goale; _1633_]
  • [57 so _D, W:_ so _1633-69_]
  • [58-9 breathe,] breath, _1633_
  • or no. Onely'in this one thing, be no Galenist: _Ed:_ or no:
  • Onley ... Galenist. _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ or no: Onely in this be no Galenist.
  • _1635-69_, _Cy_, O_'F_, _S_]
  • [64 you:] you. _1633_]
  • [65 German _1633 and all MSS.:_ Germanies _1635-69_, _Grosart
  • and Chambers (without note)_]
  • To S^r _Henry Goodyere_.
  • Who makes the Past, a patterne for next yeare,
  • Turnes no new leafe, but still the same things reads,
  • Seene things, he sees againe, heard things doth heare,
  • And makes his life, but like a paire of beads.
  • A Palace, when'tis that, which it should be, 5
  • Leaves growing, and stands such, or else decayes:
  • But hee which dwels there, is not so; for hee
  • Strives to urge upward, and his fortune raise;
  • So had your body'her morning, hath her noone,
  • And shall not better; her next change is night: 10
  • But her faire larger guest, to'whom Sun and Moone
  • Are sparkes, and short liv'd, claimes another right.
  • The noble Soule by age growes lustier,
  • Her appetite, and her digestion mend,
  • Wee must not sterve, nor hope to pamper her 15
  • With womens milke, and pappe unto the end.
  • Provide you manlyer dyet; you have seene
  • All libraries, which are Schools, Camps, and Courts;
  • But aske your Garners if you have not beene
  • In harvests, too indulgent to your sports. 20
  • Would you redeeme it? then your selfe transplant
  • A while from hence. Perchance outlandish ground
  • Beares no more wit, then ours, but yet more scant
  • Are those diversions there, which here abound.
  • To be a stranger hath that benefit, 25
  • Wee can beginnings, but not habits choke.
  • Goe; whither? Hence; you get, if you forget;
  • New faults, till they prescribe in us, are smoake.
  • Our soule, whose country'is heaven, and God her father,
  • Into this world, corruptions sinke, is sent, 30
  • Yet, so much in her travaile she doth gather,
  • That she returnes home, wiser then she went;
  • It payes you well, if it teach you to spare,
  • And make you,'ashm'd, to make your hawks praise, yours,
  • Which when herselfe she lessens in the aire, 35
  • You then first say, that high enough she toures.
  • However, keepe the lively tast you hold
  • Of God, love him as now, but feare him more,
  • And in your afternoones thinke what you told
  • And promis'd him, at morning prayer before. 40
  • Let falshood like a discord anger you,
  • Else be not froward. But why doe I touch
  • Things, of which none is in your practise new,
  • And Tables, or fruit-trenchers teach as much;
  • But thus I make you keepe your promise Sir, 45
  • Riding I had you, though you still staid there,
  • And in these thoughts, although you never stirre,
  • You came with mee to Micham, and are here.
  • [To Sir Henry Goodyere. _1633-69:_ _so with_ Goodyere
  • _variously spelt_ _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_
  • To S^r Henry Goodyere (H: G: _A18_, _N_, _TC_) moveing him to
  • travell. _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [1 Past, _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ Last _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [2 reads,] read, _1650-54_]
  • [6 decayes:] decayes, _1633_]
  • [16 womens] womans _1669_]
  • [17 dyet; _Ed:_ dyet, _1633_ (_with a larger interval than is
  • usually given to a comma_), _1669:_ dyet. _1635-54_]
  • [20 harvests, _1633-54_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _TC:_
  • harvest, _1669_, _A25_, _C_, _Cy_, _N_, _O'F_, _Chambers_]
  • [27 Goe; _A18_, _B_, _TC:_ Goe, _1633-69_
  • Hence; _A18_, _TC:_ hence; _1633:_ hence _1635-54:_ Hence.
  • _1669_]
  • [28 in us, _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _TC:_ to us, _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_]
  • [34 you,'asham'd, _Ed:_ you'asham'd, _1633-69:_ you asham'd
  • _Chambers and Grolier_. _See note_]
  • [37 However, _1633-39:_ However _1650-69:_ Howsoever _A18_,
  • _B_, _D_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [38 as] _om. 1639-69_]
  • [42 froward.] froward; _1633_]
  • [44 Tables _1633-54_, _Lec:_ Fables _1669_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [45 make] made _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [48 with mee to] to mee at _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • To M^r _Rowland Woodward_.
  • Like one who'in her third widdowhood doth professe
  • Her selfe a Nunne, tyed to retirednesse,
  • So'affects my muse now, a chast fallownesse;
  • Since shee to few, yet to too many'hath showne
  • How love-song weeds, and Satyrique thornes are growne 5
  • Where seeds of better Arts, were early sown.
  • Though to use, and love Poëtrie, to mee,
  • Betroth'd to no'one Art, be no'adulterie;
  • Omissions of good, ill, as ill deeds bee.
  • For though to us it seeme,'and be light and thinne, 10
  • Yet in those faithfull scales, where God throwes in
  • Mens workes, vanity weighs as much as sinne.
  • If our Soules have stain'd their first white, yet wee
  • May cloth them with faith, and deare honestie,
  • Which God imputes, as native puritie. 15
  • There is no Vertue, but Religion:
  • Wise, valiant, sober, just, are names, which none
  • Want, which want not Vice-covering discretion.
  • Seeke wee then our selves in our selves; for as
  • Men force the Sunne with much more force to passe, 20
  • By gathering his beames with a christall glasse;
  • So wee, If wee into our selves will turne,
  • Blowing our sparkes of vertue, may outburne
  • The straw, which doth about our hearts sojourne.
  • You know, Physitians, when they would infuse 25
  • Into any'oyle, the Soules of Simples, use
  • Places, where they may lie still warme, to chuse.
  • So workes retirednesse in us; To rome
  • Giddily, and be every where, but at home,
  • Such freedome doth a banishment become. 30
  • Wee are but farmers of our selves, yet may,
  • If we can stocke our selves, and thrive, uplay
  • Much, much deare treasure for the great rent day.
  • Manure thy selfe then, to thy selfe be'approv'd,
  • And with vaine outward things be no more mov'd, 35
  • But to know, that I love thee'and would be lov'd.
  • [To M^r Rowland Woodward. _1633-69:_ _similarly or without
  • heading_, _A18_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ A Letter of Doctor
  • Dunne to one that desired some of his papers. _B:_ To M^r R.
  • W. _W_]
  • [1 professe] professe, _1633_]
  • [2 retirednesse, _1633-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _O'F_, _P_, _S:_ a retirednesse, _A18_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _TC_, _W_]
  • [3 fallownesse; _Ed:_ fallownesse. _1633-54:_ fallowness,
  • _1669:_ holinesse _Cy_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [4 too] so _W_ showne _1633_, _1669:_ flowne, _1635-54_]
  • [5 How love-song weeds, _1633:_ How long loves weeds,
  • _1635-54_, _O'F:_ How Love-song weeds, _1669_]
  • [6 sown. _1633_, _1669:_ sown? _1635-54:_ sown; _Chambers, who
  • retains the full-stop after_ fallownesse]
  • [10 to us it] to use it, _Cy_, _P_, _S96_
  • seeme,'and be light _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_,
  • _L74_, _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ seem but light _1635-69_,
  • _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _and Chambers, who attributes to 1633 the
  • reading_ seem and be but light]
  • [13 white] whites _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_]
  • [14 honestie] integritie _Cy_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [15 puritie.] puritie, _1633_]
  • [16 Religion: _1669:_ Religion, _1633:_ Religion. _1635-54_]
  • [23 our] the _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TC_
  • sparkes _1633-54_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ spark _1669_, _A18_, _H40_,
  • _S_, _Chambers_]
  • [25 infuse] infuse _1633_]
  • [26 Soules _1633-69_, _Cy_, _P:_ soule _B_, _D_, _H40_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W_]
  • [28 To _1635-69:_ to _1633_]
  • [29 Giddily, _1669:_ Giddily _1633-54_]
  • [31 farmers _1635-69_, _and all MSS., where it is generally
  • spelt_ fermers: termers _1633_]
  • [33 deare _1633_, _and most MSS.:_ good _1635-69_, _Cy_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [34 approv'd _1633-54_, _A18_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ improv'd
  • _1669_, _B_, _Chambers_]
  • [36 lov'd. _1633-69:_ belov'd. _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TC_]
  • To S^r _Henry Wootton_.
  • Here's no more newes, then vertue,'I may as well
  • Tell you _Cales_, or S^t _Michaels_ tale for newes, as tell
  • That vice doth here habitually dwell.
  • Yet, as to'get stomachs, we walke up and downe,
  • And toyle to sweeten rest, so, may God frowne, 5
  • If, but to loth both, I haunt Court, or Towne.
  • For here no one is from the'extremitie
  • Of vice, by any other reason free,
  • But that the next to'him, still, is worse then hee.
  • In this worlds warfare, they whom rugged Fate, 10
  • (Gods Commissary,) doth so throughly hate,
  • As in'the Courts Squadron to marshall their state:
  • If they stand arm'd with seely honesty,
  • With wishing prayers, and neat integritie,
  • Like Indians'gainst Spanish hosts they bee. 15
  • Suspitious boldnesse to this place belongs,
  • And to'have as many eares as all have tongues;
  • Tender to know, tough to acknowledge wrongs.
  • Beleeve mee Sir, in my youths giddiest dayes,
  • When to be like the Court, was a playes praise, 20
  • Playes were not so like Courts, as Courts'are like playes.
  • Then let us at these mimicke antiques jeast,
  • Whose deepest projects, and egregious gests
  • Are but dull Moralls of a game at Chests.
  • But now'tis incongruity to smile, 25
  • Therefore I end; and bid farewell a while,
  • _At Court_; though _From Court_, were the better stile.
  • [To S^r Henry Wootton. _1633-69:_ _do. or_ A Letter to _&c._
  • _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _S_, _S96_ (_of these Cy
  • and S add_ From Court _and_ From y^e Court): From Court. _P:_
  • To M^r H. W. 20 Jul. 1598 at Court. _HN:_ To M^r H. W. 20 July
  • 15098 (_sic_) At Court. _W:_ Jo: D: to M^r H: W: _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC:_ Another Letter. _JC_]
  • [1 newes] new _1669_]
  • [2 Tell you _Cales_, (_Calis_, _1633_) or _S^t Michaels_ tale
  • for newes, as tell _1633_, _A18_, _B_ (tales), _Cy_ (and S^t
  • Michaels tales), _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_
  • (tales), _P_, _S_, _S96_ (tales), _TC_, _W_ (_MSS. waver in
  • spelling--but_ Cales _Cy_, _HN_, _P:_) Tell you _Calis_,
  • or _Saint Michaels_ tales, as tell _1635-54_, _Chambers_
  • (Calais): Tell _Calis_, or Saint _Michaels_ Mount, as tell
  • _1669:_ Tell you Calais, or Saint Michaels Mount as tell
  • _1719:_ _All modern editions read_ Calais]
  • [6 or] and _1669_]
  • [9 to'him, still, _1633:_ to him, still, _1635-69:_ to him is
  • still _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [12 state: _1635-69:_ state _1633_]
  • [14 wishing prayers, _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ wishing, prayers, _1669_,
  • _HN:_ wishes, prayers, _1635-54_, _B_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [20 playes] players _1639-69_]
  • [21 are like _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _S_, _S96_ (are now like), _TC_, _W:_ are _om. (metri causa)
  • 1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _JC_, _O'F_]
  • [23-4
  • are egregeous guests,
  • And but dull Morals at a game of Chests.
  • _1669_]
  • [25 now'tis] 'tis an _1669_]
  • [27 _At Court;_ though, _From Court, &c._ _W:_ _At Court_,
  • though from Court, _&c._ _1633-69_]
  • _H: W: in Hiber: belligeranti._
  • Went you to conquer? and have so much lost
  • Yourself, that what in you was best and most,
  • Respective friendship, should so quickly dye?
  • In publique gaine my share'is not such that I
  • Would lose your love for Ireland: better cheap 5
  • I pardon death (who though he do not reap
  • Yet gleanes hee many of our frends away)
  • Then that your waking mind should bee a prey
  • To lethargies. Lett shott, and boggs, and skeines
  • With bodies deale, as fate bids and restreynes; 10
  • Ere sicknesses attack, yong death is best,
  • Who payes before his death doth scape arrest.
  • Lett not your soule (at first with graces fill'd,
  • And since, and thorough crooked lymbecks, still'd
  • In many schools and courts, which quicken it,) 15
  • It self unto the Irish negligence submit.
  • I aske not labored letters which should weare
  • Long papers out: nor letters which should feare
  • Dishonest carriage: or a seers art:
  • Nor such as from the brayne come, but the hart. 20
  • [H: W: _&c._ _Burley MS._ (JD _in margin_) _i.e._ Henrico
  • Wottoni in Hibernia belligeranti]
  • [2 that] y^t _Bur, and similarly_ y^e (the), y^r (your),
  • w^{ch} (which), w^{th} (with) _throughout_]
  • [2-3 most, Respective friendship,] _no commas_, _Bur_]
  • [4 share'is] share is _Bur_]
  • [9 lethargies.] letargies. _Bur_]
  • [10 restreynes;] restreynes _Bur_]
  • [11 attack,] attack _Bur_
  • best,] best _Bur_]
  • [13 (at first] _Bur closes bracket after_ first _and again
  • after_ 15 quicken it,]
  • [14 since,] since _Bur_]
  • [19 art:] art _Bur_]
  • _To the Countesse of Bedford._
  • MADAME,
  • Reason is our Soules left hand, Faith her right,
  • By these wee reach divinity, that's you;
  • Their loves, who have the blessings of your light,
  • Grew from their reason, mine from faire faith grew.
  • But as, although a squint lefthandednesse 5
  • Be'ungracious, yet we cannot want that hand,
  • So would I, not to encrease, but to expresse
  • My faith, as I beleeve, so understand.
  • Therefore I study you first in your Saints,
  • Those friends, whom your election glorifies, 10
  • Then in your deeds, accesses, and restraints,
  • And what you reade, and what your selfe devize.
  • But soone, the reasons why you'are lov'd by all,
  • Grow infinite, and so passe reasons reach,
  • Then backe againe to'implicite faith I fall, 15
  • And rest on what the Catholique voice doth teach;
  • That you are good: and not one Heretique
  • Denies it: if he did, yet you are so.
  • For, rockes, which high top'd and deep rooted sticke,
  • Waves wash, not undermine, nor overthrow. 20
  • In every thing there naturally growes
  • A _Balsamum_ to keepe it fresh, and new,
  • If'twere not injur'd by extrinsique blowes;
  • Your birth and beauty are this Balme in you.
  • But you of learning and religion, 25
  • And vertue,'and such ingredients, have made
  • A methridate, whose operation
  • Keepes off, or cures what can be done or said.
  • Yet, this is not your physicke, but your food,
  • A dyet fit for you; for you are here 30
  • The first good Angell, since the worlds frame stood,
  • That ever did in womans shape appeare.
  • Since you are then Gods masterpeece, and so
  • His Factor for our loves; do as you doe,
  • Make your returne home gracious; and bestow 35
  • This life on that; so make one life of two.
  • For so God helpe mee,'I would not misse you there
  • For all the good which you can do me here.
  • [To the Countesse of Bedford. _1633-69:_ _do. or_ To the
  • Countesse of B. _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _RP31_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [3 blessings _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ blessing _1635-69_,
  • _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_
  • light, _1633-69:_ sight, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _RP31_, _S_, _TCD_]
  • [4 faire _1633-69_, _L74_, _N_, _TCD:_ farr _B_, _Cy_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _Lec_, _M_, _O'F_, _RP31_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [16 what] that _Chambers_
  • voice _1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _M_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TCD:_ faith _1633_, _RP31_, _S_]
  • [19 high top'd and deep rooted _1633_, _N_, _TCD:_ high to
  • sense deepe-rooted _1635-54_, _O'F_, _Chambers_ (_who has
  • overlooked 1633 reading:_) high to sense and deepe-rooted
  • _S96:_ high to sun and deepe-rooted _L74_, _RP31_, _S:_ high
  • do seem, deep-rooted _1669_, _Cy_ (_but MS. with_ and): high
  • to some, and deepe-rooted _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ high to seeme,
  • and deepe-rooted _B_. _See note_]
  • [25 But _Ed:_ But, _1633-69_]
  • [36 This, _1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _RP31_, _S_, _TCD_, _Grosart and Chambers:_ Thy _1633_,
  • _Grolier_. _See note_]
  • _To the Countesse of Bedford._
  • MADAME,
  • You have refin'd mee, and to worthyest things
  • (Vertue, Art, Beauty, Fortune,) now I see
  • Rarenesse, or use, not nature value brings;
  • And such, as they are circumstanc'd, they bee.
  • Two ills can ne're perplexe us, sinne to'excuse; 5
  • But of two good things, we may leave and chuse.
  • Therefore at Court, which is not vertues clime,
  • (Where a transcendent height, (as, lownesse mee)
  • Makes her not be, or not show) all my rime
  • Your vertues challenge, which there rarest bee; 10
  • For, as darke texts need notes: there some must bee
  • To usher vertue, and say, _This is shee._
  • So in the country'is beauty; to this place
  • You are the season (Madame) you the day,
  • 'Tis but a grave of spices, till your face 15
  • Exhale them, and a thick close bud display.
  • Widow'd and reclus'd else, her sweets she'enshrines;
  • As China, when the Sunne at Brasill dines.
  • Out from your chariot, morning breaks at night,
  • And falsifies both computations so; 20
  • Since a new world doth rise here from your light,
  • We your new creatures, by new recknings goe.
  • This showes that you from nature lothly stray,
  • That suffer not an artificiall day.
  • In this you'have made the Court the Antipodes, 25
  • And will'd your Delegate, the vulgar Sunne,
  • To doe profane autumnall offices,
  • Whilst here to you, wee sacrificers runne;
  • And whether Priests, or Organs, you wee'obey,
  • We sound your influence, and your Dictates say. 30
  • Yet to that Deity which dwels in you,
  • Your vertuous Soule, I now not sacrifice;
  • These are _Petitions_ and not _Hymnes_; they sue
  • But that I may survay the edifice.
  • In all Religions as much care hath bin 35
  • Of Temples frames, and beauty,'as Rites within.
  • As all which goe to Rome, doe not thereby
  • Esteeme religions, and hold fast the best,
  • But serve discourse, and curiosity,
  • With that which doth religion but invest, 40
  • And shunne th'entangling laborinths of Schooles,
  • And make it wit, to thinke the wiser fooles:
  • So in this pilgrimage I would behold
  • You as you'are vertues temple, not as shee,
  • What walls of tender christall her enfold, 45
  • What eyes, hands, bosome, her pure Altars bee;
  • And after this survay, oppose to all
  • Bablers of Chappels, you th'Escuriall.
  • Yet not as consecrate, but merely'as faire,
  • On these I cast a lay and country eye. 50
  • Of past and future stories, which are rare,
  • I finde you all record, and prophecie.
  • Purge but the booke of Fate, that it admit
  • No sad nor guilty legends, you are it.
  • If good and lovely were not one, of both 55
  • You were the transcript, and originall,
  • The Elements, the Parent, and the Growth,
  • And every peece of you, is both their All:
  • So'intire are all your deeds, and you, that you
  • Must do the same thinge still; you cannot two. 60
  • But these (as nice thinne Schoole divinity
  • Serves heresie to furder or represse)
  • Tast of Poëtique rage, or flattery,
  • And need not, where all hearts one truth professe;
  • Oft from new proofes, and new phrase, new doubts grow, 65
  • As strange attire aliens the men wee know.
  • Leaving then busie praise, and all appeale
  • To higher Courts, senses decree is true,
  • The Mine, the Magazine, the Commonweale,
  • The story of beauty,'in Twicknam is, and you. 70
  • Who hath seene one, would both; As, who had bin
  • In Paradise, would seeke the Cherubin.
  • [the Countesse of Bedford. _1633-69:_ _similarly or with
  • no title_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [2 (Vertue, ... Fortune,)] _brackets Ed:_ Fortune, _1633:_
  • Fortune; _1635-69_, _Grolier:_ Fortune. _Chambers_. _See
  • note_]
  • [5 ne're] nere _1633_]
  • [6 and] or _1669_]
  • [8-9 _1633 begins to bracket_ (Where ... not show) _but does
  • not finish, putting a colon after_ show: _the others drop the
  • larger brackets, retaining the smaller_ (as ... mee)]
  • [9 be] see _1669_
  • show] show: _1633-54:_ show. _1669_]
  • [11 notes: there some _1633-54:_ notes some: there _1669_]
  • [17 enshrines; _1719:_ enshrines _1633-69_]
  • [20 computations so; _1633-69:_ computations; so, _Chambers_]
  • [42 fooles:] fooles. _1633_]
  • [48 Bablers _1633:_ Babblers _1635-54:_ Builders _1669_]
  • [49 faire, _Ed:_ faire; _1633-69_]
  • [50 eye.] eye, _1633_]
  • [52 and prophecie] all prophecye _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _TCD_ prophecie.] prophecie, _1633 some copies_]
  • [57 Parent] Parents _1669_ Growth, _1669:_ Growth _1633-54_]
  • [58 both _1633 and MSS.:_ worth _1635-69_, _O'F_ All: _Ed:_
  • All, _1633-69_]
  • [60 thinge _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F:_ things
  • _1633-69_, _Lec_]
  • [61 nice thinne _1633-54:_ nicest _1669_]
  • [66 aliens _1633_, _1669 and MSS.:_ alters _1635-54_, _O'F_]
  • [67 and] end _1669_, _not_ lend _as in Chambers' note_
  • appeale _Ed:_ appeale, _1633-69_]
  • [68 true, _1633:_ true. _1635-69_]
  • [71 had bin _1633-35:_ hath bin _1639-69_. _See note_]
  • To S^r _Edward Herbert_. at _Iulyers_.
  • Man is a lumpe, where all beasts kneaded bee,
  • Wisdome makes him an Arke where all agree;
  • The foole, in whom these beasts do live at jarre,
  • Is sport to others, and a Theater;
  • Nor scapes hee so, but is himselfe their prey, 5
  • All which was man in him, is eate away,
  • And now his beasts on one another feed,
  • Yet couple'in anger, and new monsters breed.
  • How happy'is hee, which hath due place assign'd
  • To'his beasts, and disaforested his minde! 10
  • Empail'd himselfe to keepe them out, not in;
  • Can sow, and dares trust corne, where they have bin;
  • Can use his horse, goate, wolfe, and every beast,
  • And is not Asse himselfe to all the rest.
  • Else, man not onely is the heard of swine, 15
  • But he's those devills too, which did incline
  • Them to a headlong rage, and made them worse:
  • For man can adde weight to heavens heaviest curse.
  • As Soules (they say) by our first touch, take in
  • The poysonous tincture of Originall sinne, 20
  • So, to the punishments which God doth fling,
  • Our apprehension contributes the sting.
  • To us, as to his chickins, he doth cast
  • Hemlocke, and wee as men, his hemlocke taste;
  • We do infuse to what he meant for meat, 25
  • Corrosivenesse, or intense cold or heat.
  • For, God no such specifique poyson hath
  • As kills we know not how; his fiercest wrath
  • Hath no antipathy, but may be good
  • At lest for physicke, if not for our food. 30
  • Thus man, that might be'his pleasure, is his rod,
  • And is his devill, that might be his God.
  • Since then our businesse is, to rectifie
  • Nature, to what she was, wee'are led awry
  • By them, who man to us in little show; 35
  • Greater then due, no forme we can bestow
  • On him; for Man into himselfe can draw
  • All; All his faith can swallow,'or reason chaw.
  • All that is fill'd, and all that which doth fill,
  • All the round world, to man is but a pill, 40
  • In all it workes not, but it is in all
  • Poysonous, or purgative, or cordiall,
  • For, knowledge kindles Calentures in some,
  • And is to others icy _Opium_.
  • As brave as true, is that profession than 45
  • Which you doe use to make; that you know man.
  • This makes it credible; you have dwelt upon
  • All worthy bookes, and now are such an one.
  • Actions are authors, and of those in you
  • Your friends finde every day a mart of new. 50
  • [To S^r Edward _&c._ _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F:_ A
  • Letter to S^r Edward Herbert (_or_ Harbert). _B_, _Cy_ (_which
  • adds_ Incerti Authoris), _S96:_ To Sir E. H. _A18_, _N_, _TC:_
  • _no title_, _P:_ Elegia Vicesima Tertia. _S:_ To S^r Edward
  • Herbert, now (since _1669_) Lord Herbert of Cherbury, being at
  • the siege of Iulyers. _1635-69_]
  • [4 Theater; _Ed:_ Theater, _1633-69:_ Theater. _D_]
  • [5 prey, _Ed:_ prey; _1633-69_]
  • [8 breed.] breed; _1633_]
  • [10 minde! _Ed:_ minde? _1633-69_]
  • [17 a headlong] a _om. 1669:_ an headlong _1635-54_]
  • [24 taste; _Ed:_ taste. _1633-69_]
  • [28 we know _1633 and MSS.:_ men know _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [35 show; _1669:_ show, _1633-54_, _Chambers_]
  • [36 due, _1633-69:_ due; _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [38 All; All _1669:_ All: All _1635-54:_ All, All _1633_
  • chaw. _1633:_ chaw, _1635-69_, _Grolier_]
  • [39 fill, _1633-54:_ fill _1669:_ fill; _Grolier_]
  • [44 icy] jcy _1633_]
  • [47-8 credible; ... bookes, _Ed:_ credible, ... bookes;
  • _1633-69:_ credible ... bookes _Grolier_]
  • _To the Countesse of Bedford._
  • T'have written then, when you writ, seem'd to mee
  • Worst of spirituall vices, Simony,
  • And not t'have written then, seemes little lesse
  • Then worst of civill vices, thanklessenesse.
  • In this, my debt I seem'd loath to confesse, 5
  • In that, I seem'd to shunne beholdingnesse.
  • But 'tis not soe; _nothings_, as I am, may
  • Pay all they have, and yet have all to pay.
  • Such borrow in their payments, and owe more
  • By having leave to write so, then before. 10
  • Yet since rich mines in barren grounds are showne,
  • May not I yeeld (not gold) but coale or stone?
  • Temples were not demolish'd, though prophane:
  • Here _Peter Ioves_, there _Paul_ hath _Dian's_ Fane.
  • So whether my hymnes you admit or chuse, 15
  • In me you'have hallowed a Pagan Muse,
  • And denizend a stranger, who mistaught
  • By blamers of the times they mard, hath sought
  • Vertues in corners, which now bravely doe
  • Shine in the worlds best part, or all It; You. 20
  • I have beene told, that vertue in Courtiers hearts
  • Suffers an Ostracisme, and departs.
  • Profit, ease, fitnesse, plenty, bid it goe,
  • But whither, only knowing you, I know;
  • Your (or you) vertue two vast uses serves, 25
  • It ransomes one sex, and one Court preserves.
  • There's nothing but your worth, which being true,
  • Is knowne to any other, not to you:
  • And you can never know it; To admit
  • No knowledge of your worth, is some of it. 30
  • But since to you, your praises discords bee,
  • Stoop, others ills to meditate with mee.
  • Oh! to confesse wee know not what we should,
  • Is halfe excuse; wee know not what we would:
  • Lightnesse depresseth us, emptinesse fills, 35
  • We sweat and faint, yet still goe downe the hills.
  • As new Philosophy arrests the Sunne,
  • And bids the passive earth about it runne,
  • So wee have dull'd our minde, it hath no ends;
  • Onely the bodie's busie, and pretends; 40
  • As dead low earth ecclipses and controules
  • The quick high Moone: so doth the body, Soules.
  • In none but us, are such mixt engines found,
  • As hands of double office: For, the ground
  • We till with them; and them to heav'n wee raise; 45
  • Who prayer-lesse labours, or, without this, prayes,
  • Doth but one halfe, that's none; He which said, _Plough
  • And looke not back_, to looke up doth allow.
  • Good seed degenerates, and oft obeyes
  • The soyles disease, and into cockle strayes; 50
  • Let the minds thoughts be but transplanted so,
  • Into the body,'and bastardly they grow.
  • What hate could hurt our bodies like our love?
  • Wee (but no forraine tyrants could) remove
  • These not ingrav'd, but inborne dignities, 55
  • Caskets of soules; Temples, and Palaces:
  • For, bodies shall from death redeemed bee,
  • Soules but preserv'd, not naturally free.
  • As men to'our prisons, new soules to us are sent,
  • Which learne vice there, and come in innocent. 60
  • First seeds of every creature are in us,
  • What ere the world hath bad, or pretious,
  • Mans body can produce, hence hath it beene
  • That stones, wormes, frogges, and snakes in man are seene:
  • But who ere saw, though nature can worke soe, 65
  • That pearle, or gold, or corne in man did grow?
  • We'have added to the world Virginia,'and sent
  • Two new starres lately to the firmament;
  • Why grudge wee us (not heaven) the dignity
  • T'increase with ours, those faire soules company. 70
  • But I must end this letter, though it doe
  • Stand on two truths, neither is true to you,
  • Vertue hath some perversenesse; For she will
  • Neither beleeve her good, nor others ill.
  • Even in you, vertues best paradise, 75
  • Vertue hath some, but wise degrees of vice.
  • Too many vertues, or too much of one
  • Begets in you unjust suspition;
  • And ignorance of vice, makes vertue lesse,
  • Quenching compassion of our wrechednesse. 80
  • But these are riddles; Some aspersion
  • Of vice becomes well some complexion.
  • Statesmen purge vice with vice, and may corrode
  • The bad with bad, a spider with a toad:
  • For so, ill thralls not them, but they tame ill 85
  • And make her do much good against her will,
  • But in your Commonwealth, or world in you,
  • Vice hath no office, or good worke to doe.
  • Take then no vitious purge, but be content
  • With cordiall vertue, your knowne nourishment. 90
  • [the _&c._ _1633-69:_ To the Countesse of B. _N_, _O'F_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [5 debt _1669_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ doubt _1633-54_]
  • [7 soe; _Ed:_ soe, _1633-54:_ soe. _1669_
  • _nothings_, _1635-54:_ _nothing_, _1633_, _N_, _TCD:_
  • _Nothing_ _1669_
  • may] may, _1633_]
  • [14 hath] have _1633:_ _om._ _N_, _TCD_ (have _inserted_)
  • _Dian's_ _1635-54:_ Dian's _1633:_ _Dina's_ _1669_]
  • [20 or all It; You. _1635-54:_ or all it, you. _1669_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _TCD:_ or all, in you. _1633_ (you, _some copies_)]
  • [25 Your (or you) vertue _O'F:_ Your, or you vertue,
  • _1633-54:_ You, or you vertue, _1669_]
  • [26 preserves. _Ed:_ preserves; _1633-69_]
  • [28 you:] you. _1633-39_]
  • [30 is some] it some _1633_]
  • [32 Stoop, others ills] Stoop (Stop _1633_) others ills,
  • _1633-54:_ Stoop others ills _1669_]
  • [34 excuse; _Ed:_ excuse, _1633-69_, _Grosart_ (_who
  • transposes_ should _and_ would), _Chambers:_ excuse _Grolier_.
  • _See note_
  • would: _Ed:_ would] _1633-69_]
  • [36 the hills. _Ed:_ the hills; _1633-69_]
  • [37 Philosophy. Phylosophy _1633 some copies_, _1669_]
  • [45 raise;] raise _1633_]
  • [46 this,] these _1669_]
  • [50 strayes; _Ed:_ strayes. _1633-69_]
  • [51 Let] Let but _1669_]
  • [54 Wee (but no forraine tyrants could) remove _Ed:_ Wee but
  • no forraine tyrants could, remove _O'F:_ Wee but no forraigne
  • tyrants could remove, _1633-54_ (tyrans _1633_): We, but no
  • forrain tyrants, could remove _1669_, _Chambers and Grolier_.
  • _See note_]
  • [55 dignities, _Ed:_ dignities _1633-69_]
  • [56 Palaces: _1633-35:_ Palaces. _1639-69_]
  • [58 not naturally free. _Ed:_ not naturally free; _1633_, _N_,
  • _TCD:_ borne naturally free; _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [59 prisons, new soules _1633:_ prisons now, soules _1635-69_,
  • _O'F:_ prisons, now soules _N_, _TCD_]
  • [60 vice _1635-69_, _O'F:_ it _1633_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [66 That] That, _1633_
  • grow? _1639-69:_ grow. _1633-35_]
  • [74 ill.] ill, _1633-35_]
  • [75 you, _1669:_ you _1635-54:_ your _1633_]
  • [78 suspition; _Ed:_ suspition. _1633-69_]
  • [79 makes] make _1635-39_]
  • [87 Commonwealth, ... you,] _no commas 1633_]
  • _To the Countesse of_ Bedford.
  • _On New-yeares day._
  • This twilight of two yeares, not past nor next,
  • Some embleme is of mee, or I of this,
  • Who Meteor-like, of stuffe and forme perplext,
  • Whose _what_, and _where_, in disputation is,
  • If I should call mee _any thing_, should misse. 5
  • I summe the yeares, and mee, and finde mee not
  • Debtor to th'old, nor Creditor to th'new,
  • That cannot say, My thankes I have forgot,
  • Nor trust I this with hopes, and yet scarce true
  • This bravery is, since these times shew'd mee you. 10
  • In recompence I would show future times
  • What you were, and teach them to'urge towards such.
  • Verse embalmes vertue;'and Tombs, or Thrones of rimes,
  • Preserve fraile transitory fame, as much
  • As spice doth bodies from corrupt aires touch. 15
  • Mine are short-liv'd; the tincture of your name
  • Creates in them, but dissipates as fast,
  • New spirits: for, strong agents with the same
  • Force that doth warme and cherish, us doe wast;
  • Kept hot with strong extracts, no bodies last: 20
  • So, my verse built of your just praise, might want
  • Reason and likelihood, the firmest Base,
  • And made of miracle, now faith is scant,
  • Will vanish soone, and so possesse no place,
  • And you, and it, too much grace might disgrace. 25
  • When all (as truth commands assent) confesse
  • All truth of you, yet they will doubt how I,
  • One corne of one low anthills dust, and lesse,
  • Should name, know, or expresse a thing so high,
  • And not an inch, measure infinity. 30
  • I cannot tell them, nor my selfe, nor you,
  • But leave, lest truth b'endanger'd by my praise,
  • And turne to God, who knowes I thinke this true,
  • And useth oft, when such a heart mis-sayes,
  • To make it good, for, such a praiser prayes. 35
  • Hee will best teach you, how you should lay out
  • His stock of _beauty_, _learning_, _favour_, _blood_;
  • He will perplex security with doubt,
  • And cleare those doubts; hide from you,'and shew you good,
  • And so increase your appetite and food; 40
  • Hee will teach you, that good and bad have not
  • One latitude in cloysters, and in Court;
  • Indifferent there the greatest space hath got;
  • Some pitty'is not good there, some vaine disport,
  • On this side sinne, with that place may comport. 45
  • Yet he, as hee bounds seas, will fixe your houres,
  • Which pleasure, and delight may not ingresse,
  • And though what none else lost, be truliest yours,
  • Hee will make you, what you did not, possesse,
  • By using others, not vice, but weakenesse. 50
  • He will make you speake truths, and credibly,
  • And make you doubt, that others doe not so:
  • Hee will provide you keyes, and locks, to spie,
  • And scape spies, to good ends, and hee will show
  • What you may not acknowledge, what not know. 55
  • For your owne conscience, he gives innocence,
  • But for your fame, a discreet warinesse,
  • And though to scape, then to revenge offence
  • Be better, he showes both, and to represse
  • _Ioy_, when your state swells, _sadnesse_ when'tis lesse. 60
  • From need of teares he will defend your soule,
  • Or make a rebaptizing of one teare;
  • Hee cannot, (that's, he will not) dis-inroule
  • Your name; and when with active joy we heare
  • This private Ghospell, then'tis our New Yeare. 65
  • [To the _&c._ _1633-69:_ To the Countesse of B. at New-yeares
  • tide. _N_, _O'F_, _TCD_]
  • [3-4 (Meteor-like, ... disputation is,) _1635-69_]
  • [9 true _Ed:_ true, _1633_ true. _1635-69_]
  • [10 is, _Ed:_ is _1633-69_ (_in 1633 the interval shows that a
  • comma was intended_)
  • times] time _1633_]
  • [12 such. _Ed:_ such, _1633-69_]
  • [16 short-liv'd] short liv'd _1633_]
  • [17 fast,] fast _1633_]
  • [18 spirits: _Ed:_ spirit: _1633:_ spirits; _1635-69_]
  • [19 cherish, us doe _1633:_ cherish us, doe _1635-69_]
  • [27 I, _Ed:_ I _1633-69_]
  • [28 (One corne ... and lesse,) _1635-69_]
  • [29 name, know,] _no commas 1633-69_]
  • [30 And not an inch, _1633:_ And (not an inch) _1635-69_
  • infinity.] infinite. _1669_]
  • [35 praiser prayes. _1635-69_, _O'F:_ prayer prayes. _1633:_
  • prayer praise. _N_, _TCD_]
  • [37 _blood_;] _blood_, _1633_]
  • [39 doubts;] doubts, _1633_]
  • [42 Court; _Ed:_ Court, _1633-69_]
  • [43 got; _Ed:_ got, _1633-69_]
  • [44 pitty' _1633-69:_ piety _James Russell Lowell, in Grolier
  • note_. _See note_]
  • [45 On this side sinne, _Ed_ (_from Chambers_): On this side,
  • sinne; _1633:_ On this side, sin, _1635-69_. _See note_]
  • [46 he, _Ed:_ he _1633-69_]
  • [47 Which] With _1633_]
  • [55 may] will _1669_]
  • [58-9 (though to scape ... Be better,) _1635-69_]
  • [65 New Yeare.] new yeare, _1633_]
  • _To the Countesse of Huntingdon._
  • MADAME,
  • Man to Gods image; _Eve_, to mans was made,
  • Nor finde wee that God breath'd a soule in her,
  • Canons will not Church functions you invade,
  • Nor lawes to civill office you preferre.
  • Who vagrant transitory Comets sees, 5
  • Wonders, because they'are rare; But a new starre
  • Whose motion with the firmament agrees,
  • Is miracle; for, there no new things are;
  • In woman so perchance milde innocence
  • A seldome comet is, but active good 10
  • A miracle, which reason scapes, and sense;
  • For, Art and Nature this in them withstood.
  • As such a starre, the _Magi_ led to view
  • The manger-cradled infant, God below:
  • By vertues beames by fame deriv'd from you, 15
  • May apt soules, and the worst may, vertue know.
  • If the worlds age, and death be argued well
  • By the Sunnes fall, which now towards earth doth bend,
  • Then we might feare that vertue, since she fell
  • So low as woman, should be neare her end. 20
  • But she's not stoop'd, but rais'd; exil'd by men
  • She fled to heaven, that's heavenly things, that's you;
  • She was in all men, thinly scatter'd then,
  • But now amass'd, contracted in a few.
  • She guilded us: But you are gold, and Shee; 25
  • Us she inform'd, but transubstantiates you;
  • Soft dispositions which ductile bee,
  • Elixarlike, she makes not cleane, but new.
  • Though you a wifes and mothers name retaine,
  • 'Tis not as woman, for all are not soe, 30
  • But vertue having made you vertue,'is faine
  • T'adhere in these names, her and you to show,
  • Else, being alike pure, wee should neither see;
  • As, water being into ayre rarify'd,
  • Neither appeare, till in one cloud they bee, 35
  • So, for our sakes you do low names abide;
  • Taught by great constellations, which being fram'd,
  • Of the most starres, take low names, _Crab_ and _Bull_,
  • When single planets by the _Gods_ are nam'd,
  • You covet not great names, of great things full. 40
  • So you, as woman, one doth comprehend,
  • And in the vaile of kindred others see;
  • To some ye are reveal'd, as in a friend,
  • And as a vertuous Prince farre off, to mee.
  • To whom, because from you all vertues flow, 45
  • And 'tis not none, to dare contemplate you,
  • I, which doe so, as your true subject owe
  • Some tribute for that, so these lines are due.
  • If you can thinke these flatteries, they are,
  • For then your judgement is below my praise, 50
  • If they were so, oft, flatteries worke as farre,
  • As Counsels, and as farre th'endeavour raise.
  • So my ill reaching you might there grow good,
  • But I remaine a poyson'd fountaine still;
  • But not your beauty, vertue, knowledge, blood 55
  • Are more above all flattery, then my will.
  • And if I flatter any,'tis not you
  • But my owne judgement, who did long agoe
  • Pronounce, that all these praises should be true,
  • And vertue should your beauty,'and birth outgrow. 60
  • Now that my prophesies are all fulfill'd,
  • Rather then God should not be honour'd too,
  • And all these gifts confess'd, which hee instill'd,
  • Your selfe were bound to say that which I doe.
  • So I, but your Recorder am in this, 65
  • Or mouth, or Speaker of the universe,
  • A ministeriall Notary, for'tis
  • Not I, but you and fame, that make this verse;
  • I was your Prophet in your yonger dayes,
  • And now your Chaplaine, God in you to praise. 70
  • [To the _&c._ _1633-69_, _O'F:_ To the C. of H. _N_, _TCD_]
  • [1 image;] image, _1633_
  • mans] man _1650-69_]
  • [9 woman] women _1669_]
  • [13 the] which _1633_
  • _Magi_] Magis _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ _compare p._ 243, _l._ 390]
  • [14 below: _Ed:_ below. _1633-69_]
  • [15 beames by ... you, _1633:_ beames (by ... you) _1633-69_]
  • [16 may, _Ed:_ may _1633-69_]
  • [22 you; _Ed:_ you, _1633-69_]
  • [24 amass'd, _1633_, _O'F:_ a masse _1635-69_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [25-6 But you are gold, and Shee; ... transubstantiates you;
  • _Ed:_ But you are gold, and Shee, ... transubstantiates you,
  • _1633:_
  • but you are gold; and she,
  • Informed us, but transubstantiates you,
  • _1635-69_, _Chambers_ (_but no comma after_ and she _and colon
  • or full stop after_ you _1650-69_, _Chambers_)]
  • [33 see; _Ed:_ see, _1633-69_]
  • [37-9 (which being ... are nam'd) _1635-69_]
  • [42 vaile] vale _1669_]
  • [43 ye _1633:_ you _1635-69_]
  • [47 doe so, _1635-69_, _O'F:_ doe _N_, _TCD:_ to you _1633_]
  • [48 due.] due, _1633_]
  • [55 But _1633_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ And _1635-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [64 that] thar _1633_]
  • [66 or Speaker _1633:_ and Speaker _1635-69_]
  • [67 Notary,] notary, _1633_]
  • To M^r _T. W._
  • All haile sweet Poët, more full of more strong fire,
  • Then hath or shall enkindle any spirit,
  • I lov'd what nature gave thee, but this merit
  • Of wit and Art I love not but admire;
  • Who have before or shall write after thee, 5
  • Their workes, though toughly laboured, will bee
  • Like infancie or age to mans firme stay,
  • Or earely and late twilights to mid-day.
  • Men say, and truly, that they better be
  • Which be envyed then pittied: therefore I, 10
  • Because I wish thee best, doe thee envie:
  • O wouldst thou, by like reason, pitty mee!
  • But care not for mee: I, that ever was
  • In Natures, and in Fortunes gifts, alas,
  • (Before thy grace got in the Muses Schoole 15
  • A monster and a begger,) am now a foole.
  • Oh how I grieve, that late borne modesty
  • Hath got such root in easie waxen hearts,
  • That men may not themselves, their owne good parts
  • Extoll, without suspect of surquedrie, 20
  • For, but thy selfe, no subject can be found
  • Worthy thy quill, nor any quill resound
  • Thy worth but thine: how good it were to see
  • A Poëm in thy praise, and writ by thee.
  • Now if this song be too'harsh for rime, yet, as 25
  • The Painters bad god made a good devill,
  • 'Twill be good prose, although the verse be evill,
  • If thou forget the rime as thou dost passe.
  • Then write, that I may follow, and so bee
  • Thy debter, thy'eccho, thy foyle, thy zanee. 30
  • I shall be thought, if mine like thine I shape,
  • All the worlds Lyon, though I be thy Ape.
  • [To M^r T. W.: _P_, _S_, _W:_ To M. I. W. _1633-69_, _A18_,
  • _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ A Letter. To M^r T. W. _O'F:_ Ad amicum.
  • _S96:_ _no title_, _B_, _Cy_]
  • [1 more full] and full _1669_]
  • [2 any spirit, _1633_, _A18_, _Cy_, _N_, _P_, _TC_, _W:_ my
  • dull spirit, _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [3 this merit _1633_, _A18_, _Cy_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_, _W:_
  • thy merit _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _Chambers_]
  • [11 thee ... thee] the ... the _1669_]
  • [12 mee! _Ed:_ mee. _W:_ mee, _1633-69_]
  • [13 mee: _Ed:_ mee, _1633-69_
  • ever was] never was _B_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [14-16
  • In Natures, and in Fortunes gifts, alas,
  • (Before ... and a begger,)
  • _Ed:_
  • In Natures, and in fortunes gifts, (alas,
  • Before thy grace got in the Muses Schoole)
  • A monster and a begger,
  • _1633_ (_some copies:_ _others read_ 15 Before by thy grace
  • _&c._, _which is also the Grolier conjecture_), _A18_, _Cy_,
  • _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC_, _W_ (_but W and some of the other MSS.
  • have no brackets_):
  • In Natures, and in fortunes gifts, alas,
  • (But for thy grace got in the Muses Schoole)
  • A Monster and a beggar,
  • _1635-69_, _O'F_, _Chambers_
  • In fortunes, nor (or _S96_) in natures gifts alas,
  • But by thy grace, _&c._
  • _B_, _S96_. _See note_]
  • [16 am now a foole. _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ am a
  • foole. _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [23 worth _1669_, _B_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ worke
  • _1633-54_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [27 evill, _W:_ evill. _1633-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [28 passe. _W:_ passe, _1633-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [29 that I _1669_, _B_, _Cy_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _W:_ then
  • I _1633-54_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [30 Thy debter, thy'eccho _1633-54:_ Thy eccho, thy debtor
  • _1669_
  • thy zanee.] and thy Zanee. _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [31 if ... shape] _brackets_ _1635-69_]
  • To M _T. W._
  • Hast thee harsh verse, as fast as thy lame measure
  • Will give thee leave, to him, my pain and pleasure.
  • I have given thee, and yet thou art too weake,
  • Feete, and a reasoning soule and tongue to speake.
  • Plead for me, and so by thine and my labour 5
  • I am thy Creator, thou my Saviour.
  • Tell him, all questions, which men have defended
  • Both of the place and paines of hell, are ended;
  • And 'tis decreed our hell is but privation
  • Of him, at least in this earths habitation: 10
  • And 'tis where I am, where in every street
  • Infections follow, overtake, and meete:
  • Live I or die, by you my love is sent,
  • And you'are my pawnes, or else my Testament.
  • [To M^r T. W.: _O'F_, _W:_ To M. T. W. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [1 verse, _1669:_ verse _1633-54_]
  • [2 to him, my pain and pleasure. _W_, _and Chambers_ (_without
  • comma_): to him; My pain, and pleasure _1633-69:_ to him. My
  • pain and pleasure, _Grolier_]
  • [4 Feete, ... soule _W:_ _no comma_ _1633:_ Feete ... soule,
  • _1635-69_]
  • [5-6 _These lines only in W_]
  • [9 our] that _W_]
  • [14 And you'are _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ You are
  • _1635-69_, _O'F_
  • pawnes] _om. with space_, _W_]
  • To M^r _T. W._
  • Pregnant again with th'old twins Hope, and Feare,
  • Oft have I askt for thee, both how and where
  • Thou wert, and what my hopes of letters were;
  • As in our streets sly beggers narrowly
  • Watch motions of the givers hand and eye, 5
  • And evermore conceive some hope thereby.
  • And now thy Almes is given, thy letter'is read,
  • The body risen againe, the which was dead,
  • And thy poore starveling bountifully fed.
  • After this banquet my Soule doth say grace, 10
  • And praise thee for'it, and zealously imbrace
  • Thy love; though I thinke thy love in this case
  • To be as gluttons, which say 'midst their meat,
  • They love that best of which they most do eat.
  • [To M^r T. W. _O'F_, _W:_ To M. T. W. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [5 Watch] Marke _W_
  • and eye, _A18_, _A23_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _W:_ or eye,
  • _1633-69_]
  • [12 love; _Ed:_ love, _1633-69_]
  • To M^r _T. W._
  • At once, from hence, my lines and I depart,
  • I to my soft still walks, they to my Heart;
  • I to the Nurse, they to the child of Art;
  • Yet as a firme house, though the Carpenter
  • Perish, doth stand: As an Embassadour 5
  • Lyes safe, how e'r his king be in danger:
  • So, though I languish, prest with Melancholy,
  • My verse, the strict Map of my misery,
  • Shall live to see that, for whose want I dye.
  • Therefore I envie them, and doe repent, 10
  • That from unhappy mee, things happy'are sent;
  • Yet as a Picture, or bare Sacrament,
  • Accept these lines, and if in them there be
  • Merit of love, bestow that love on mee.
  • [To M^r T. W. _W:_ An Old Letter. _D_, _H49:_ A Letter. _S96:_
  • Letter. _O'F:_ _no heading_, _and following the preceding
  • without any interval_, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ Incerto.
  • _1635-69_]
  • [5 As _W:_ as _1633-69_]
  • [7 Melancholy] Malancholy _1633_]
  • [14 of love,] of love _1633_]
  • To M^r _R. W._
  • Zealously my Muse doth salute all thee,
  • Enquiring of that mistique trinitee
  • Whereof thou,'and all to whom heavens do infuse
  • Like fyer, are made; thy body, mind, and Muse.
  • Dost thou recover sicknes, or prevent? 5
  • Or is thy Mind travail'd with discontent?
  • Or art thou parted from the world and mee,
  • In a good skorn of the worlds vanitee?
  • Or is thy devout Muse retyr'd to sing
  • Vpon her tender Elegiaque string? 10
  • Our Minds part not, joyne then thy Muse with myne,
  • For myne is barren thus devorc'd from thyne.
  • [To M^r R. W. _A23_, _W:_ _first printed in Gosse's_ Life and
  • Letters of John Donne, _&c._, 1899]
  • [1 thee,] thee _W_]
  • To M^r _R. W._
  • Mvse not that by thy mind thy body is led:
  • For by thy mind, my mind's distempered.
  • So thy Care lives long, for I bearing part
  • It eates not only thyne, but my swolne hart.
  • And when it gives us intermission 5
  • We take new harts for it to feede upon.
  • But as a Lay Mans Genius doth controule
  • Body and mind; the Muse beeing the Soules Soule
  • Of Poets, that methinks should ease our anguish,
  • Although our bodyes wither and minds languish. 10
  • Wright then, that my griefes which thine got may bee
  • Cured by thy charming soveraigne melodee.
  • [M^r R. W. _A23_, _W:_ _printed here for the first time_]
  • To M^r _C. B._
  • Thy friend, whom thy deserts to thee enchaine,
  • Urg'd by this unexcusable occasion,
  • Thee and the Saint of his affection
  • Leaving behinde, doth of both wants complaine;
  • And let the love I beare to both sustaine 5
  • No blott nor maime by this division,
  • Strong is this love which ties our hearts in one,
  • And strong that love pursu'd with amorous paine;
  • But though besides thy selfe I leave behind
  • Heavens liberall, and earths thrice-fairer Sunne, 10
  • Going to where sterne winter aye doth wonne,
  • Yet, loves hot fires, which martyr my sad minde,
  • Doe send forth scalding sighes, which have the Art
  • To melt all Ice, but that which walls her heart.
  • [To M^r C. B.: _A23_, _W:_ To M. C. B. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [9 thy self] my self _1669_]
  • [10 liberall,] liberall _1633_
  • earths _1633_, _1669_, _A18_, _A23_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _W:_
  • the _1635-54_, _Chambers_
  • thrice fairer _A23_, _W:_ thrice-faire _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [11 sterne _1633_, _A18_, _A23_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ sterv'd
  • _1633-69_, _O'F_]
  • [13 forth] out _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • To M^r _E. G._
  • Even as lame things thirst their perfection, so
  • The slimy rimes bred in our vale below,
  • Bearing with them much of my love and hart,
  • Fly unto that Parnassus, where thou art.
  • There thou oreseest London: Here I have beene, 5
  • By staying in London, too much overseene.
  • Now pleasures dearth our City doth posses,
  • Our Theaters are fill'd with emptines;
  • As lancke and thin is every street and way
  • As a woman deliver'd yesterday. 10
  • Nothing whereat to laugh my spleen espyes
  • But bearbaitings or Law exercise.
  • Therefore I'le leave it, and in the Country strive
  • Pleasure, now fled from London, to retrive.
  • Do thou so too: and fill not like a Bee 15
  • Thy thighs with hony, but as plenteously
  • As Russian Marchants, thy selfes whole vessell load,
  • And then at Winter retaile it here abroad.
  • Blesse us with Suffolks sweets; and as it is
  • Thy garden, make thy hive and warehouse this. 20
  • [To M^r E. G. _W:_ _first printed in Gosse's_ Life and Letters
  • of John Donne, _&c._ 1899]
  • [5-6 beene, ... London,] _no commas_, _W_]
  • [6 staying] staing _W_]
  • [7 dearth] dirth _W_]
  • [7-8 posses, ... emptines;] posses ... emptines. _W_]
  • To M^r _R. W._
  • If, as mine is, thy life a slumber be,
  • Seeme, when thou read'st these lines, to dreame of me,
  • Never did Morpheus nor his brother weare
  • Shapes soe like those Shapes, whom they would appeare,
  • As this my letter is like me, for it 5
  • Hath my name, words, hand, feet, heart, minde and wit;
  • It is my deed of gift of mee to thee,
  • It is my Will, my selfe the Legacie.
  • So thy retyrings I love, yea envie,
  • Bred in thee by a wise melancholy, 10
  • That I rejoyce, that unto where thou art,
  • Though I stay here, I can thus send my heart,
  • As kindly'as any enamored Patient
  • His Picture to his absent Love hath sent.
  • All newes I thinke sooner reach thee then mee; 15
  • Havens are Heavens, and Ships wing'd Angels be,
  • The which both Gospell, and sterne threatnings bring;
  • Guyanaes harvest is nip'd in the spring,
  • I feare; And with us (me thinkes) Fate deales so
  • As with the Jewes guide God did; he did show 20
  • Him the rich land, but bar'd his entry in:
  • Oh, slownes is our punishment and sinne.
  • Perchance, these Spanish businesse being done,
  • Which as the Earth betweene the Moone and Sun
  • Eclipse the light which Guyana would give, 25
  • Our discontinued hopes we shall retrive:
  • But if (as all th'All must) hopes smoake away,
  • Is not Almightie Vertue'an India?
  • If men be worlds, there is in every one
  • Some thing to answere in some proportion 30
  • All the worlds riches: And in good men, this,
  • Vertue, our formes forme and our soules soule, is.
  • [To M^r R. W. _A18_, _A23_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W:_ To
  • M. R. W. _1633-69:_ _no breaks_, _W:__ two stanzas of fourteen
  • lines and a quatrain_, _1633:_ _twenty-eight lines continuous
  • and a quatrain_, _1633-69_]
  • [3 brother _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ brethren _W_]
  • [6 hand,] hands _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [21 in: _1650-69_, _W:_ in, _1633-39_]
  • [22 Oh, _A23_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ Ah, _W:_ Our _1633-69_
  • sinne. _W:_ sinne; _1633-69_]
  • [23 businesse _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ busnesses _W:_
  • businesses _1635-69_
  • done] donne _W_]
  • [27 all th'All _W:_ All th'All _1633-69_]
  • [31 men, this, _Ed:_ men, this _1633-69_]
  • [32 soules soule, is. _Chambers:_ soules soule is. _1633-69_]
  • To M^r _R. W._
  • Kindly I envy thy songs perfection
  • Built of all th'elements as our bodyes are:
  • That Litle of earth that is in it, is a faire
  • Delicious garden where all sweetes are sowne.
  • In it is cherishing fyer which dryes in mee 5
  • Griefe which did drowne me: and halfe quench'd by it
  • Are satirique fyres which urg'd me to have writt
  • In skorne of all: for now I admyre thee.
  • And as Ayre doth fullfill the hollownes
  • Of rotten walls; so it myne emptines, 10
  • Where tost and mov'd it did beget this sound
  • Which as a lame Eccho of thyne doth rebound.
  • Oh, I was dead; but since thy song new Life did give,
  • I recreated, even by thy creature, live.
  • [To M^r R. W. _W:_ _published here for the first time_]
  • [6 which] w^{ch} _W_, _and so always_]
  • [10 emptines,] emptines. _W_]
  • [13-14 Oh, ... give, ... recreated, ... creature,] _no
  • commas_, _W_]
  • To M^r _S. B._
  • O Thou which to search out the secret parts
  • Of the India, or rather Paradise
  • Of knowledge, hast with courage and advise
  • Lately launch'd into the vast Sea of Arts,
  • Disdaine not in thy constant travailing 5
  • To doe as other Voyagers, and make
  • Some turnes into lesse Creekes, and wisely take
  • Fresh water at the Heliconian spring;
  • I sing not, Siren like, to tempt; for I
  • Am harsh; nor as those Scismatiques with you, 10
  • Which draw all wits of good hope to their crew;
  • But seeing in you bright sparkes of Poetry,
  • I, though I brought no fuell, had desire
  • With these Articulate blasts to blow the fire.
  • [To M^r S. B. _O'F:_ To M. S. B. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD_, _W_]
  • [10 harsh; _1650-69:_ harsh, _1633-39_]
  • [12 seeing] seing _1633:_ seene _TCD_, _W:_ seeme _TCC_]
  • [13 I, though] I thought _1650-54_
  • had] but _1650-54_]
  • To M^r _I. L._
  • Of that short Roll of friends writ in my heart
  • Which with thy name begins, since their depart,
  • Whether in the English Provinces they be,
  • Or drinke of Po, Sequan, or Danubie,
  • There's none that sometimes greets us not, and yet 5
  • Your Trent is Lethe; that past, us you forget.
  • You doe not duties of Societies,
  • If from the'embrace of a lov'd wife you rise,
  • View your fat Beasts, stretch'd Barnes, and labour'd fields,
  • Eate, play, ryde, take all joyes which all day yeelds, 10
  • And then againe to your embracements goe:
  • Some houres on us your frends, and some bestow
  • Upon your Muse, else both wee shall repent,
  • I that my love, she that her guifts on you are spent.
  • [To M^r I. L. _W:_ To M. I. L. _1633-69:_ To M. I. L. _A18_,
  • _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ To M^r T. L. _O'F_]
  • [5 sometimes] sometime _1635-39_, _Chambers_]
  • [6 Lethe; _W:_ Lethe', _1633-69_
  • forget. _1639-69_, _W:_ forget, _1633-35_]
  • [13 your] thy _W_]
  • [14 you] thee _W_
  • spent.] spent _1633_]
  • To M^r _B. B._
  • Is not thy sacred hunger of science
  • Yet satisfy'd? Is not thy braines rich hive
  • Fulfil'd with hony which thou dost derive
  • From the Arts spirits and their Quintessence?
  • Then weane thy selfe at last, and thee withdraw 5
  • From Cambridge thy old nurse, and, as the rest,
  • Here toughly chew, and sturdily digest
  • Th'immense vast volumes of our common law;
  • And begin soone, lest my griefe grieve thee too,
  • Which is, that that which I should have begun 10
  • In my youthes morning, now late must be done;
  • And I as Giddy Travellers must doe,
  • Which stray or sleepe all day, and having lost
  • Light and strength, darke and tir'd must then ride post.
  • If thou unto thy Muse be marryed, 15
  • Embrace her ever, ever multiply,
  • Be far from me that strange Adulterie
  • To tempt thee and procure her widowhed.
  • My Muse, (for I had one,) because I'am cold,
  • Divorc'd her selfe: the cause being in me, 20
  • That I can take no new in Bigamye,
  • Not my will only but power doth withhold.
  • Hence comes it, that these Rymes which never had
  • Mother, want matter, and they only have
  • A little forme, the which their Father gave; 25
  • They are prophane, imperfect, oh, too bad
  • To be counted Children of Poetry
  • Except confirm'd and Bishoped by thee.
  • [To M^r B. B. _O'F_, _W:_ To M. B. B. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [12 I ... Travellers _1650-69:_ I, ... Travellers, _1633-39_]
  • [13 stray] stay _W:_ _compare_ Sat. III. 78]
  • [16 ever, ever multiply, _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_
  • still: encrease and multiply; _W_]
  • [18 widowhed. _W:_ widdowhood, _1633-39:_ widdowhood;
  • _1650-69_]
  • [19 Muse, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _W:_ nurse, _1633-69_]
  • [20 selfe: _W:_ selfe, _1633-69_
  • in me, _1633-69:_ in me; _Grolier:_ in me. _Chambers_. _See
  • note_]
  • To M^r _I. L._
  • Blest are your North parts, for all this long time
  • My Sun is with you, cold and darke'is our Clime:
  • Heavens Sun, which staid so long from us this yeare,
  • Staid in your North (I thinke) for she was there,
  • And hether by kinde nature drawne from thence, 5
  • Here rages, chafes, and threatens pestilence;
  • Yet I, as long as shee from hence doth staie,
  • Thinke this no South, no Sommer, nor no day.
  • With thee my kinde and unkinde heart is run,
  • There sacrifice it to that beauteous Sun: 10
  • And since thou art in Paradise and need'st crave
  • No joyes addition, helpe thy friend to save.
  • So may thy pastures with their flowery feasts,
  • As suddenly as Lard, fat thy leane beasts;
  • So may thy woods oft poll'd, yet ever weare 15
  • A greene, and when thee list, a golden haire;
  • So may all thy sheepe bring forth Twins; and so
  • In chace and race may thy horse all out goe;
  • So may thy love and courage ne'r be cold;
  • Thy Sonne ne'r Ward; Thy lov'd wife ne'r seem old;
  • But maist thou wish great things, and them attaine, 21
  • As thou telst her, and none but her, my paine.
  • [To M^r I. L. _Ed:_ To M. I. L. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_, _W:_
  • To M^r T. L. _O'F:_ To M. I. P. _1633-69_]
  • [6 rages, chafes, _Ed:_ rages chafes _1633-39:_ rages, chafes
  • _1650-69:_ rages, burnes, _W_]
  • [11-12 _these lines from W: they have not previously been
  • printed_]
  • [16 when thee list, _Ed:_ when thee list _1633_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC:_ (when she list) _1635-69_, _O'F:_ when thou wilt _W_]
  • [20 lov'd wife] fair wife _W_]
  • [22 her, ... her, _Ed:_ her ... her _1633:_ her, ... her
  • _1635-69_]
  • To Sir _H. W._ at his going Ambassador to _Venice_.
  • After those reverend papers, whose soule is
  • Our good and great Kings lov'd hand and fear'd name,
  • By which to you he derives much of his,
  • And (how he may) makes you almost the same,
  • A Taper of his Torch, a copie writ 5
  • From his Originall, and a faire beame
  • Of the same warme, and dazeling Sun, though it
  • Must in another Sphere his vertue streame:
  • After those learned papers which your hand
  • Hath stor'd with notes of use and pleasure too, 10
  • From which rich treasury you may command
  • Fit matter whether you will write or doe:
  • After those loving papers, where friends tend
  • With glad griefe, to your Sea-ward steps, farewel,
  • Which thicken on you now, as prayers ascend 15
  • To heaven in troupes at'a good mans passing bell:
  • Admit this honest paper, and allow
  • It such an audience as your selfe would aske;
  • What you must say at Venice this meanes now,
  • And hath for nature, what you have for taske: 20
  • To sweare much love, not to be chang'd before
  • Honour alone will to your fortune fit;
  • Nor shall I then honour your forture, more
  • Then I have done your honour wanting it.
  • But'tis an easier load (though both oppresse) 25
  • To want, then governe greatnesse, for wee are
  • In that, our owne and onely business,
  • In this, wee must for others vices care;
  • 'Tis therefore well your spirits now are plac'd
  • In their last Furnace, in activity; 30
  • Which fits them (Schooles and Courts and Warres o'rpast)
  • To touch and test in any best degree.
  • For mee, (if there be such a thing as I)
  • Fortune (if there be such a thing as thee)
  • Spies that I beare so well her tyranny, 35
  • That she thinks nothing else so fit for mee;
  • But though she part us, to heare my oft prayers
  • For your increase, God is as neere mee here;
  • And to send you what I shall begge, his staires
  • In length and ease are alike every where. 40
  • [To Sir H. W. at his _&c._ _1633-54:_ To Sir Henry Wotton, at
  • his _&c._ _1669_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _printed in
  • Walton's_ Life of Sir Henry Wotton, 1670, _as a_ 'letter,
  • sent by him to Sir _Henry Wotton_, the morning before he left
  • _England_', _i.e. July 13 (O.S.), 1604_]
  • [10 pleasure _1635-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _Walton:_
  • pleasures _1633_]
  • [13 where _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ which _1635-69_, _O'F_,
  • _Walton_]
  • [16 in troupes] on troops _Walton_]
  • [19 must ... meanes] would ... sayes _Walton_]
  • [20 hath] has _Walton_
  • taske: _Ed:_ taske. _1633-69_]
  • [21 not] nor _Walton_]
  • [24 honour wanting it _1633:_ noble-wanting-wit. _1635-69_,
  • _O'F:_ honour-wanting-wit. _Walton:_ noble wanting it. _A18_,
  • _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [31 Warres _Ed:_ warres _1633-69:_ tents _Burley MS._]
  • [32 test] tast _1669 and Walton_]
  • [35 Spies] Finds _Walton_]
  • To M^rs _M. H._
  • Mad paper stay, and grudge not here to burne
  • With all those sonnes whom my braine did create,
  • At lest lye hid with mee, till thou returne
  • To rags againe, which is thy native state.
  • What though thou have enough unworthinesse 5
  • To come unto great place as others doe,
  • That's much; emboldens, pulls, thrusts I confesse,
  • But'tis not all; Thou should'st be wicked too.
  • And, that thou canst not learne, or not of mee;
  • Yet thou wilt goe? Goe, since thou goest to her 10
  • Who lacks but faults to be a Prince, for shee,
  • Truth, whom they dare not pardon, dares preferre.
  • But when thou com'st to that perplexing eye
  • Which equally claimes _love_ and _reverence_,
  • Thou wilt not long dispute it, thou wilt die; 15
  • And, having little now, have then no sense.
  • Yet when her warme redeeming hand, which is
  • A miracle; and made such to worke more,
  • Doth touch thee (saples leafe) thou grow'st by this
  • Her creature; glorify'd more then before. 20
  • Then as a mother which delights to heare
  • Her early child mis-speake halfe uttered words,
  • Or, because majesty doth never feare
  • Ill or bold speech, she Audience affords.
  • And then, cold speechlesse wretch, thou diest againe, 25
  • And wisely; what discourse is left for thee?
  • For, speech of ill, and her, thou must abstaine,
  • And is there any good which is not shee?
  • Yet maist thou praise her servants, though not her,
  • And wit, and vertue,'and honour her attend, 30
  • And since they'are but her cloathes, thou shalt not erre,
  • If thou her shape and beauty'and grace commend.
  • Who knowes thy destiny? when thou hast done,
  • Perchance her Cabinet may harbour thee,
  • Whither all noble ambitious wits doe runne, 35
  • A nest almost as full of Good as shee.
  • When thou art there, if any, whom wee know,
  • Were sav'd before, and did that heaven partake,
  • When she revolves his papers, marke what show
  • Of favour, she alone, to them doth make. 40
  • Marke, if to get them, she o'r skip the rest,
  • Marke, if shee read them twice, or kisse the name;
  • Marke, if she doe the same that they protest,
  • Marke, if she marke whether her woman came.
  • Marke, if slight things be'objected, and o'r blowne, 45
  • Marke, if her oathes against him be not still
  • Reserv'd, and that shee grieves she's not her owne,
  • And chides the doctrine that denies Freewill.
  • I bid thee not doe this to be my spie;
  • Nor to make my selfe her familiar; 50
  • But so much I doe love her choyce, that I
  • Would faine love him that shall be lov'd of her.
  • [To M^rs M. H. _O'F:_ To M. M. H. _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _P:_ Elegie. _S96_]
  • [2 sonnes] Sunnes _B_, _S96_
  • my _1633:_ thy _1635-69:_ _Chambers attributes_ thy _to 1633_]
  • [3 returne] returne. _1633_]
  • [7 That's much; emboldens, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ That's much,
  • emboldens, _1633-54:_ That's much emboldness, _1669:_ That's
  • much, it emboldens, _B_, _P_]
  • [8 all; Thou _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ all, thou _1633-69_]
  • [10 goe? Goe, _Ed:_ goe, Goe, _1633-69_]
  • [14 _reverence_, _Ed:_ _reverence_. _1633:_ _reverence:_
  • _1635-69_]
  • [22 mis-speake] mispeake _1633_]
  • [27 For, _1633:_ From _1635-69_, _and MSS_.
  • her, _Ed:_ her _1633-69_]
  • [31 erre, _1669:_ erre _1633-54_]
  • [40 she alone, _1633:_ she, alone, _1635-69_]
  • [41 get them, she o'r skip] get them, she do skip _A18_
  • (doth), _N_, _TC:_ get them, she skip oare _A25_, _C_, _O'F_
  • (skips): get to them, shee skipp _B_, _P_]
  • [44 whether _1633:_ whither _1635-69_]
  • [47 grieves _1633:_ grieve _1635-69_]
  • _To the Countesse of Bedford._
  • Honour is so sublime perfection,
  • And so refinde; that when God was alone
  • And creaturelesse at first, himselfe had none;
  • But as of the elements, these which wee tread,
  • Produce all things with which wee'are joy'd or fed, 5
  • And, those are barren both above our head:
  • So from low persons doth all honour flow;
  • Kings, whom they would have honoured, to us show,
  • And but _direct_ our honour, not _bestow_.
  • For when from herbs the pure part must be wonne 10
  • From grosse, by Stilling, this is better done
  • By despis'd dung, then by the fire or Sunne.
  • Care not then, Madame,'how low your praysers lye;
  • In labourers balads oft more piety
  • God findes, then in _Te Deums_ melodie. 15
  • And, ordinance rais'd on Towers, so many mile
  • Send not their voice, nor last so long a while
  • As fires from th'earths low vaults in _Sicil_ Isle.
  • Should I say I liv'd darker then were true,
  • Your radiation can all clouds subdue; 20
  • But one,'tis best light to contemplate you.
  • You, for whose body God made better clay,
  • Or tooke Soules stuffe such as shall late decay,
  • Or such as needs small change at the last day.
  • This, as an Amber drop enwraps a Bee, 25
  • Covering discovers your quicke Soule; that we
  • May in your through-shine front your hearts thoughts see.
  • You teach (though wee learne not) a thing unknowne
  • To our late times, the use of specular stone,
  • Through which all things within without were shown. 30
  • Of such were Temples; so and of such you are;
  • _Beeing_ and _seeming_ is your equall care,
  • And _vertues_ whole _summe_ is but _know_ and _dare_.
  • But as our Soules of growth and Soules of sense
  • Have birthright of our reasons Soule, yet hence 35
  • They fly not from that, nor seeke presidence:
  • Natures first lesson, so, discretion,
  • Must not grudge zeale a place, nor yet keepe none,
  • Not banish it selfe, nor religion.
  • Discretion is a wisemans Soule, and so 40
  • Religion is a Christians, and you know
  • How these are one; her _yea_, is not her _no_.
  • Nor may we hope to sodder still and knit
  • These two, and dare to breake them; nor must wit
  • Be colleague to religion, but be it. 45
  • In those poor types of God (round circles) so
  • Religions tipes the peeclesse centers flow,
  • And are in all the lines which all wayes goe.
  • If either ever wrought in you alone
  • Or principally, then religion 50
  • Wrought your ends, and your wayes discretion.
  • Goe thither stil, goe the same way you went,
  • Who so would change, do covet or repent;
  • Neither can reach you, great and innocent.
  • [To the Countesse of Bedford. _1633-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96:_ To
  • the Countess of B. _N_, _TCD_]
  • [10 part] parts _N_, _O'F_, _TCD_]
  • [12 or Sunne. _1633_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TCD:_ or Sun:
  • _1669:_ of Sunne: _1635-54_, _Chambers_]
  • [13 praysers _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ prayers _S96:_ prayses
  • _1633-69_]
  • [16 Towers,] Towers _1633_]
  • [20-1 subdue; But one, _Ed:_ subdue; But One _Chambers:_
  • subdue, But one, _1633-69:_ subdue But one; _Grolier and
  • Grosart_. _See note_]
  • [26 Covering discovers] Coverings discover _1669_]
  • [27 your hearts thoughts _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TCD:_ our
  • hearts thoughts _1633-69_. _See note_]
  • [31 so and of such _N_, _TCD:_ so and such _1633-69_, _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [33 is but to know and dare. _N_]
  • [36-7
  • They fly not from that, nor seeke presidence:
  • Natures first lesson, so, discretion, _&c._
  • _1633-69_ (presidence. _1633_; precedence: _1669_)
  • They fly not from that, nor seek precedence,
  • Natures first lesson; so discretion _&c._
  • _Chambers and Grolier_ (discretion, _Grolier_). _See note_]
  • [40-2] _These lines precede_ 34-9 _in_ _1635-69_, _B_, _N_,
  • _S96_, _TCD:_ _om. O'F_]
  • [42 one; _Ed:_ one, _1633-69_ _yea, ... no_] _ital. Ed._]
  • [48 all wayes _1719:_ alwayes _1633-69_]
  • [50-1
  • 'twas Religion,
  • Yet you neglected not Discretion.
  • _S96_]
  • [53 do covet] doth covet _1669_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • _To the Countesse of_ Bedford.
  • _Begun in France but never perfected._
  • Though I be _dead_, and buried, yet I have
  • (Living in you,) Court enough in my grave,
  • As oft as there I thinke my selfe to bee,
  • So many resurrections waken mee.
  • That thankfullnesse your favours have begot 5
  • In mee, embalmes mee, that I doe not rot.
  • This season as 'tis Easter, as 'tis spring,
  • Must both to growth and to confession bring
  • My thoughts dispos'd unto your influence; so,
  • These verses bud, so these confessions grow. 10
  • First I confesse I have to others lent
  • Your flock, and over prodigally spent
  • Your treasure, for since I had never knowne
  • Vertue or beautie, but as they are growne
  • In you, I should not thinke or say they shine, 15
  • (So as I have) in any other Mine.
  • Next I confesse this my confession,
  • For, 'tis some fault thus much to touch upon
  • Your praise to you, where half rights seeme too much,
  • And make your minds sincere complexion blush. 20
  • Next I confesse my'impenitence, for I
  • Can scarce repent my first fault, since thereby
  • Remote low Spirits, which shall ne'r read you,
  • May in lesse lessons finde enough to doe,
  • By studying copies, not Originals, 25
  • _Desunt cætera._
  • [To the Countesse _&c._ _1633-69_ (_following in 1635-69_ That
  • unripe side _&c._, _p._ 417, _and_ If her disdaine _&c._, _p._
  • 430), _O'F_]
  • [5 begot] forgot _1633 some copies_]
  • [6 embalmes mee, _Ed_: embalmes mee; _1633-69_
  • rot. _Ed_: rot; _1633-69_]
  • [9 influence; _Ed_: influence, _1633-69_]
  • [10 grow. _Ed_: grow; _1633-69_]
  • [14 or _1633-39_: and _1650-69_]
  • [16 Mine. _Ed:_ Mine; _1633-69_]
  • [18 upon _Ed:_ upon, _1633-69_]
  • _A Letter to the Lady_ Carey, _and M^rs_ Essex Riche, _From_ Amyens.
  • MADAME,
  • Here where by All All Saints invoked are,
  • 'Twere too much schisme to be singular,
  • And 'gainst a practise generall to warre.
  • Yet turning to Saincts, should my'humility
  • To other Sainct then you directed bee, 5
  • That were to make my schisme, heresie.
  • Nor would I be a Convertite so cold,
  • As not to tell it; If this be too bold,
  • Pardons are in this market cheaply sold.
  • Where, because Faith is in too low degree, 10
  • I thought it some Apostleship in mee
  • To speake things which by faith alone I see.
  • That is, of you, who are a firmament
  • Of virtues, where no one is growne, or spent,
  • They'are your materials, not your ornament. 15
  • Others whom wee call vertuous, are not so
  • In their whole substance, but, their vertues grow
  • But in their humours, and at seasons show.
  • For when through tastlesse flat humilitie
  • In dow bak'd men some harmelessenes we see, 20
  • 'Tis but his _flegme_ that's _Vertuous_, and not Hee:
  • Soe is the Blood sometimes; who ever ran
  • To danger unimportun'd, he was than
  • No better then a _sanguine_ Vertuous man.
  • So cloysterall men, who, in pretence of feare 25
  • All contributions to this life forbeare,
  • Have Vertue in _Melancholy_, and only there.
  • Spirituall _Cholerique_ Crytiques, which in all
  • Religions find faults, and forgive no fall,
  • Have, through this zeale, Vertue but in their Gall. 30
  • We'are thus but parcel guilt; to Gold we'are growne
  • When Vertue is our Soules complexion;
  • Who knowes his Vertues name or place, hath none.
  • Vertue'is but aguish, when 'tis severall,
  • By occasion wak'd, and circumstantiall. 35
  • True vertue is _Soule_, Alwaies in all deeds _All_.
  • This Vertue thinking to give dignitie
  • To your soule, found there no infirmitie,
  • For, your soule was as good Vertue, as shee;
  • Shee therefore wrought upon that part of you 40
  • Which is scarce lesse then soule, as she could do,
  • And so hath made your beauty, Vertue too.
  • Hence comes it, that your Beauty wounds not hearts,
  • As Others, with prophane and sensuall Darts,
  • But as an influence, vertuous thoughts imparts. 45
  • But if such friends by the honor of your sight
  • Grow capable of this so great a light,
  • As to partake your vertues, and their might,
  • What must I thinke that influence must doe,
  • Where it findes sympathie and matter too, 50
  • Vertue, and beauty of the same stuffe, as you?
  • Which is, your noble worthie sister, shee
  • Of whom, if what in this my Extasie
  • And revelation of you both I see,
  • I should write here, as in short Galleries 55
  • The Master at the end large glasses ties,
  • So to present the roome twice to our eyes,
  • So I should give this letter length, and say
  • That which I said of you; there is no way
  • From either, but by the other, not to stray. 60
  • May therefore this be enough to testifie
  • My true devotion, free from flattery;
  • He that beleeves himselfe, doth never lie.
  • [A Letter to _&c._ _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ To the Lady
  • Carey and her Sister M^rs Essex Rich. From Amiens. _O'F:_
  • To the Lady Co: of C. _N_, _TCD:_ To the Ladie Carey. _or_ A
  • Letter to the Ladie Carey. _B_, _Cy_, _S96:_ _no title_, _P:_
  • To M^rs Essex Rich and her sister frô Amiens. _M_]
  • [13 who are] who is _1633_]
  • [19 humilitie _1633-54_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _M_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ humidity _1669_, _Chambers_]
  • [26 contributions] contribution _B_, _D_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [30 this zeale, _1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ their zeale, _1633_, _Lec_]
  • [31 Gold] Golds _1633 some copies_]
  • [33 aguish,] anguish, _1650-54_]
  • [57 our eyes,] your eyes, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _P_]
  • [60 by the] to the _1669_
  • other, _1669:_ other _1633-54_]
  • _To the Countesse of Salisbury._ August. 1614.
  • Faire, great, and good, since seeing you, wee see
  • What Heaven can doe, and what any Earth can be:
  • Since now your beauty shines, now when the Sunne
  • Growne stale, is to so low a value runne,
  • That his disshevel'd beames and scattered fires 5
  • Serve but for Ladies Periwigs and Tyres
  • In lovers Sonnets: you come to repaire
  • Gods booke of creatures, teaching what is faire.
  • Since now, when all is withered, shrunke, and dri'd,
  • All Vertues ebb'd out to a dead low tyde, 10
  • All the worlds frame being crumbled into sand,
  • Where every man thinks by himselfe to stand,
  • Integritie, friendship, and confidence,
  • (Ciments of greatnes) being vapor'd hence,
  • And narrow man being fill'd with little shares, 15
  • Court, Citie, Church, are all shops of small-wares,
  • All having blowne to sparkes their noble fire,
  • And drawne their sound gold-ingot into wyre;
  • All trying by a love of littlenesse
  • To make abridgments, and to draw to lesse, 20
  • Even that nothing, which at first we were;
  • Since in these times, your greatnesse doth appeare,
  • And that we learne by it, that man to get
  • Towards him that's infinite, must first be great.
  • Since in an age so ill, as none is fit 25
  • So much as to accuse, much lesse mend it,
  • (For who can judge, or witnesse of those times
  • Where all alike are guiltie of the crimes?)
  • Where he that would be good, is thought by all
  • A monster, or at best fantasticall; 30
  • Since now you durst be good, and that I doe
  • Discerne, by daring to contemplate you,
  • That there may be degrees of faire, great, good,
  • Through your light, largenesse, vertue understood:
  • If in this sacrifice of mine, be showne 35
  • Any small sparke of these, call it your owne.
  • And if things like these, have been said by mee
  • Of others; call not that Idolatrie.
  • For had God made man first, and man had seene
  • The third daies fruits, and flowers, and various greene, 40
  • He might have said the best that he could say
  • Of those faire creatures, which were made that day;
  • And when next day he had admir'd the birth
  • Of Sun, Moone, Stars, fairer then late-prais'd earth,
  • Hee might have said the best that he could say, 45
  • And not be chid for praising yesterday;
  • So though some things are not together true,
  • As, that another is worthiest, and, that you:
  • Yet, to say so, doth not condemne a man,
  • If when he spoke them, they were both true than. 50
  • How faire a proofe of this, in our soule growes?
  • Wee first have soules of growth, and sense, and those,
  • When our last soule, our soule immortall came,
  • Were swallowed into it, and have no name.
  • Nor doth he injure those soules, which doth cast 55
  • The power and praise of both them, on the last;
  • No more doe I wrong any; I adore
  • The same things now, which I ador'd before,
  • The subject chang'd, and measure; the same thing
  • In a low constable, and in the King 60
  • I reverence; His power to work on mee:
  • So did I humbly reverence each degree
  • Of faire, great, good; but more, now I am come
  • From having found their _walkes_, to find their _home_.
  • And as I owe my first soules thankes, that they 65
  • For my last soule did fit and mould my clay,
  • So am I debtor unto them, whose worth,
  • Enabled me to profit, and take forth
  • This new great lesson, thus to study you;
  • Which none, not reading others, first, could doe. 70
  • Nor lacke I light to read this booke, though I
  • In a darke Cave, yea in a Grave doe lie;
  • For as your fellow Angells, so you doe
  • Illustrate them who come to study you.
  • The first whom we in Histories doe finde 75
  • To have profest all Arts, was one borne blinde:
  • He lackt those eyes beasts have as well as wee,
  • Not those, by which Angels are seene and see;
  • So, though I'am borne without those eyes to live,
  • Which fortune, who hath none her selfe, doth give, 80
  • Which are, fit meanes to see bright courts and you,
  • Yet may I see you thus, as now I doe;
  • I shall by that, all goodnesse have discern'd,
  • And though I burne my librarie, be learn'd.
  • [To the Countesse _&c._ _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ To
  • the Countess of Salisbury. _O'F:_ To the Countess of S. _N_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [2 and what _1633_, _1669_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ what _1635-54_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _TCD_]
  • [16 Court,] Courts, _1669_]
  • [17 noble fire,] nobler fire, _O'F_]
  • [24 him] him, _1633_
  • that's _1650-69:_ thats _1633-39_]
  • [29-30 _Chambers includes in parenthesis_]
  • [30 fantasticall; _Ed:_ fantasticall: _1633-69_]
  • [34 light, largenesse,] lights largeness, _1669_]
  • [38 Idolatrie.] Adulterie: _N_, _TCD_]
  • [40 greene,] greene _1633_]
  • [42 day; _Ed:_ day: _1633-69_]
  • [46 yesterday; _Ed:_ yesterday: _1633-69_]
  • [54 name. _1633-39:_ name _1654-69_]
  • [57 any; I adore _1633_, _D_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ any, if I
  • adore _1635-69_, _O'F_ (if _being inserted_)]
  • [61 mee: _D_, _N_, _TCD:_ mee; _1633-69_]
  • [63 good; _Ed:_ good, _1633-69_]
  • [77-8 _om._ _D_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • _To the Lady Bedford._
  • You that are she and you, that's double shee,
  • In her dead face, halfe of your selfe shall see;
  • Shee was the other part, for so they doe
  • Which build them friendships, become one of two;
  • So two, that but themselves no third can fit, 5
  • Which were to be so, when they were not yet;
  • Twinnes, though their birth _Cusco_, and _Musco_ take,
  • As divers starres one Constellation make;
  • Pair'd like two eyes, have equall motion, so
  • Both but one meanes to see, one way to goe. 10
  • Had you dy'd first, a carcasse shee had beene;
  • And wee your rich Tombe in her face had seene;
  • She like the Soule is gone, and you here stay,
  • Not a live friend; but th'other halfe of clay.
  • And since you act that part, As men say, here 15
  • Lies such a Prince, when but one part is there,
  • And do all honour and devotion due
  • Unto the whole, so wee all reverence you;
  • For, such a friendship who would not adore
  • In you, who are all what both were before, 20
  • Not all, as if some perished by this,
  • But so, as all in you contracted is.
  • As of this all, though many parts decay,
  • The pure which elemented them shall stay;
  • And though diffus'd, and spread in infinite, 25
  • Shall recollect, and in one All unite:
  • So madame, as her Soule to heaven is fled,
  • Her flesh rests in the earth, as in the bed;
  • Her vertues do, as to their proper spheare,
  • Returne to dwell with you, of whom they were: 30
  • As perfect motions are all circular,
  • So they to you, their sea, whence lesse streames are.
  • Shee was all spices, you all metalls; so
  • In you two wee did both rich Indies know.
  • And as no fire, nor rust can spend or waste 35
  • One dramme of gold, but what was first shall last,
  • Though it bee forc'd in water, earth, salt, aire,
  • Expans'd in infinite, none will impaire;
  • So, to your selfe you may additions take,
  • But nothing can you lesse, or changed make. 40
  • Seeke not in seeking new, to seeme to doubt,
  • That you can match her, or not be without;
  • But let some faithfull booke in her roome be,
  • Yet but of _Iudith_ no such booke as shee.
  • [To the _&c._ _1635-69_, _O'F:_ Elegie to the Lady Bedford.
  • _1633_, _Cy_, _H40_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TCD:_ Elegia Sexta.
  • _S:_ _In 1633, Cy, H40, N, TCD it follows, in P precedes, the
  • Funerall Elegy_ Death (_p._ 284), _to which it is apparently
  • a covering letter:_ _In L74 it follows the_ Elegy on the Lady
  • Marckham: _O'F places it among the_ Letters, _S among the_
  • Elegies]
  • [1 she and you,] she, and you _1633-69_, _Chambers_. _See
  • note_]
  • [4 two;] the two; _1669_]
  • [6 yet; _Ed:_ yet _1633-39:_ yet. _1650-69_]
  • [8 make; _Ed:_ make, _1633-69_]
  • [10 goe. _Ed:_ goe; _1633-69_]
  • [13 stay,] stay _1633-35_
  • th'other] thother _1633_
  • clay. _Ed:_ clay; _1633-69_]
  • [16 there, _Ed:_ there; _1633-69_]
  • [17 honour] honour: _1633_
  • due] due; _1633_]
  • [20 were] was _1633_]
  • [22 as all in you] as in you all _O'F:_ that in you all _Cy_,
  • _H40_, _L74_, _N_, _S_
  • is. _Ed:_ is; _1633-69_]
  • [28 the bed;] a bed; _Cy_, _H40_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S:_ her
  • bed; _P_]
  • [30 were:] were; _1633_]
  • [32 are.] are; _1633_]
  • [34 know.] know; _1633_]
  • [41 doubt, _1633:_ doubt; _1635-69_]
  • [42 can] _twice in 1633_]
  • AN ANATOMIE OF THE WORLD.
  • _Wherein_,
  • By occasion of the untimely death of
  • Mistris ELIZABETH DRVRY,
  • the frailty and the decay of this
  • whole World is represented.
  • * * * * *
  • The first Anniversary.
  • * * * * *
  • _To the praise of the dead_,
  • _and the_ ANATOMIE.
  • Well dy'd the World, that we might live to see
  • This world of wit, in his Anatomie:
  • No evill wants his good; so wilder heires
  • Bedew their Fathers Tombes, with forced teares,
  • Whose state requites their losse: whiles thus we gain, 5
  • Well may wee walke in blacks, but not complaine.
  • Yet how can I consent the world is dead
  • While this Muse lives? which in his spirits stead
  • Seemes to informe a World; and bids it bee,
  • In spight of losse or fraile mortalitie? 10
  • And thou the subject of this welborne thought,
  • Thrice noble maid, couldst not have found nor sought
  • A fitter time to yeeld to thy sad Fate,
  • Then whiles this spirit lives, that can relate
  • Thy worth so well to our last Nephews eyne, 15
  • That they shall wonder both at his and thine:
  • Admired match! where strives in mutuall grace
  • The cunning pencill, and the comely face:
  • A taske which thy faire goodnesse made too much
  • For the bold pride of vulgar pens to touch; 20
  • Enough is us to praise them that praise thee,
  • And say, that but enough those prayses bee,
  • Which hadst thou liv'd, had hid their fearfull head
  • From th'angry checkings of thy modest red:
  • Death barres reward and shame: when envy's gone, 25
  • And gaine, 'tis safe to give the dead their owne.
  • As then the wise Egyptians wont to lay
  • More on their Tombes, then houses: these of clay,
  • But those of brasse, or marble were: so wee
  • Give more unto thy Ghost, then unto thee. 30
  • Yet what wee give to thee, thou gav'st to us,
  • And may'st but thanke thy selfe, for being thus:
  • Yet what thou gav'st, and wert, O happy maid,
  • Thy grace profest all due, where 'tis repayd.
  • So these high songs that to thee suited bin 35
  • Serve but to sound thy Makers praise, in thine,
  • Which thy deare soule as sweetly sings to him
  • Amid the Quire of Saints, and Seraphim,
  • As any Angels tongue can sing of thee;
  • The subjects differ, though the skill agree: 40
  • For as by infant-yeares men judge of age,
  • Thy early love, thy vertues, did presage
  • What an high part thou bear'st in those best songs,
  • Whereto no burden, nor no end belongs.
  • Sing on thou virgin Soule, whose lossfull gaine 45
  • Thy lovesick parents have bewail'd in vaine;
  • Never may thy Name be in our songs forgot,
  • Till wee shall sing thy ditty and thy note.
  • [An Anatomie _&c._ _1611-33:_ Anatomie _&c._ _1635-69_
  • The first Anniversary. _1612-69:_ _om. 1611_. _See note_
  • To the praise of the dead _&c._ _1611-69_ (Dead _1611_)]
  • [8 While] Whiles _1639-69_]
  • [21 is] it is _1699_]
  • [25 shame: _1611_, _1612-25:_ shame, _1633-69_]
  • [26 gaine, _1633-69:_ gaine; _1612-25_]
  • [34 where] were _1621-25_]
  • [35 bin _1633-39:_ bine _1611:_ bine, _1612-21:_ bine. _1625:_
  • bin, _1650-69_]
  • [36 praise, in thine, _1611_, _1612-25:_ praise and thine,
  • _1633-69_]
  • [38 Quire _1611_, _1612-25:_ quire _1633-69_]
  • [39 tongue _1611_, _1612-39:_ tongues _1650-69_]
  • [41 infant-yeares _1611_, _1621-25:_ infant yeares _1633-69_]
  • [42 vertues, _1611_, _1612-25:_ vertues _1633-69_
  • presage _1612-25:_ presage, _1633-69_]
  • [43 What an hie ... best songs, _1611-12:_ What hie ... best
  • songs _1621-25:_ What high ... best of songs, _1633-69_]
  • [47 our _1611_, _1612-54:_ _om. 1669_
  • forgot,] forgot. _1621-25_]
  • An Anatomy of the World.
  • _The first Anniversary._
  • [Sidenote: _The entrie into the worke._]
  • When that rich Soule which to her heaven is gone,
  • Whom all do celebrate, who know they have one,
  • (For who is sure he hath a Soule, unlesse
  • It see, and judge, and follow worthinesse,
  • And by Deedes praise it? hee who doth not this, 5
  • May lodge an In-mate soule, but 'tis not his.)
  • When that Queene ended here her progresse time,
  • And, as t'her standing house to heaven did climbe,
  • Where loath to make the Saints attend her long,
  • She's now a part both of the Quire, and Song, 10
  • This World, in that great earthquake languished;
  • For in a common bath of teares it bled,
  • Which drew the strongest vitall spirits out:
  • But succour'd then with a perplexed doubt,
  • Whether the world did lose, or gaine in this, 15
  • (Because since now no other way there is,
  • But goodnesse, to see her, whom all would see,
  • All must endeavour to be good as shee,)
  • This great consumption to a fever turn'd,
  • And so the world had fits; it joy'd, it mourn'd; 20
  • And, as men thinke, that Agues physick are,
  • And th'Ague being spent, give over care,
  • So thou sicke World, mistak'st thy selfe to bee
  • Well, when alas, thou'rt in a Lethargie.
  • Her death did wound and tame thee than, and than 25
  • Thou might'st have better spar'd the Sunne, or Man.
  • That wound was deep, but 'tis more misery,
  • That thou hast lost thy sense and memory.
  • 'Twas heavy then to heare thy voyce of mone,
  • But this is worse, that thou art speechlesse growne. 30
  • Thou hast forgot thy name, thou hadst; thou wast
  • Nothing but shee, and her thou hast o'rpast.
  • For as a child kept from the Font, untill
  • A prince, expected long, come to fulfill
  • The ceremonies, thou unnam'd had'st laid, 35
  • Had not her comming, thee her Palace made:
  • Her name defin'd thee, gave thee forme, and frame,
  • And thou forgett'st to celebrate thy name.
  • Some moneths she hath beene dead (but being dead,
  • Measures of times are all determined) 40
  • But long she'ath beene away, long, long, yet none
  • Offers to tell us who it is that's gone.
  • But as in states doubtfull of future heires,
  • When sicknesse without remedie empaires
  • The present Prince, they're loth it should be said, 45
  • The Prince doth languish, or the Prince is dead:
  • So mankinde feeling now a generall thaw,
  • A strong example gone, equall to law,
  • The Cyment which did faithfully compact,
  • And glue all vertues, now resolv'd, and slack'd, 50
  • Thought it some blasphemy to say sh'was dead,
  • Or that our weaknesse was discovered
  • In that confession; therefore spoke no more
  • Then tongues, the Soule being gone, the losse deplore.
  • But though it be too late to succour thee, 55
  • Sicke World, yea, dead, yea putrified, since shee
  • Thy'intrinsique balme, and thy preservative,
  • Can never be renew'd, thou never live,
  • I (since no man can make thee live) will try,
  • What wee may gaine by thy Anatomy. 60
  • Her death hath taught us dearely, that thou art
  • Corrupt and mortall in thy purest part.
  • Let no man say, the world it selfe being dead,
  • 'Tis labour lost to have discovered
  • The worlds infirmities, since there is none 65
  • Alive to study this dissection;
  • [Sidenote: _What life the world hath stil._]
  • For there's a kinde of World remaining still,
  • Though shee which did inanimate and fill
  • The world, be gone, yet in this last long night,
  • Her Ghost doth walke; that is, a glimmering light, 70
  • A faint weake love of vertue, and of good,
  • Reflects from her, on them which understood
  • Her worth; and though she have shut in all day,
  • The twilight of her memory doth stay;
  • Which, from the carcasse of the old world, free, 75
  • Creates a new world, and new creatures bee
  • Produc'd: the matter and the stuffe of this,
  • Her vertue, and the forme our practice is:
  • And though to be thus elemented, arme
  • These creatures, from home-borne intrinsique harme, 80
  • (For all assum'd unto this dignitie,
  • So many weedlesse Paradises bee,
  • Which of themselves produce no venemous sinne,
  • Except some forraine Serpent bring it in)
  • Yet, because outward stormes the strongest breake, 85
  • And strength it selfe by confidence growes weake,
  • This new world may be safer, being told
  • [Sidenote: _The sicknesses of the World._]
  • The dangers and diseases of the old:
  • For with due temper men doe then forgoe,
  • Or covet things, when they their true worth know. 90
  • [Sidenote: _Impossibility of health._]
  • There is no health; Physitians say that wee,
  • At best, enjoy but a neutralitie.
  • And can there bee worse sicknesse, then to know
  • That we are never well, nor can be so?
  • Wee are borne ruinous: poore mothers cry, 95
  • That children come not right, nor orderly;
  • Except they headlong come and fall upon
  • An ominous precipitation.
  • How witty's ruine! how importunate
  • Upon mankinde! it labour'd to frustrate 100
  • Even Gods purpose; and made woman, sent
  • For mans reliefe, cause of his languishment.
  • They were to good ends, and they are so still,
  • But accessory, and principall in ill;
  • For that first marriage was our funerall: 105
  • One woman at one blow, then kill'd us all,
  • And singly, one by one, they kill us now.
  • We doe delightfully our selves allow
  • To that consumption; and profusely blinde,
  • Wee kill our selves to propagate our kinde. 110
  • And yet we do not that; we are not men:
  • There is not now that mankinde, which was then,
  • When as, the Sunne and man did seeme to strive,
  • [Sidenote: _Shortnesse of life._]
  • (Joynt tenants of the world) who should survive;
  • When, Stagge, and Raven, and the long-liv'd tree, 115
  • Compar'd with man, dy'd in minoritie;
  • When, if a slow pac'd starre had stolne away
  • From the observers marking, he might stay
  • Two or three hundred yeares to see't againe,
  • And then make up his observation plaine; 120
  • When, as the age was long, the sise was great;
  • Mans growth confess'd, and recompenc'd the meat;
  • So spacious and large, that every Soule
  • Did a faire Kingdome, and large Realme controule:
  • And when the very stature, thus erect, 125
  • Did that soule a good way towards heaven direct.
  • Where is this mankinde now? who lives to age,
  • Fit to be made _Methusalem_ his page?
  • Alas, we scarce live long enough to try
  • Whether a true made clocke run right, or lie. 130
  • Old Grandsires talke of yesterday with sorrow,
  • And for our children wee reserve to morrow.
  • So short is life, that every peasant strives,
  • In a torne house, or field, to have three lives.
  • And as in lasting, so in length is man 135
  • [Sidenote: _Smalnesse of stature._]
  • Contracted to an inch, who was a spanne;
  • For had a man at first in forrests stray'd,
  • Or shipwrack'd in the Sea, one would have laid
  • A wager, that an Elephant, or Whale,
  • That met him, would not hastily assaile 140
  • A thing so equall to him: now alas,
  • The Fairies, and the Pigmies well may passe
  • As credible; mankinde decayes so soone,
  • We'are scarce our Fathers shadowes cast at noone:
  • Onely death addes t'our length: nor are wee growne 145
  • In stature to be men, till we are none.
  • But this were light, did our lesse volume hold
  • All the old Text; or had wee chang'd to gold
  • Their silver; or dispos'd into lesse glasse
  • Spirits of vertue, which then scatter'd was. 150
  • But 'tis not so: w'are not retir'd, but dampt;
  • And as our bodies, so our mindes are crampt:
  • 'Tis shrinking, not close weaving that hath thus,
  • In minde, and body both bedwarfed us.
  • Wee seeme ambitious, Gods whole worke t'undoe; 155
  • Of nothing hee made us, and we strive too,
  • To bring our selves to nothing backe; and wee
  • Doe what wee can, to do't so soone as hee.
  • With new diseases on our selves we warre,
  • And with new Physicke, a worse Engin farre. 160
  • Thus man, this worlds Vice-Emperour, in whom
  • All faculties, all graces are at home;
  • And if in other creatures they appeare,
  • They're but mans Ministers, and Legats there,
  • To worke on their rebellions, and reduce 165
  • Them to Civility, and to mans use:
  • This man, whom God did wooe, and loth t'attend
  • Till man came up, did downe to man descend,
  • This man, so great, that all that is, is his,
  • Oh what a trifle, and poore thing he is! 170
  • If man were any thing, he's nothing now:
  • Helpe, or at least some time to wast, allow
  • T'his other wants, yet when he did depart
  • With her whom we lament, hee lost his heart.
  • She, of whom th'Ancients seem'd to prophesie, 175
  • When they call'd vertues by the name of _shee_;
  • Shee in whom vertue was so much refin'd,
  • That for Allay unto so pure a minde
  • Shee tooke the weaker Sex; shee that could drive
  • The poysonous tincture, and the staine of _Eve_, 180
  • Out of her thoughts, and deeds; and purifie
  • All, by a true religious Alchymie;
  • Shee, shee is dead; shee's dead: when thou knowest this,
  • Thou knowest how poore a trifling thing man is.
  • And learn'st thus much by our Anatomie, 185
  • The heart being perish'd, no part can be free.
  • And that except thou feed (not banquet) on
  • The supernaturall food, Religion,
  • Thy better Growth growes withered, and scant;
  • Be more then man, or thou'rt lesse then an Ant. 190
  • Then, as mankinde, so is the worlds whole frame
  • Quite out of joynt, almost created lame:
  • For, before God had made up all the rest,
  • Corruption entred, and deprav'd the best:
  • It seis'd the Angels, and then first of all 195
  • The world did in her cradle take a fall,
  • And turn'd her braines, and tooke a generall maime,
  • Wronging each joynt of th'universall frame.
  • The noblest part, man, felt it first; and than
  • Both beasts and plants, curst in the curse of man. 200
  • [Sidenote: _Decay of nature in other parts._]
  • So did the world from the first houre decay,
  • That evening was beginning of the day,
  • And now the Springs and Sommers which we see,
  • Like sonnes of women after fiftie bee.
  • And new Philosophy calls all in doubt, 205
  • The Element of fire is quite put out;
  • The Sun is lost, and th'earth, and no mans wit
  • Can well direct him where to looke for it.
  • And freely men confesse that this world's spent,
  • When in the Planets, and the Firmament 210
  • They seeke so many new; they see that this
  • Is crumbled out againe to his Atomies.
  • 'Tis all in peeces, all cohaerence gone;
  • All just supply, and all Relation:
  • Prince, Subject, Father, Sonne, are things forgot, 215
  • For every man alone thinkes he hath got
  • To be a Phœnix, and that then can bee
  • None of that kinde, of which he is, but hee.
  • This is the worlds condition now, and now
  • She that should all parts to reunion bow, 220
  • She that had all Magnetique force alone,
  • To draw, and fasten sundred parts in one;
  • She whom wise nature had invented then
  • When she observ'd that every sort of men
  • Did in their voyage in this worlds Sea stray, 225
  • And needed a new compasse for their way;
  • She that was best, and first originall
  • Of all faire copies, and the generall
  • Steward to Fate; she whose rich eyes, and brest
  • Guilt the West Indies, and perfum'd the East; 230
  • Whose having breath'd in this world, did bestow
  • Spice on those Iles, and bad them still smell so,
  • And that rich Indie which doth gold interre,
  • Is but as single money, coyn'd from her:
  • She to whom this world must it selfe refer, 235
  • As Suburbs, or the Microcosme of her,
  • Shee, shee is dead; shee's dead: when thou knowst this,
  • Thou knowst how lame a cripple this world is.
  • And learn'st thus much by our Anatomy,
  • That this worlds generall sickenesse doth not lie 240
  • In any humour, or one certaine part;
  • But as thou sawest it rotten at the heart,
  • Thou seest a Hectique feaver hath got hold
  • Of the whole substance, not to be contrould,
  • And that thou hast but one way, not t'admit 245
  • The worlds infection, to be none of it.
  • For the worlds subtilst immateriall parts
  • Feele this consuming wound, and ages darts.
  • For the worlds beauty is decai'd, or gone,
  • [Sidenote: _Disformity of parts._]
  • Beauty, that's colour, and proportion. 250
  • We thinke the heavens enjoy their Sphericall,
  • Their round proportion embracing all.
  • But yet their various and perplexed course,
  • Observ'd in divers ages, doth enforce
  • Men to finde out so many Eccentrique parts, 255
  • Such divers downe-right lines, such overthwarts,
  • As disproportion that pure forme: It teares
  • The Firmament in eight and forty sheires,
  • And in these Constellations then arise
  • New starres, and old doe vanish from our eyes: 260
  • As though heav'n suffered earthquakes, peace or war,
  • When new Towers rise, and old demolish't are.
  • They have impal'd within a Zodiake
  • The free-borne Sun, and keepe twelve Signes awake
  • To watch his steps; the Goat and Crab controule, 265
  • And fright him backe, who else to either Pole
  • (Did not these Tropiques fetter him) might runne:
  • For his course is not round; nor can the Sunne
  • Perfit a Circle, or maintaine his way
  • One inch direct; but where he rose to-day 270
  • He comes no more, but with a couzening line,
  • Steales by that point, and so is Serpentine:
  • And seeming weary with his reeling thus,
  • He meanes to sleepe, being now falne nearer us.
  • So, of the Starres which boast that they doe runne 275
  • In Circle still, none ends where he begun.
  • All their proportion's lame, it sinkes, it swels.
  • For of Meridians, and Parallels,
  • Man hath weav'd out a net, and this net throwne
  • Upon the Heavens, and now they are his owne. 280
  • Loth to goe up the hill, or labour thus
  • To goe to heaven, we make heaven come to us.
  • We spur, we reine the starres, and in their race
  • They're diversly content t'obey our pace.
  • But keepes the earth her round proportion still? 285
  • Doth not a Tenarif, or higher Hill
  • Rise so high like a Rocke, that one might thinke
  • The floating Moone would shipwracke there, and sinke?
  • Seas are so deepe, that Whales being strooke to day,
  • Perchance to morrow, scarse at middle way 290
  • Of their wish'd journies end, the bottome, die.
  • And men, to sound depths, so much line untie,
  • As one might justly thinke, that there would rise
  • At end thereof, one of th'Antipodies:
  • If under all, a Vault infernall bee, 295
  • (Which sure is spacious, except that we
  • Invent another torment, that there must
  • Millions into a straight hot roome be thrust)
  • Then solidnesse, and roundnesse have no place.
  • Are these but warts, and pock-holes in the face 300
  • Of th'earth? Thinke so: but yet confesse, in this
  • The worlds proportion disfigured is;
  • [Sidenote: _Disorder in the world._]
  • That those two legges whereon it doth rely,
  • Reward and punishment are bent awry.
  • And, Oh, it can no more be questioned, 305
  • That beauties best, proportion, is dead,
  • Since even griefe it selfe, which now alone
  • Is left us, is without proportion.
  • Shee by whose lines proportion should bee
  • Examin'd, measure of all Symmetree, 310
  • Whom had that Ancient seen, who thought soules made
  • Of Harmony, he would at next have said
  • That Harmony was shee, and thence infer,
  • That soules were but Resultances from her,
  • And did from her into our bodies goe, 315
  • As to our eyes, the formes from objects flow:
  • Shee, who if those great Doctors truly said
  • That the Arke to mans proportions was made,
  • Had been a type for that, as that might be
  • A type of her in this, that contrary 320
  • Both Elements, and Passions liv'd at peace
  • In her, who caus'd all Civill war to cease.
  • Shee, after whom, what forme so'er we see,
  • Is discord, and rude incongruitie;
  • Shee, shee is dead, shee's dead; when thou knowst this 325
  • Thou knowst how ugly a monster this world is:
  • And learn'st thus much by our Anatomie,
  • That here is nothing to enamour thee:
  • And that, not only faults in inward parts,
  • Corruptions in our braines, or in our hearts, 330
  • Poysoning the fountaines, whence our actions spring,
  • Endanger us: but that if every thing
  • Be not done fitly'and in proportion,
  • To satisfie wise, and good lookers on,
  • (Since most men be such as most thinke they bee) 335
  • They're lothsome too, by this Deformitee.
  • For good, and well, must in our actions meete;
  • Wicked is not much worse than indiscreet.
  • But beauties other second Element,
  • Colour, and lustre now, is as neere spent. 340
  • And had the world his just proportion,
  • Were it a ring still, yet the stone is gone.
  • As a compassionate Turcoyse which doth tell
  • By looking pale, the wearer is not well,
  • As gold falls sicke being stung with Mercury, 345
  • All the worlds parts of such complexion bee.
  • When nature was most busie, the first weeke,
  • Swadling the new borne earth, God seem'd to like
  • That she should sport her selfe sometimes, and play,
  • To mingle, and vary colours every day: 350
  • And then, as though shee could not make inow,
  • Himselfe his various Rainbow did allow.
  • Sight is the noblest sense of any one,
  • Yet sight hath only colour to feed on,
  • And colour is decai'd: summers robe growes 355
  • Duskie, and like an oft dyed garment showes.
  • Our blushing red, which us'd in cheekes to spred,
  • Is inward sunke, and only our soules are red.
  • Perchance the world might have recovered,
  • If she whom we lament had not beene dead: 360
  • But shee, in whom all white, and red, and blew
  • (Beauties ingredients) voluntary grew,
  • As in an unvext Paradise; from whom
  • Did all things verdure, and their lustre come,
  • Whose composition was miraculous, 365
  • Being all colour, all Diaphanous,
  • (For Ayre, and Fire but thick grosse bodies were,
  • And liveliest stones but drowsie, and pale to her,)
  • Shee, shee, is dead; shee's dead: when thou know'st this,
  • Thou knowst how wan a Ghost this our world is: 370
  • And learn'st thus much by our Anatomie,
  • That it should more affright, then pleasure thee.
  • And that, since all faire colour then did sinke,
  • 'Tis now but wicked vanitie, to thinke
  • [Sidenote: _Weaknesse in the want of correspondence of heaven and
  • earth._]
  • To colour vicious deeds with good pretence, 375
  • Or with bought colors to illude mens sense.
  • Nor in ought more this worlds decay appeares,
  • Then that her influence the heav'n forbeares,
  • Or that the Elements doe not feele this,
  • The father, or the mother barren is. 380
  • The cloudes conceive not raine, or doe not powre,
  • In the due birth time, downe the balmy showre;
  • Th'Ayre doth not motherly sit on the earth,
  • To hatch her seasons, and give all things birth;
  • Spring-times were common cradles, but are tombes; 385
  • And false-conceptions fill the generall wombes;
  • Th'Ayre showes such Meteors, as none can see,
  • Not only what they meane, but what they bee;
  • Earth such new wormes, as would have troubled much
  • Th'Ægyptian _Mages_ to have made more such. 390
  • What Artist now dares boast that he can bring
  • Heaven hither, or constellate any thing,
  • So as the influence of those starres may bee
  • Imprison'd in an Hearbe, or Charme, or Tree,
  • And doe by touch, all which those stars could doe? 395
  • The art is lost, and correspondence too.
  • For heaven gives little, and the earth takes lesse,
  • And man least knowes their trade and purposes.
  • If this commerce twixt heaven and earth were not
  • Embarr'd, and all this traffique quite forgot, 400
  • She, for whose losse we have lamented thus,
  • Would worke more fully, and pow'rfully on us:
  • Since herbes, and roots, by dying lose not all,
  • But they, yea Ashes too, are medicinall,
  • Death could not quench her vertue so, but that 405
  • It would be (if not follow'd) wondred at:
  • And all the world would be one dying Swan,
  • To sing her funerall praise, and vanish than.
  • But as some Serpents poyson hurteth not,
  • Except it be from the live Serpent shot, 410
  • So doth her vertue need her here, to fit
  • That unto us; shee working more then it.
  • But shee, in whom to such maturity
  • Vertue was growne, past growth, that it must die;
  • She, from whose influence all Impressions came, 415
  • But, by Receivers impotencies, lame,
  • Who, though she could not transubstantiate
  • All states to gold, yet guilded every state,
  • So that some Princes have some temperance;
  • Some Counsellers some purpose to advance 420
  • The common profit; and some people have
  • Some stay, no more then Kings should give, to crave;
  • Some women have some taciturnity,
  • Some nunneries some graines of chastitie.
  • She that did thus much, and much more could doe, 425
  • But that our age was Iron, and rustie too,
  • Shee, shee is dead; shee's dead; when thou knowst this,
  • Thou knowst how drie a Cinder this world is.
  • And learn'st thus much by our Anatomy,
  • That 'tis in vaine to dew, or mollifie 430
  • It with thy teares, or sweat, or blood: nothing
  • Is worth our travaile, griefe, or perishing,
  • But those rich joyes, which did possesse her heart,
  • Of which she's now partaker, and a part.
  • [Sidenote: _Conclusion._]
  • But as in cutting up a man that's dead, 435
  • The body will not last out, to have read
  • On every part, and therefore men direct
  • Their speech to parts, that are of most effect;
  • So the worlds carcasse would not last, if I
  • Were punctuall in this Anatomy; 440
  • Nor smels it well to hearers, if one tell
  • Them their disease, who faine would think they're well.
  • Here therefore be the end: And, blessed maid,
  • Of whom is meant what ever hath been said,
  • Or shall be spoken well by any tongue, 445
  • Whose name refines course lines, and makes prose song,
  • Accept this tribute, and his first yeares rent,
  • Who till his darke short tapers end be spent,
  • As oft as thy feast sees this widowed earth,
  • Will yearely celebrate thy second birth, 450
  • That is, thy death; for though the soule of man
  • Be got when man is made, 'tis borne but than
  • When man doth die; our body's as the wombe,
  • And, as a Mid-wife, death directs it home.
  • And you her creatures, whom she workes upon, 455
  • And have your last, and best concoction
  • From her example, and her vertue, if you
  • In reverence to her, do thinke it due,
  • That no one should her praises thus rehearse,
  • As matter fit for Chronicle, not verse; 460
  • Vouchsafe to call to minde that God did make
  • A last, and lasting'st peece, a song. He spake
  • To _Moses_ to deliver unto all,
  • That song, because hee knew they would let fall
  • The Law, the Prophets, and the History, 465
  • But keepe the song still in their memory:
  • Such an opinion (in due measure) made
  • Me this great Office boldly to invade:
  • Nor could incomprehensiblenesse deterre
  • Mee, from thus trying to emprison her, 470
  • Which when I saw that a strict grave could doe,
  • I saw not why verse might not do so too.
  • Verse hath a middle nature: heaven keepes Soules,
  • The Grave keepes bodies, Verse the Fame enroules.
  • [An Anatomy _&c._ _1611-69_ The first Anniversary. _1612-69_
  • (First _1612-25_): _om. 1611_]
  • [_The entrie &c._ _1612-21:_ _om. 1625-33:_ _1611 and 1635-69
  • have no notes_]
  • [2 Whom _1611_, _1612-25_, _1669:_ Who _1633:_ whõ
  • _1635-54_]
  • [5 Deedes _1611_, _1612-25:_ deeds, _1633-69_]
  • [6 In-mate _1611-12:_ Inmate _1621-25:_ immate _1633:_ inmate
  • _1635-69_]
  • [10 Song, _1611:_ Song. _1612-33:_ Song: _1635-69_]
  • [14 then _1611_, _1612-39:_ them _1650-69_]
  • [18 shee, _1611:_ shee _1612_, _1669:_ shee. _1621-54_]
  • [22 care, _1611-21:_ care. _1625-33_]
  • [24 Lethargie.] Letargee. _1611_, _1612-25_]
  • [26 Man. _1611_, _1621-25:_ man. _1633-69_]
  • [31 name, _1611_, _1612-25:_ name _1633-69_]
  • [33 Font, _1611:_ Fount, _1612-69_]
  • [36 Palace _1611-12_, _1621-25:_ palace _1633-69_]
  • [40 times _1611_, _1612-33:_ time _1635-69_]
  • [48 law, _1612_, _1669:_ law. _1611_, _1621-25:_ law;
  • _1633-54_]
  • [50 glue] give _1650-69_]
  • [_What life &c._ _1612-21:_ _om. 1625-33_]
  • [70 walke; _1611_, _1612-25:_ walke, _1633-69_]
  • [71 good, _1633:_ good _1612-25_, _1635-69_]
  • [75 old world, free, _1611-12_, _1633-69:_ old world, free
  • _1621-25_]
  • [79 though] thought _1621-33_]
  • [80 home-borne] homborne _1611_, _1621-25:_ homeborne
  • _1633-69_]
  • [85 Yet, _1612-25:_ Yet _1633-69_]
  • [_The sicknesses &c._ _1612:_ _The sicknesse &c._ _1621:_ _The
  • sicknes &c._ _1625-33_]
  • [89 then] them _1650-69_]
  • [99 ruine! _Ed:_ ruine? _1611_, _1612-25:_ ruine, _1633-69_]
  • [100 mankinde! _Ed:_ mankinde? _1611_, _1612-69_]
  • [113 When as, the Sunne and man _1633-39:_ _no commas_
  • _1650-69:_ When as the Sunne and man, _1611_, _1612-25_]
  • [114 survive; _1650-69:_ survive. _1611_, _1612-39_]
  • [116 minoritie; _1650-69:_ minoritee. _1611_, _1621-25:_
  • minoritie, _1633-39_]
  • [131 Grandsires _1611_, _1612-21:_ Gransires _1625-69_
  • sorrow, _1611-21:_ sorrow. _1625:_ sorrow: _1633-69_]
  • [133 peasant _1611_, _1612-25:_ pesant _1633-69_]
  • [134 lives. _1611_, _1633:_ lives _1612:_ lives, _1621-25_]
  • [135 man _1611:_ man. _1612-25:_ man, _1633-69_]
  • [145 addes _1611-21:_ adds _1635-69:_ ads _1625_, _1633_]
  • [149 silver; _1611-12:_ silver _1621-25:_ silver, _1633-69_]
  • [150 scatter'd] scattred _1612-25_]
  • [152 bodies, _1611-25:_ bodies _1633-39_]
  • [153 close weaving _1633-69:_ close-weaning _1611-12:_ close
  • weaning _1621-25_]
  • [161 Thus man, _1611_, _1612-33:_ This man, _1635-69_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [166 use:] use. _1611_, _1621-33_]
  • [167 t'attend] t'atend _1633_]
  • [169 man, _1611:_ man _1612-69_]
  • [171 any thing, _1611-12:_ any thing; _1621-33_]
  • [172 wast, _1633:_ wast, _1611:_ waste, _1635-69_]
  • [178 Allay _1611_, _1612-25:_ allay _1633-69_]
  • [179 Sex; _1611:_ Sex, _1621-25:_ Sex: _1633-69_]
  • [181 thoughts, _1611-12_, _1635-69:_ thought, _1621-33_]
  • [183 Shee, shee _1611_, _1612-25:_ She, she _1633-69_]
  • [186 no] no no _1621_]
  • [188 Religion, _1611_, _1650-69:_ Religion. _1612-25:_
  • Religion: _1633-39_]
  • [189 Growth _1611:_ grouth _1612-25:_ growth _1633-69_
  • withered] whithered _1621-25_]
  • [191 Then, _1611_, _1621-25:_ Then _1633-69_]
  • [195 Angels, _1612-69:_ Angells: _1611_]
  • [200 man. _1611_, _1612-25:_ man, _1633-39:_ man: _1650-69_]
  • [210 Firmament _1611-12:_ firmament _1621-69_]
  • [212 Atomies.] Atomis. _1611_, _1612-25_]
  • [213 cohaerence _1611_, _1612-25:_ coherence _1633-69_]
  • [217 then _1611_, _1612-69:_ there _Grosart, who with Chambers
  • attributes to 1669_]
  • [223 invented] innented _1621_]
  • [228 copies, _1633-69:_ copies; _1611-12:_ copies _1621-25_]
  • [229 Fate; _1612-69:_ Fate: _1611_
  • brest _1611:_ brest: _1612-25:_ breast, _1633_]
  • [230 West Indies, _1611:_ West-Indies, _1621-69_
  • East; _1611:_ East, _1621-69_]
  • [234 money, _1611-21:_ money _1625-69_]
  • [237 knowst _1611:_ knowest _1612-69:_ _and so in_ 238]
  • [237 this,] this _1633-35_]
  • [238 is. _1611_, _1612-33:_ is, _1635-69_]
  • [244 contrould,] contrould. _1611_, _1612-25_]
  • [251 Sphericall, _1650-69:_ Sphericall _1611_, _1612-39_]
  • [252 all. _1611_, _1612-25:_ all, _1633-69_]
  • [257 forme: _1633-69:_ forme. _1611_, _1612-25_]
  • [258 sheires, _1633-35:_ sheeres, _1611_, _1612-25:_ shieres,
  • _1639-69_]
  • [267 Tropiques _1611_, _1612-25:_ tropiques _1633-69_]
  • [273 with] of _1635-69_]
  • [284 pace.] peace. _1612-33_]
  • [286 Tenarif, _1611_, _1612-25:_ Tenarus _1633-69_
  • Hill _1611_, _1612-25:_ hill _1633-69_]
  • [288 there, _1611_, _1612-21:_ there _1625-69_]
  • [289 strooke _1611_, _1612-25:_ strucke _1633-69_]
  • [290 to morrow, _1611_, _1612-25:_ to morrow _1633-69_]
  • [295 Vault _1611_, _1612-25:_ vault _1633-69_]
  • [298 straight] strait _1611-25_]
  • [300 pock-holes] pockholes _1633-69_]
  • [301 th'earth?] th'earth; _1633_]
  • [306 beauties best, proportion, _1611_, _1612-39:_ beauty's
  • best proportion _Chambers:_ _1650-69_ _drop the second comma_]
  • [313 infer, _1611-12:_ infer. _1621-25:_ infer _1633-69_]
  • [318 proportions _1611-12:_ proportion _1621-69_]
  • [321 Elements, _1611-12:_ Elements _1621-69_]
  • [325 Shee, shee _1611_, _1612-25:_ She, she _1633-69_
  • shee's] she's _1633-69_
  • knowst _1611:_ knowest _1612-25:_ know'st _1633-69_]
  • [326 knowst _1611_, _1612-25:_ knowest _1633-69_]
  • [336 Deformitee. _1611_, _1612-25:_ deformitie. _1633-69_]
  • [351 inow, _1611_, _1612-25:_ enough, _1633:_ enow, _1635-69_]
  • [352 allow.] allow, _1621-33_]
  • [366 Diaphanous, _1611_, _1612-25:_ diaphanous, _1633-69_]
  • [369 Shee, shee, _1611_, _1612-25_ (shee _1625_): She, she
  • _1633-69_ (_but_ Shee, _1633_, _in pass-over word_)]
  • [370 knowst _1611:_ knowest _1621-69_]
  • [374 vanitie, to thinke _1633-69:_ vanity to think, _1611_,
  • _1612-25_]
  • [379-80 feele this, ... barren is. _1611_, _1612-69:_ feele
  • this. ... barren is; _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [383 Th'Ayre _1611_, _1612-21:_ Th'ayre _1625-69_]
  • [387 Th'Ayre _1611:_ Th'ayre _1612-69_]
  • [390 _Mages_] _No change of type_, _1611-12_]
  • [394 Charme, _1611-21:_ Charme _1625-54_]
  • [404 Ashes _1611_, _1612-25:_ ashes _1633-69_]
  • [407 Swan, _1611_, _1612-25:_ swan, _1633-69_]
  • [415 Impressions _1611:_ Impression _1612-25:_ impression
  • _1633-69_]
  • [416 But, _1611:_ But _1621-69_
  • Receivers _1611-12:_ _rest no capital_]
  • [421 have] have, _1633_]
  • [427 is dead;] is dead, _1633-69_
  • shee's dead; _1611-25:_ she's dead; _1633-69_]
  • [431 nothing] no thing _1611-21_]
  • [442 they're] thy're _1633_]
  • [443 And, _1611_, _1612-25:_ and, _1633-69_]
  • [467 (in due measure) _1611_, _1612-25_ (_but 1625 drops
  • second bracket_): _commas_ _1633-69_]
  • [468 Office _1611_, _1612-25:_ office _1633-69_]
  • [473 nature: _1611-25:_ nature, _1633-69_]
  • A Funerall ELEGIE.
  • 'Tis lost, to trust a Tombe with such a guest,
  • Or to confine her in a marble chest.
  • Alas, what's Marble, Jeat, or Porphyrie,
  • Priz'd with the Chrysolite of either eye,
  • Or with those Pearles, and Rubies, which she was? 5
  • Joyne the two Indies in one Tombe, 'tis glasse;
  • And so is all to her materials,
  • Though every inch were ten Escurials,
  • Yet she's demolish'd: can wee keepe her then
  • In works of hands, or of the wits of men? 10
  • Can these memorials, ragges of paper, give
  • Life to that name, by which name they must live?
  • Sickly, alas, short-liv'd, aborted bee
  • Those carcasse verses, whose soule is not shee.
  • And can shee, who no longer would be shee, 15
  • Being such a Tabernacle, stoop to be
  • In paper wrapt; or, when shee would not lie
  • In such a house, dwell in an Elegie?
  • But 'tis no matter; wee may well allow
  • Verse to live so long as the world will now, 20
  • For her death wounded it. The world containes
  • Princes for armes, and Counsellors for braines,
  • Lawyers for tongues, Divines for hearts, and more,
  • The Rich for stomackes, and for backes, the Poore;
  • The Officers for hands, Merchants for feet, 25
  • By which, remote and distant Countries meet.
  • But those fine spirits which do tune, and set
  • This Organ, are those peeces which beget
  • Wonder and love; and these were shee; and shee
  • Being spent, the world must needs decrepit bee; 30
  • For since death will proceed to triumph still,
  • He can finde nothing, after her, to kill,
  • Except the world it selfe, so great as shee.
  • Thus brave and confident may Nature bee,
  • Death cannot give her such another blow, 35
  • Because shee cannot such another show.
  • But must wee say she's dead? may't not be said
  • That as a sundred clocke is peecemeale laid,
  • Not to be lost, but by the makers hand
  • Repollish'd, without errour then to stand, 40
  • Or as the Affrique Niger streame enwombs
  • It selfe into the earth, and after comes
  • (Having first made a naturall bridge, to passe
  • For many leagues) farre greater then it was,
  • May't not be said, that her grave shall restore 45
  • Her, greater, purer, firmer, then before?
  • Heaven may say this, and joy in't, but can wee
  • Who live, and lacke her, here this vantage see?
  • What is't to us, alas, if there have beene
  • An Angell made a Throne, or Cherubin? 50
  • Wee lose by't: and as aged men are glad
  • Being tastlesse growne, to joy in joyes they had,
  • So now the sick starv'd world must feed upon
  • This joy, that we had her, who now is gone.
  • Rejoyce then Nature, and this World, that you, 55
  • Fearing the last fires hastning to subdue
  • Your force and vigour, ere it were neere gone,
  • Wisely bestow'd and laid it all on one.
  • One, whose cleare body was so pure and thinne,
  • Because it need disguise no thought within. 60
  • 'Twas but a through-light scarfe, her minde t'inroule;
  • Or exhalation breath'd out from her Soule.
  • One, whom all men who durst no more, admir'd:
  • And whom, who ere had worth enough, desir'd;
  • As when a Temple's built, Saints emulate 65
  • To which of them, it shall be consecrate.
  • But, as when heaven lookes on us with new eyes,
  • Those new starres every Artist exercise,
  • What place they should assigne to them they doubt,
  • Argue,'and agree not, till those starres goe out: 70
  • So the world studied whose this peece should be,
  • Till shee can be no bodies else, nor shee:
  • But like a Lampe of Balsamum, desir'd
  • Rather t'adorne, then last, she soone expir'd,
  • Cloath'd in her virgin white integritie, 75
  • For marriage, though it doe not staine, doth dye.
  • To scape th'infirmities which wait upon
  • Woman, she went away, before sh'was one;
  • And the worlds busie noyse to overcome,
  • Tooke so much death, as serv'd for _opium_; 80
  • For though she could not, nor could chuse to dye,
  • She'ath yeelded to too long an extasie:
  • Hee which not knowing her said History,
  • Should come to reade the booke of destiny,
  • How faire, and chast, humble, and high she'ad been, 85
  • Much promis'd, much perform'd, at not fifteene,
  • And measuring future things, by things before,
  • Should turne the leafe to reade, and reade no more,
  • Would thinke that either destiny mistooke,
  • Or that some leaves were torne out of the booke. 90
  • But 'tis not so; Fate did but usher her
  • To yeares of reasons use, and then inferre
  • Her destiny to her selfe, which liberty
  • She tooke but for thus much, thus much to die.
  • Her modestie not suffering her to bee 95
  • Fellow-Commissioner with Destinie,
  • She did no more but die; if after her
  • Any shall live, which dare true good prefer,
  • Every such person is her deligate,
  • T'accomplish that which should have beene her Fate. 100
  • They shall make up that Booke and shall have thanks
  • Of Fate, and her, for filling up their blankes.
  • For future vertuous deeds are Legacies,
  • Which from the gift of her example rise;
  • And 'tis in heav'n part of spirituall mirth, 105
  • To see how well the good play her, on earth.
  • [Funerall ELEGIE. _1611_, _1612-69:_ _whole poem printed in
  • italics_ _1612-25:_ _in roman 1611_]
  • [1 lost, _1611_, _1612-25:_ lost _1633:_ losse _1635-69_]
  • [2 chest. _1611-21:_ chest, _1625-69_]
  • [8 Escurials,] escurials. _1611-25_]
  • [13 aborted _1611_, _1612-33:_ abortive _1635-69_]
  • [17 or, _1612-25:_ or _1633-69_]
  • [18 a] an _1635-69_]
  • [22-5 Princes, Counsellors _&c._ _all in capitals except_
  • Officers _1611_, _1612-25:_ _later editions erratic_]
  • [24: backes, _1611:_ backes _1612-25:_ backs _1633-69_
  • Poore] _spelt_ Pore _1611-12_]
  • [28 peeces] peeces, _1633-69_]
  • [30 _1625 inserts marginal note_, Smalnesse of stature. _See
  • p._ 235]
  • [33 as _1611-21:_ _om. 1625:_ was _1633-69_]
  • [47 in't,] in't; _1612-21:_ in'ts, _1625_]
  • [48 her, here _1611_, _1612-25:_ her, here, _1633:_ her here,
  • _1635-69_]
  • [58 one. _1612-25:_ one; _1633-69_]
  • [64 worth] worke _1633_]
  • [74 expir'd, _1633-69:_ expir'd; _1611_, _1612-25_]
  • [75 integritie, _1633-69:_ integritie; _1611-25_]
  • [76 it doe _1611_, _1612-25:_ it doth _1633-69_
  • dye. _1611_, _1612-69_ (_spelt_ die _1633-69_): _Chambers
  • closes the sentence at_ 74 expir'd _and prints_ 75-7 _thus_--
  • Clothed in her virgin white integrity
  • --For marriage, though it doth not stain, doth dye--
  • To 'scape _&c._
  • ]
  • [83 said _1611_, _1612-33:_ sad _1635-69_]
  • [94 tooke _1611_, _1612-25:_ tooke, _1633-69_]
  • [98 prefer, _1611_, _1612-25:_ prefer; _1633-69_]
  • OF THE PROGRESSE OF THE SOULE.
  • _Wherein_,
  • By occasion of the Religious death of
  • Mistris ELIZABETH DRVRY,
  • the incommodities of the Soule in
  • this life, and her exaltation in
  • the next, are contemplated.
  • * * * * *
  • The second Anniversary.
  • * * * * *
  • _The Harbinger to the_
  • PROGRESSE.
  • Two Soules move here, and mine (a third) must move
  • Paces of admiration, and of love;
  • Thy Soule (deare virgin) whose this tribute is,
  • Mov'd from this mortall Spheare to lively blisse;
  • And yet moves still, and still aspires to see 5
  • The worlds last day, thy glories full degree:
  • Like as those starres which thou o'r-lookest farre,
  • Are in their place, and yet still moved are:
  • No soule (whiles with the luggage of this clay
  • It clogged is) can follow thee halfe way; 10
  • Or see thy flight, which doth our thoughts outgoe
  • So fast, that now the lightning moves but slow:
  • But now thou art as high in heaven flowne
  • As heaven's from us; what soule besides thine owne
  • Can tell thy joyes, or say he can relate 15
  • Thy glorious Journals in that blessed state?
  • I envie thee (Rich soule) I envy thee,
  • Although I cannot yet thy glory see:
  • And thou (great spirit) which hers follow'd hast
  • So fast, as none can follow thine so fast; 20
  • So far, as none can follow thine so farre,
  • (And if this flesh did not the passage barre
  • Hadst caught her) let me wonder at thy flight
  • Which long agone hadst lost the vulgar sight,
  • And now mak'st proud the better eyes, that they 25
  • Can see thee less'ned in thine ayery way;
  • So while thou mak'st her soule by progresse knowne
  • Thou mak'st a noble progresse of thine owne,
  • From this worlds carkasse having mounted high
  • To that pure life of immortalitie; 30
  • Since thine aspiring thoughts themselves so raise
  • That more may not beseeme a creatures praise,
  • Yet still thou vow'st her more; and every yeare
  • Mak'st a new progresse, while thou wandrest here;
  • Still upward mount; and let thy Makers praise 35
  • Honor thy Laura, and adorne thy laies.
  • And since thy Muse her head in heaven shrouds,
  • Oh let her never stoope below the clouds:
  • And if those glorious sainted soules may know
  • Or what wee doe, or what wee sing below, 40
  • Those acts, those songs shall still content them best
  • Which praise those awfull Powers that make them blest.
  • [Of the Progresse _&c._ _1612-69:_ The second Anniversary.
  • _1612-69_ (_in 1612-21 it stands at head of page_)]
  • [The Harbinger _&c._] _In 1612-25 this poem printed in
  • italics_]
  • [8 are:] are _1612-25_]
  • [12 that now] as now _1635-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [27 soule] soules _1612_]
  • [28 owne, _1635-69:_ owne. _1612-33_]
  • [34 while] whilst _1669_]
  • [35 upward] upwards _1612_]
  • OF THE PROGRESSE OF THE SOULE.
  • _The second Anniversarie._
  • [Sidenote: _The entrance._[1]]
  • Nothing could make me sooner to confesse
  • That this world had an everlastingnesse,
  • Then to consider, that a yeare is runne,
  • Since both this lower world's, and the Sunnes Sunne,
  • The Lustre, and the vigor of this All, 5
  • Did set; 'twere blasphemie to say, did fall.
  • But as a ship which hath strooke saile, doth runne
  • By force of that force which before, it wonne:
  • Or as sometimes in a beheaded man,
  • Though at those two Red seas, which freely ranne, 10
  • One from the Trunke, another from the Head,
  • His soule be sail'd, to her eternall bed,
  • His eyes will twinckle, and his tongue will roll,
  • As though he beckned, and cal'd backe his soule,
  • He graspes his hands, and he pulls up his feet, 15
  • And seemes to reach, and to step forth to meet
  • His soule; when all these motions which we saw,
  • Are but as Ice, which crackles at a thaw:
  • Or as a Lute, which in moist weather, rings
  • Her knell alone, by cracking of her strings: 20
  • So struggles this dead world, now shee is gone;
  • For there is motion in corruption.
  • As some daies are at the Creation nam'd,
  • Before the Sunne, the which fram'd daies, was fram'd,
  • So after this Sunne's set, some shew appeares, 25
  • And orderly vicissitude of yeares.
  • Yet a new Deluge, and of _Lethe_ flood,
  • Hath drown'd us all, All have forgot all good,
  • Forgetting her, the maine reserve of all.
  • Yet in this deluge, grosse and generall, 30
  • Thou seest me strive for life; my life shall bee,
  • To be hereafter prais'd, for praysing thee;
  • Immortall Maid, who though thou would'st refuse
  • The name of Mother, be unto my Muse
  • A Father, since her chast Ambition is, 35
  • Yearely to bring forth such a child as this.
  • These Hymnes may worke on future wits, and so
  • May great Grand children of thy prayses grow.
  • And so, though not revive, embalme and spice
  • The world, which else would putrifie with vice. 40
  • For thus, Man may extend thy progeny,
  • Untill man doe but vanish, and not die.
  • These Hymnes thy issue, may encrease so long,
  • As till Gods great _Venite_ change the song.
  • [Sidenote: _A iust disestimation[2] of this world._]
  • Thirst for that time, O my insatiate soule, 45
  • And serve thy thirst, with Gods safe-sealing Bowle.
  • Be thirstie still, and drinke still till thou goe
  • To th'only Health, to be Hydroptique so.
  • Forget this rotten world; And unto thee
  • Let thine owne times as an old storie bee. 50
  • Be not concern'd: studie not why, nor when;
  • Doe not so much as not beleeve a man.
  • For though to erre, be worst, to try truths forth,
  • Is far more businesse, then this world is worth.
  • The world is but a carkasse; thou art fed 55
  • By it, but as a worme, that carkasse bred;
  • And why should'st thou, poore worme, consider more,
  • When this world will grow better then before,
  • Then those thy fellow wormes doe thinke upon
  • That carkasses last resurrection. 60
  • Forget this world, and scarce thinke of it so,
  • As of old clothes, cast off a yeare agoe.
  • To be thus stupid is Alacritie;
  • Men thus Lethargique have best Memory.
  • Look upward; that's towards her, whose happy state 65
  • We now lament not, but congratulate.
  • Shee, to whom all this world was but a stage,
  • Where all sat harkning how her youthfull age
  • Should be emploi'd, because in all shee did,
  • Some Figure of the Golden times was hid. 70
  • Who could not lacke, what e'r this world could give,
  • Because shee was the forme, that made it live;
  • Nor could complaine, that this world was unfit
  • To be staid in, then when shee was in it;
  • Shee that first tried indifferent desires 75
  • By vertue, and vertue by religious fires,
  • Shee to whose person Paradise adher'd,
  • As Courts to Princes, shee whose eyes ensphear'd
  • Star-light enough, t'have made the South controule,
  • (Had shee beene there) the Star-full Northerne Pole, 80
  • Shee, shee is gone; she is gone; when thou knowest this,
  • What fragmentary rubbidge this world is
  • Thou knowest, and that it is not worth a thought;
  • He honors it too much that thinkes it nought.
  • [Sidenote: _Contemplation of our state in our death-bed._]
  • Thinke then, my soule, that death is but a Groome, 85
  • Which brings a Taper to the outward roome,
  • Whence thou spiest first a little glimmering light,
  • And after brings it nearer to thy sight:
  • For such approaches doth heaven make in death.
  • Thinke thy selfe labouring now with broken breath, 90
  • And thinke those broken and soft Notes to bee
  • Division, and thy happyest Harmonie.
  • Thinke thee laid on thy death-bed, loose and slacke;
  • And thinke that, but unbinding of a packe,
  • To take one precious thing, thy soule from thence. 95
  • Thinke thy selfe parch'd with fevers violence,
  • Anger thine ague more, by calling it
  • Thy Physicke; chide the slacknesse of the fit.
  • Thinke that thou hear'st thy knell, and think no more,
  • But that, as Bels cal'd thee to Church before, 100
  • So this, to the Triumphant Church, calls thee.
  • Thinke Satans Sergeants round about thee bee,
  • And thinke that but for Legacies they thrust;
  • Give one thy Pride, to'another give thy Lust:
  • Give them those sinnes which they gave thee before, 105
  • And trust th'immaculate blood to wash thy score.
  • Thinke thy friends weeping round, and thinke that they
  • Weepe but because they goe not yet thy way.
  • Thinke that they close thine eyes, and thinke in this,
  • That they confesse much in the world, amisse, 110
  • Who dare not trust a dead mans eye with that,
  • Which they from God, and Angels cover not.
  • Thinke that they shroud thee up, and think from thence
  • They reinvest thee in white innocence.
  • Thinke that thy body rots, and (if so low, 115
  • Thy soule exalted so, thy thoughts can goe,)
  • Think thee a Prince, who of themselves create
  • Wormes which insensibly devoure their State.
  • Thinke that they bury thee, and thinke that right
  • Laies thee to sleepe but a Saint Lucies night. 120
  • Thinke these things cheerefully: and if thou bee
  • Drowsie or slacke, remember then that shee,
  • Shee whose Complexion was so even made,
  • That which of her Ingredients should invade
  • The other three, no Feare, no Art could guesse: 125
  • So far were all remov'd from more or lesse.
  • But as in Mithridate, or just perfumes,
  • Where all good things being met, no one presumes
  • To governe, or to triumph on the rest,
  • Only because all were, no part was best. 130
  • And as, though all doe know, that quantities
  • Are made of lines, and lines from Points arise,
  • None can these lines or quantities unjoynt,
  • And say this is a line, or this a point,
  • So though the Elements and Humors were 135
  • In her, one could not say, this governes there.
  • Whose even constitution might have wonne
  • Any disease to venter on the Sunne,
  • Rather then her: and make a spirit feare,
  • That hee to disuniting subject were. 140
  • To whose proportions if we would compare
  • Cubes, th'are unstable; Circles, Angular;
  • She who was such a chaine as Fate employes
  • To bring mankinde all Fortunes it enjoyes;
  • So fast, so even wrought, as one would thinke, 145
  • No Accident could threaten any linke;
  • Shee, shee embrac'd a sicknesse, gave it meat,
  • The purest blood, and breath, that e'r it eate;
  • And hath taught us, that though a good man hath
  • Title to heaven, and plead it by his Faith, 150
  • And though he may pretend a conquest, since
  • Heaven was content to suffer violence,
  • Yea though hee plead a long possession too,
  • (For they're in heaven on earth who heavens workes do)
  • Though hee had right and power and place, before, 155
  • Yet Death must usher, and unlocke the doore.
  • [Sidenote: _Incommodities of the Soule in the Body._[3]]
  • Thinke further on thy selfe, my Soule, and thinke
  • How thou at first wast made but in a sinke;
  • Thinke that it argued some infirmitie,
  • That those two soules, which then thou foundst in me, 160
  • Thou fedst upon, and drewst into thee, both
  • My second soule of sense, and first of growth.
  • Thinke but how poore thou wast, how obnoxious;
  • Whom a small lumpe of flesh could poyson thus.
  • This curded milke, this poore unlittered whelpe 165
  • My body, could, beyond escape or helpe,
  • Infect thee with Originall sinne, and thou
  • Couldst neither then refuse, nor leave it now.
  • Thinke that no stubborne sullen Anchorit,
  • Which fixt to a pillar, or a grave, doth sit 170
  • Bedded, and bath'd in all his ordures, dwels
  • So fowly as our Soules in their first-built Cels.
  • Thinke in how poore a prison thou didst lie
  • After, enabled but to suck, and crie.
  • Thinke, when'twas growne to most,'twas a poore Inne, 175
  • A Province pack'd up in two yards of skinne,
  • And that usurp'd or threatned with the rage
  • Of sicknesses, or their true mother, Age.
  • But thinke that Death hath now enfranchis'd thee,
  • [Sidenote: _Her liberty by death._]
  • Thou hast thy'expansion now, and libertie; 180
  • Thinke that a rustie Peece, discharg'd, is flowne
  • In peeces, and the bullet is his owne,
  • And freely flies: This to thy Soule allow,
  • Thinke thy shell broke, thinke thy Soule hatch'd but now.
  • And think this slow-pac'd soule, which late did cleave 185
  • To'a body, and went but by the bodies leave,
  • Twenty, perchance, or thirty mile a day,
  • Dispatches in a minute all the way
  • Twixt heaven, and earth; she stayes not in the ayre,
  • To looke what Meteors there themselves prepare; 190
  • She carries no desire to know, nor sense,
  • Whether th'ayres middle region be intense;
  • For th'Element of fire, she doth not know,
  • Whether she past by such a place or no;
  • She baits not at the Moone, nor cares to trie 195
  • Whether in that new world, men live, and die.
  • _Venus_ retards her not, to'enquire, how shee
  • Can, (being one starre) _Hesper_, and _Vesper_ bee;
  • Hee that charm'd _Argus_ eyes, sweet _Mercury_,
  • Workes not on her, who now is growne all eye; 200
  • Who, if she meet the body of the Sunne,
  • Goes through, not staying till his course be runne;
  • Who findes in _Mars_ his Campe no corps of Guard;
  • Nor is by _Iove_, nor by his father barr'd;
  • But ere she can consider how she went, 205
  • At once is at, and through the Firmament.
  • And as these starres were but so many beads
  • Strung on one string, speed undistinguish'd leads
  • Her through those Spheares, as through the beads, a string,
  • Whose quick succession makes it still one thing: 210
  • As doth the pith, which, lest our bodies slacke,
  • Strings fast the little bones of necke, and backe;
  • So by the Soule doth death string Heaven and Earth;
  • For when our Soule enjoyes this her third birth,
  • (Creation gave her one, a second, grace,) 215
  • Heaven is as neare, and present to her face,
  • As colours are, and objects, in a roome
  • Where darknesse was before, when Tapers come.
  • This must, my Soule, thy long-short Progresse bee;
  • To'advance these thoughts, remember then, that she, 220
  • She; whose faire body no such prison was,
  • But that a Soule might well be pleas'd to passe
  • An age in her; she whose rich beauty lent
  • Mintage to other beauties, for they went
  • But for so much as they were like to her; 225
  • Shee, in whose body (if we dare preferre
  • This low world, to so high a marke as shee,)
  • The Westerne treasure, Easterne spicerie,
  • Europe, and Afrique, and the unknowne rest
  • Were easily found, or what in them was best; 230
  • And when w'have made this large discoverie
  • Of all, in her some one part then will bee
  • Twenty such parts, whose plenty and riches is
  • Enough to make twenty such worlds as this;
  • Shee, whom had they knowne who did first betroth 235
  • The Tutelar Angels, and assign'd one, both
  • To Nations, Cities, and to Companies,
  • To Functions, Offices, and Dignities,
  • And to each severall man, to him, and him,
  • They would have given her one for every limbe; 240
  • She, of whose soule, if wee may say, 'twas Gold,
  • Her body was th'Electrum, and did hold
  • Many degrees of that; wee understood
  • Her by her sight; her pure, and eloquent blood
  • Spoke in her cheekes, and so distinctly wrought, 245
  • That one might almost say, her body thought;
  • Shee, shee, thus richly and largely hous'd, is gone:
  • And chides us slow-pac'd snailes who crawle upon
  • Our prisons prison, earth, nor thinke us well,
  • Longer, then whil'st wee beare our brittle shell. 250
  • [Sidenote: _Her ignorance in this life and knowledge in the
  • next._[4]]
  • But 'twere but little to have chang'd our roome,
  • If, as we were in this our living Tombe
  • Oppress'd with ignorance, wee still were so.
  • Poore soule, in this thy flesh what dost thou know?
  • Thou know'st thy selfe so little, as thou know'st not, 255
  • How thou didst die, nor how thou wast begot.
  • Thou neither know'st, how thou at first cam'st in,
  • Nor how thou took'st the poyson of mans sinne.
  • Nor dost thou, (though thou know'st, that thou art so)
  • By what way thou art made immortall, know. 260
  • Thou art too narrow, wretch, to comprehend
  • Even thy selfe: yea though thou wouldst but bend
  • To know thy body. Have not all soules thought
  • For many ages, that our body'is wrought
  • Of Ayre, and Fire, and other Elements? 265
  • And now they thinke of new ingredients,
  • And one Soule thinkes one, and another way
  • Another thinkes, and 'tis an even lay.
  • Knowst thou but how the stone doth enter in
  • The bladders cave, and never breake the skinne? 270
  • Know'st thou how blood, which to the heart doth flow,
  • Doth from one ventricle to th'other goe?
  • And for the putrid stuffe, which thou dost spit,
  • Know'st thou how thy lungs have attracted it?
  • There are no passages, so that there is 275
  • (For ought thou know'st) piercing of substances.
  • And of those many opinions which men raise
  • Of Nailes and Haires, dost thou know which to praise?
  • What hope have wee to know our selves, when wee
  • Know not the least things, which for our use be? 280
  • Wee see in Authors, too stiffe to recant,
  • A hundred controversies of an Ant;
  • And yet one watches, starves, freeses, and sweats,
  • To know but Catechismes and Alphabets
  • Of unconcerning things, matters of fact; 285
  • How others on our stage their parts did Act;
  • What _Cæsar_ did, yea, and what _Cicero_ said.
  • Why grasse is greene, or why our blood is red,
  • Are mysteries which none have reach'd unto.
  • In this low forme, poore soule, what wilt thou doe? 290
  • When wilt thou shake off this Pedantery,
  • Of being taught by sense, and Fantasie?
  • Thou look'st through spectacles; small things seeme great
  • Below; But up unto the watch-towre get,
  • And see all things despoyl'd of fallacies: 295
  • Thou shalt not peepe through lattices of eyes,
  • Nor heare through Labyrinths of eares, nor learne
  • By circuit, or collections to discerne.
  • In heaven thou straight know'st all, concerning it,
  • And what concernes it not, shalt straight forget. 300
  • There thou (but in no other schoole) maist bee
  • Perchance, as learned, and as full, as shee,
  • Shee who all libraries had throughly read
  • At home in her owne thoughts, and practised
  • So much good as would make as many more: 305
  • Shee whose example they must all implore,
  • Who would or doe, or thinke well, and confesse
  • That all the vertuous Actions they expresse,
  • Are but a new, and worse edition
  • Of her some one thought, or one action: 310
  • She who in th'art of knowing Heaven, was growne
  • Here upon earth, to such perfection,
  • That she hath, ever since to Heaven she came,
  • (In a far fairer print,) but read the same:
  • Shee, shee not satisfied with all this waight, 315
  • (For so much knowledge, as would over-fraight
  • Another, did but ballast her) is gone
  • As well t'enjoy, as get perfection.
  • And cals us after her, in that shee tooke,
  • (Taking her selfe) our best, and worthiest booke. 320
  • [Sidenote: _Of our company in this life, and in the next._]
  • Returne not, my Soule, from this extasie,
  • And meditation of what thou shalt bee,
  • To earthly thoughts, till it to thee appeare,
  • With whom thy conversation must be there.
  • With whom wilt thou converse? what station 325
  • Canst thou choose out, free from infection,
  • That will not give thee theirs, nor drinke in thine?
  • Shalt thou not finde a spungie slacke Divine
  • Drinke and sucke in th'instructions of Great men,
  • And for the word of God, vent them agen? 330
  • Are there not some Courts (and then, no things bee
  • So like as Courts) which, in this let us see,
  • That wits and tongues of Libellers are weake,
  • Because they do more ill, then these can speake?
  • The poyson's gone through all, poysons affect 335
  • Chiefly the chiefest parts, but some effect
  • In nailes, and haires, yea excrements, will show;
  • So lyes the poyson of sinne in the most low.
  • Up, up, my drowsie Soule, where thy new eare
  • Shall in the Angels songs no discord heare; 340
  • Where thou shalt see the blessed Mother-maid
  • Joy in not being that, which men have said.
  • Where she is exalted more for being good,
  • Then for her interest of Mother-hood.
  • Up to those Patriarchs, which did longer sit 345
  • Expecting Christ, then they'have enjoy'd him yet.
  • Up to those Prophets, which now gladly see
  • Their Prophesies growne to be Historie.
  • Up to th'Apostles, who did bravely runne
  • All the Suns course, with more light then the Sunne. 350
  • Up to those Martyrs, who did calmly bleed
  • Oyle to th'Apostles Lamps, dew to their seed.
  • Up to those Virgins, who thought, that almost
  • They made joyntenants with the Holy Ghost,
  • If they to any should his Temple give. 355
  • Up, up, for in that squadron there doth live
  • She, who hath carried thither new degrees
  • (As to their number) to their dignities.
  • Shee, who being to her selfe a State, injoy'd
  • All royalties which any State employ'd; 360
  • For shee made warres, and triumph'd; reason still
  • Did not o'rthrow, but rectifie her will:
  • And she made peace, for no peace is like this,
  • That beauty, and chastity together kisse:
  • She did high justice, for she crucified 365
  • Every first motion of rebellious pride:
  • And she gave pardons, and was liberall,
  • For, onely her selfe except, she pardon'd all:
  • Shee coy'nd, in this, that her impressions gave
  • To all our actions all the worth they have: 370
  • She gave protections; the thoughts of her brest
  • Satans rude Officers could ne'r arrest.
  • As these prerogatives being met in one,
  • Made her a soveraigne State; religion
  • Made her a Church; and these two made her all. 375
  • She who was all this All, and could not fall
  • To worse, by company, (for she was still
  • More Antidote, then all the world was ill,)
  • Shee, shee doth leave it, and by Death, survive
  • All this, in Heaven; whither who doth not strive 380
  • The more, because shees there, he doth not know
  • That accidentall joyes in Heaven doe grow.
  • But pause, my soule; And study, ere thou fall
  • On accidentall joyes, th'essentiall.
  • [Sidenote: _Of essentiall joy in this life and in the next._]
  • Still before Accessories doe abide 385
  • A triall, must the principall be tride.
  • And what essentiall joy can'st thou expect
  • Here upon earth? what permanent effect
  • Of transitory causes? Dost thou love
  • Beauty? (And beauty worthy'st is to move) 390
  • Poore cousened cousenor, _that_ she, and _that_ thou,
  • Which did begin to love, are neither now;
  • You are both fluid, chang'd since yesterday;
  • Next day repaires, (but ill) last dayes decay.
  • Nor are, (although the river keepe the name) 395
  • Yesterdaies waters, and to daies the same.
  • So flowes her face, and thine eyes, neither now
  • That Saint, nor Pilgrime, which your loving vow
  • Concern'd, remaines; but whil'st you thinke you bee
  • Constant, you'are hourely in inconstancie. 400
  • Honour may have pretence unto our love,
  • Because that God did live so long above
  • Without this Honour, and then lov'd it so,
  • That he at last made Creatures to bestow
  • Honour on him; not that he needed it, 405
  • But that, to his hands, man might grow more fit.
  • But since all Honours from inferiours flow,
  • (For they doe give it; Princes doe but shew
  • Whom they would have so honor'd) and that this
  • On such opinions, and capacities 410
  • Is built, as rise and fall, to more and lesse:
  • Alas, 'tis but a casuall happinesse.
  • Hath ever any man to'himselfe assign'd
  • This or that happinesse to'arrest his minde,
  • But that another man which takes a worse, 415
  • Thinks him a foole for having tane that course?
  • They who did labour Babels tower to'erect,
  • Might have considered, that for that effect,
  • All this whole solid Earth could not allow
  • Nor furnish forth materialls enow; 420
  • And that this Center, to raise such a place,
  • Was farre too little, to have beene the Base;
  • No more affords this world, foundation
  • To erect true joy, were all the meanes in one.
  • But as the Heathen made them severall gods, 425
  • Of all Gods Benefits, and all his Rods,
  • (For as the Wine, and Corne, and Onions are
  • Gods unto them, so Agues bee, and Warre)
  • And as by changing that whole precious Gold
  • To such small Copper coynes, they lost the old, 430
  • And lost their only God, who ever must
  • Be sought alone, and not in such a thrust:
  • So much mankinde true happinesse mistakes;
  • No Joy enjoyes that man, that many makes.
  • Then, Soule, to thy first pitch worke up againe; 435
  • Know that all lines which circles doe containe,
  • For once that they the Center touch, doe touch
  • Twice the circumference; and be thou such;
  • Double on heaven thy thoughts on earth emploid;
  • All will not serve; Only who have enjoy'd 440
  • The sight of God, in fulnesse, can thinke it;
  • For it is both the object, and the wit.
  • This is essentiall joy, where neither hee
  • Can suffer diminution, nor wee;
  • 'Tis such a full, and such a filling good; 445
  • Had th'Angels once look'd on him, they had stood.
  • To fill the place of one of them, or more,
  • Shee whom wee celebrate, is gone before.
  • She, who had Here so much essentiall joy,
  • As no chance could distract, much lesse destroy; 450
  • Who with Gods presence was acquainted so,
  • (Hearing, and speaking to him) as to know
  • His face in any naturall Stone, or Tree,
  • Better then when in Images they bee:
  • Who kept by diligent devotion, 455
  • Gods Image, in such reparation,
  • Within her heart, that what decay was growne,
  • Was her first Parents fault, and not her owne:
  • Who being solicited to any act,
  • Still heard God pleading his safe precontract; 460
  • Who by a faithfull confidence, was here
  • Betroth'd to God, and now is married there;
  • Whose twilights were more cleare, then our mid-day;
  • Who dreamt devoutlier, then most use to pray;
  • Who being here fil'd with grace, yet strove to bee, 465
  • Both where more grace, and more capacitie
  • At once is given: she to Heaven is gone,
  • Who made this world in some proportion
  • A heaven, and here, became unto us all,
  • Joy, (as our joyes admit) essentiall. 470
  • [Sidenote: _Of accidentall joys in both places._]
  • But could this low world joyes essentiall touch,
  • Heavens accidentall joyes would passe them much.
  • How poore and lame, must then our casuall bee?
  • If thy Prince will his subjects to call thee
  • _My Lord_, and this doe swell thee, thou art than, 475
  • By being greater, growne to bee lesse Man.
  • When no Physitian of redresse can speake,
  • A joyfull casuall violence may breake
  • A dangerous Apostem in thy breast;
  • And whil'st thou joyest in this, the dangerous rest, 480
  • The bag may rise up, and so strangle thee.
  • What e'r was casuall, may ever bee.
  • What should the nature change? Or make the same
  • Certaine, which was but casuall, when it came?
  • All casuall joy doth loud and plainly say, 485
  • Only by comming, that it can away.
  • Only in Heaven joyes strength is never spent;
  • And accidentall things are permanent.
  • Joy of a soules arrivall ne'r decaies;
  • For that soule ever joyes and ever staies. 490
  • Joy that their last great Consummation
  • Approaches in the resurrection;
  • When earthly bodies more celestiall
  • Shall be, then Angels were, for they could fall;
  • This kinde of joy doth every day admit 495
  • Degrees of growth, but none of losing it.
  • In this fresh joy, 'tis no small part, that shee,
  • Shee, in whose goodnesse, he that names degree,
  • Doth injure her; ('Tis losse to be cal'd best,
  • There where the stuffe is not such as the rest) 500
  • Shee, who left such a bodie, as even shee
  • Only in Heaven could learne, how it can bee
  • Made better; for shee rather was two soules,
  • Or like to full on both sides written Rols,
  • Where eyes might reade upon the outward skin, 505
  • As strong Records for God, as mindes within;
  • Shee, who by making full perfection grow,
  • Peeces a Circle, and still keepes it so,
  • Long'd for, and longing for it, to heaven is gone,
  • Where shee receives, and gives addition. 510
  • [Sidenote: _Conclusion._]
  • Here in a place, where mis-devotion frames
  • A thousand Prayers to Saints, whose very names
  • The ancient Church knew not, Heaven knows not yet:
  • And where, what lawes of Poetry admit,
  • Lawes of Religion have at least the same, 515
  • Immortall Maide, I might invoke thy name.
  • Could any Saint provoke that appetite,
  • Thou here should'st make me a French convertite.
  • But thou would'st not; nor would'st thou be content,
  • To take this, for my second yeares true Rent, 520
  • Did this Coine beare any other stampe, then his,
  • That gave thee power to doe, me, to say this.
  • Since his will is, that to posteritie,
  • Thou should'st for life, and death, a patterne bee,
  • And that the world should notice have of this, 525
  • The purpose, and th'authoritie is his;
  • Thou art the Proclamation; and I am
  • The Trumpet, at whose voyce the people came.
  • [Footnote 1: _The entrance._ _1612-21_: _om. 1625-33_:
  • _no notes, 1635-69_]
  • [Footnote 2: _disestimation_] _estimation_ _1625_]
  • [Footnote 3: _Incommodities &c._ _1612-21:_ _om. 1625-33_]
  • [Footnote 4: _Her ignorance &c.:_ _1612-25:_ _om. 1633_]
  • [5 All, _1612_: all, _1625-69_]
  • [10 Though] Through _1612-25_]
  • [12 be fail'd,] he fail'd, _1621-33_]
  • [13 twinckle] twincke _1625_]
  • [20 strings: _Ed_: strings. _1612-69_]
  • [23 are _Ed:_ are, _1612-69_]
  • [24 was fram'd, _1612-25:_ was fram'd: _1633-69_]
  • [27 Deluge, _1612-25:_ deluge, _1633-69_]
  • [29 all. _Ed:_ all, _1612-33:_ all; _1635-69_]
  • [33 Maid, _1612-25_, _1669:_ maid, _1633-54_]
  • [35 is, _1612-25:_ is _1633-69_]
  • [43 thy] they _1621-25_
  • issue, _1612-33:_ issue _1635-69_. _See note_]
  • [46 safe-sealing] safe-fealing _1621-39_]
  • [47 goe] goe; _1612-25_]
  • [48 Health, _1612-33:_ Health; _1635-69_, _Chambers and
  • Grolier_
  • so. _1612-21:_ so, _1625-69_, _Chambers and Grolier_. _See
  • note_]
  • [50 bee. _Ed:_ bee _1612-35:_ bee, _1639-69_]
  • [51 why, _1612-21:_ why _1625-69_
  • nor] or _1669_]
  • [57 more, _1612-25:_ more _1633-69_]
  • [67 was but] twas but _1612-25_]
  • [81 Shee, shee _1621-25:_ Shee, she _1633-69_]
  • [82 is] is. _1612-25_]
  • [96 parch'd _1612-21_, _1639-69:_ pach'd _1625:_ patch'd
  • _1633-35_]
  • [99 knell,] knell _1633_]
  • [101 So this, _1612-33:_ So, this _1635-69_]
  • [103 thrust;] trust; _1669_]
  • [113 shroud] shourd _1621-25_]
  • [116 exalted] exhalted _1621_
  • goe,] goe. _1612-21_]
  • [123 Complexion _1612-25:_ complexion _1633-69_]
  • [124 Ingredients _1612-25:_ ingredients _1633-69_]
  • [134 a point, _1612-21:_ a-point. _1625:_ a point: _1633-69_]
  • [136 there. _1612-25:_ there, _1633-69_]
  • [137 wonne] worne _1612-25:_ woon _1633_]
  • [140 to _1612-25:_ too _1633-69_]
  • [146 Accident _1612-25:_ accident _1633-69_]
  • [156 Death _1612-25:_ death _1633-69_]
  • [161 thee, both _1612-25:_ thee both _1633-69_]
  • [172 first-built _1612-25:_ first built _1633-69_]
  • [173 didst] dost _1669_]
  • [177 the rage _1612-25:_ a rage _1633-69_]
  • [179 Death _1612-25:_ death _1633-69_]
  • [181 Peece, discharg'd, _1612:_ Peece, discharg'd _1625:_
  • Peece discharg'd _1633:_ Peece discharg'd, _1635-69_]
  • [183 This _1612-25:_ this _1633-69_]
  • [185 soule, _1612-21:_ soule _1625-69_]
  • [187 Twenty, perchance,] Twentie, perchance _1625:_ Twenty
  • perchance _1633-69_]
  • [197 _Venus_] _no ital. 1612-25, and so with_ Hesper _&c._
  • retards] recards _1612-25_]
  • [201 Who, if _1612-25:_ Who if _1633-69_]
  • [204 barr'd;] bard; _1612-39_]
  • [209 the] those _1669_]
  • [214 her] _om. 1650-69_]
  • [219-20 _text 1612-25_ (_but_ soul _1612-25, and_ then _1625
  • and_ shee _1612-25_):
  • This must, my Soule, thy long-short Progresse bee,
  • To'advance these thoughts; Remember then that she,
  • _1633-69_, _Chambers and Grolier_. _See note_]
  • [231 discoverie] Discoveree. _1612-25_]
  • [232 Of all,] Of all _1612-25_]
  • [236 assign'd _Ed:_ assigned _1612-69_]
  • [238 Dignities, _1612-25:_ dignities, _1633-69_]
  • [241 Gold, _1612-25:_ gold, _1633-69_]
  • [243 understood] unstood _1621-25_]
  • [249 well,] well _1612-25_]
  • [251 little] little _1633_]
  • [265 Ayre, and Fire, _1612-25:_ aire, and fire, _1633-69_]
  • [266 ingredients, _1612:_ ingredients. _1621-69_]
  • [268 'tis] ty's _1612-21_]
  • [270 breake _1612:_ brake _1621-33:_ break _1635-69_]
  • [287 said. _1612-25:_ said, _1633-69_]
  • [291 Pedantery] Pedantry _1650-69_]
  • [292 taught] thought _1612-25_]
  • [300 shalt] shall _1612-25_, _1669_]
  • [308 all] aie _1612-21:_ are _1625_]
  • [314 print,] point, _1612-33_]
  • [323 earthly] early _1625_]
  • [324 there.] there, _1633-39_]
  • [326 choose _1612-25:_ chose _1633-69_]
  • [327 will not] will nor _1612-25_]
  • [328 Divine _1612-25:_ Divine, _1633-69_]
  • [329 Great _1612-25:_ great _1633-69_]
  • [333 wits _1612-25:_ wits, _1633-69_]
  • [336 some] some, _1633_]
  • [338 lyes] wise _1612-25_]
  • [353 thought] thoughts _1612-25_]
  • [366 rebellious] rebellions _1635-69_]
  • [369 impressions _1612-25:_ _rest_ impression]
  • [378 ill,)] _last bracket dropped 1612-33_]
  • [380 whither] _spelt_ whether _1612-33_]
  • [383 study, _1635-69:_ study _1612-33_]
  • [391 _that_ ... _that_] _no italics 1612-25_]
  • [397 eies, _1612-21:_ eyes _1625:_ eyes; _1633-69_,
  • _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [398 Saint, _1612-25:_ Saint _1633-69_
  • vow] row _1612-25_]
  • [399 remaines;] remaines, _1612-25_]
  • [402 that] _in italics 1633-69_]
  • [404 Creatures _1612-25:_ creatures _1633-69_]
  • [416 Thinks] Thinke _1612-25_]
  • [420 enow] enough _1633_]
  • [421 this _1612:_ his _1621-69_]
  • [421-2 place, ... little, _1612:_ place ... little, _1621-33_]
  • [423 affords] affoords _1612-25_
  • world, foundation _1633-69:_ worlds, foundatione _1612-25_]
  • [426 Benefits ... Rods] _capitals from 1612-25_]
  • [428 Warre] _no capital 1612-39_]
  • [429 that] the _1625_]
  • [433 much] much, _1633-39_]
  • [435 up] upon _1612-25_]
  • [449 Here _1612-25:_ here _1633-69_]
  • [463 cleare,] cleane, _1635_]
  • [475 _My Lord_] _no italics 1612-25_]
  • [477 redresse] Reders _1612-25_]
  • [482 What e'r] What eye _1612-25_]
  • [500 where] waere _1612_]
  • [501 even] ever _1625_]
  • [506: within; _Ed:_ within, _1612-39:_ within. _1650-69_]
  • [516: invoke] inroque _1612-25_]
  • [518 French _1635-69:_ french _1612-33_]
  • [520 Rent] Rent. _1633_]
  • * * * * *
  • EPICEDES AND OBSEQVIES
  • _Vpon_
  • The deaths of sundry Personages.
  • * * * * *
  • _Elegie upon the untimely death of the incomparable Prince Henry._
  • Looke to mee faith, and looke to my faith, God;
  • For both my centers feele this period.
  • Of waight one center, one of greatnesse is;
  • And Reason is that center, Faith is this;
  • For into'our reason flow, and there do end 5
  • All, that this naturall world doth comprehend:
  • Quotidian things, and equidistant hence,
  • Shut in, for man, in one circumference.
  • But for th'enormous greatnesses, which are
  • So disproportion'd, and so angulare, 10
  • As is Gods essence, place and providence,
  • Where, how, when, what soules do, departed hence,
  • These things (eccentrique else) on faith do strike;
  • Yet neither all, nor upon all, alike.
  • For reason, put to'her best extension, 15
  • Almost meetes faith, and makes both centers one.
  • And nothing ever came so neare to this,
  • As contemplation of that Prince, wee misse.
  • For all that faith might credit mankinde could,
  • Reason still seconded, that this prince would. 20
  • If then least moving of the center, make
  • More, then if whole hell belch'd, the world to shake,
  • What must this do, centers distracted so,
  • That wee see not what to beleeve or know?
  • Was it not well beleev'd till now, that hee, 25
  • Whose reputation was an extasie
  • On neighbour States, which knew not why to wake,
  • Till hee discover'd what wayes he would take;
  • For whom, what Princes angled, when they tryed,
  • Met a _Torpedo_, and were stupified; 30
  • And others studies, how he would be bent;
  • Was his great fathers greatest instrument,
  • And activ'st spirit, to convey and tie
  • This soule of peace, through Christianity?
  • Was it not well beleev'd, that hee would make 35
  • This generall peace, th'Eternall overtake,
  • And that his times might have stretch'd out so farre,
  • As to touch those, of which they emblems are?
  • For to confirme this just beleefe, that now
  • The last dayes came, wee saw heav'n did allow, 40
  • That, but from his aspect and exercise,
  • In peacefull times, Rumors of war did rise.
  • But now this faith is heresie: we must
  • Still stay, and vexe our great-grand-mother, Dust.
  • Oh, is God prodigall? hath he spent his store 45
  • Of plagues, on us; and onely now, when more
  • Would ease us much, doth he grudge misery;
  • And will not let's enjoy our curse; to dy?
  • As, for the earth throwne lowest downe of all,
  • T'were an ambition to desire to fall, 50
  • So God, in our desire to dye, doth know
  • Our plot for ease, in being wretched so.
  • Therefore we live; though such a life wee have,
  • As but so many mandrakes on his grave.
  • What had his growth, and generation done, 55
  • When, what we are, his putrefaction
  • Sustaines in us; Earth, which griefes animate?
  • Nor hath our world now, other Soule then that.
  • And could griefe get so high as heav'n, that Quire,
  • Forgetting this their new joy, would desire 60
  • (With griefe to see him) hee had staid below,
  • To rectifie our errours, They foreknow.
  • Is th'other center, Reason, faster then?
  • Where should we looke for that, now we'are not men?
  • For if our Reason be'our connexion 65
  • Of causes, now to us there can be none.
  • For, as, if all the substances were spent,
  • 'Twere madnesse, to enquire of accident,
  • So is't to looke for reason, hee being gone,
  • The onely subject reason wrought upon. 70
  • If Fate have such a chaine, whose divers links
  • Industrious man discerneth, as hee thinks;
  • When miracle doth come, and so steale in
  • A new linke, man knowes not, where to begin:
  • At a much deader fault must reason bee, 75
  • Death having broke off such a linke as hee.
  • But now, for us, with busie proofe to come,
  • That we'have no reason, would prove wee had some.
  • So would just lamentations: Therefore wee
  • May safelyer say, that we are dead, then hee. 80
  • So, if our griefs wee do not well declare,
  • We'have double excuse; he'is not dead; and we are.
  • Yet I would not dy yet; for though I bee
  • Too narrow, to thinke him, as hee is hee,
  • (Our Soules best baiting, and midd-period, 85
  • In her long journey, of considering God)
  • Yet, (no dishonour) I can reach him thus,
  • As he embrac'd the fires of love, with us.
  • Oh may I, (since I live) but see, or heare,
  • That she-Intelligence which mov'd this spheare, 90
  • I pardon Fate, my life: Who ere thou bee,
  • Which hast the noble conscience, thou art shee,
  • I conjure thee by all the charmes he spoke,
  • By th'oathes, which onely you two never broke,
  • By all the soules yee sigh'd, that if you see 95
  • These lines, you wish, I knew your history.
  • So much, as you, two mutuall heav'ns were here,
  • I were an Angell, singing what you were.
  • [Epicedes _&c._ _1635-69:_ Elegie upon _&c._ _1613_, _in the_
  • Lachrymae Lachrymarum _&c. of Joshua Sylvester_. _See note:_
  • Elegie on Prince Henry. _1633-54_, _O'F:_ _similarly_, _Cy_,
  • _N_, _TCD:_ An Elegie on the untimely _&c._ _1669_]
  • [8 man _1633-69:_ men _1613_]
  • [17 neare] nere _1633_]
  • [18 that _1633-69:_ the _1613_]
  • [19 might credit _1633-69:_ could credit _1613_]
  • [21 moving _1633-69:_ movings _1613_]
  • [22 shake, _1650-69:_ shake. _1633-39_]
  • [26 extasie _Ed:_ exstasie, _1633-69_]
  • [31 bent; _Ed:_ bent, _1613_, _1633-69_]
  • [34 through _1613-33:_ to _1635-69_
  • Christianity? _1669:_ Christianity: _1633-54_]
  • [42 did _1633:_ should _1613_, _1635-69_]
  • [44 great-grand-mother, _1613:_ great grand mother, _1633:_
  • great grand-mother, _1635-69_]
  • [46 us;] us, _1633_]
  • [48 to dy? _Ed:_ to dy. _1633:_ to die! _1635-54:_ _no stop_,
  • _1669_]
  • [57 animate?] animate; _1633_]
  • [66 Of _1633-69:_ With _1613_]
  • [67 as, _1613:_ as _1633-69_]
  • [69 So is't to] So is' to _1669_]
  • [71 Fate _1633-69:_ Faith _1613_]
  • [72 thinks; _Ed:_ thinks, _1613_, _1633-69_]
  • [73 come, _1633-69:_ joine; _1613_
  • so steale in _1633-69:_ to steal-in _1613_]
  • [77 proofe _1633-69:_ proofes _1613_]
  • [78 some. _1633:_ some, _1635-69_]
  • [80 hee. _1633:_ hee, _1635-69_]
  • [82 and we are. _1633-54:_ we are. _1613_, _1669_]
  • [83 I would not _1633-54:_ would not I _1669_]
  • [91 Who _Ed:_ who _1633-69_]
  • [92 shee, _1633-69:_ she. _Chambers_]
  • [97 So much, as you, _1633-69:_ So, much as you _Chambers_]
  • _To the Countesse of_ Bedford.
  • MADAME,
  • _I have learn'd by those lawes wherein I am a[1] little conversant,
  • that hee which bestowes any cost upon the dead, obliges him which is
  • dead, but not the[2] heire; I do not therefore send this paper to your
  • Ladyship, that you should thanke mee for it, or thinke that I thanke
  • you in it; your favours and benefits to mee are so much above my
  • merits, that they are even above my gratitude, if that were to be
  • judged by words which must expresse it: But, Madame, since your noble
  • brothers fortune being yours, the evidences also concerning it are
  • yours,[3] so his vertue[4] being yours, the evidences concerning
  • it,[5] belong also to you, of which by your acceptance this may be one
  • peece, in which quality I humbly present it, and as a testimony how
  • intirely your familie possesseth_
  • Your Ladiships most humble
  • and thankfull servant
  • JOHN DONNE.
  • [To the Countesse _&c._ _1633-69_, _and in most of the MSS. as
  • next page_]
  • [Footnote 1: a _1633-54:_ _om. 1669_]
  • [Footnote 2: the] his _1669_]
  • [Footnote 3: yours, _1633:_ yours: _1635-69_]
  • [Footnote 4: vertue _1633:_ vertues _1635-69_]
  • [Footnote 5: it, _1633:_ that _1635-69_]
  • _Obsequies to the Lord Harrington, brother to the Lady Lucy,
  • Countesse of Bedford._
  • Faire soule, which wast, not onely, as all soules bee,
  • Then when thou wast infused, harmony,
  • But did'st continue so; and now dost beare
  • A part in Gods great organ, this whole Spheare:
  • If looking up to God; or downe to us, 5
  • Thou finde that any way is pervious,
  • Twixt heav'n and earth, and that mans actions doe
  • Come to your knowledge, and affections too,
  • See, and with joy, mee to that good degree
  • Of goodnesse growne, that I can studie thee, 10
  • And, by these meditations refin'd,
  • Can unapparell and enlarge my minde,
  • And so can make by this soft extasie,
  • This place a map of heav'n, my selfe of thee.
  • Thou seest mee here at midnight, now all rest; 15
  • Times dead-low water; when all mindes devest
  • To morrows businesse, when the labourers have
  • Such rest in bed, that their last Church-yard grave,
  • Subject to change, will scarce be'a type of this,
  • Now when the clyent, whose last hearing is 20
  • To morrow, sleeps, when the condemned man,
  • (Who when hee opes his eyes, must shut them than
  • Againe by death,) although sad watch hee keepe,
  • Doth practice dying by a little sleepe,
  • Thou at this midnight seest mee, and as soone 25
  • As that Sunne rises to mee, midnight's noone,
  • All the world growes transparent, and I see
  • Through all, both Church and State, in seeing thee;
  • And I discerne by favour of this light,
  • My selfe, the hardest object of the sight. 30
  • God is the glasse; as thou when thou dost see
  • Him who sees all, seest all concerning thee,
  • So, yet unglorified, I comprehend
  • All, in these mirrors of thy wayes, and end.
  • Though God be our true glasse, through which we see 35
  • All, since the beeing of all things is hee,
  • Yet are the trunkes which doe to us derive
  • Things, in proportion fit, by perspective,
  • Deeds of good men; for by their living here,
  • Vertues, indeed remote, seeme to be neare. 40
  • But where can I affirme, or where arrest
  • My thoughts on his deeds? which shall I call best?
  • For fluid vertue cannot be look'd on,
  • Nor can endure a contemplation.
  • As bodies change, and as I do not weare 45
  • Those Spirits, humors, blood I did last yeare,
  • And, as if on a streame I fixe mine eye,
  • That drop, which I looked on, is presently
  • Pusht with more waters from my sight, and gone,
  • So in this sea of vertues, can no one 50
  • Bee'insisted on; vertues, as rivers, passe,
  • Yet still remaines that vertuous man there was.
  • And as if man feed on mans flesh, and so
  • Part of his body to another owe,
  • Yet at the last two perfect bodies rise, 55
  • Because God knowes where every Atome lyes;
  • So, if one knowledge were made of all those,
  • Who knew his minutes well, hee might dispose
  • His vertues into names, and ranks; but I
  • Should injure Nature, Vertue, and Destinie, 60
  • Should I divide and discontinue so,
  • Vertue, which did in one intirenesse grow.
  • For as, hee that would say, spirits are fram'd
  • Of all the purest parts that can be nam'd,
  • Honours not spirits halfe so much, as hee 65
  • Which sayes, they have no parts, but simple bee;
  • So is't of vertue; for a point and one
  • Are much entirer then a million.
  • And had Fate meant to have his vertues told,
  • It would have let him live to have beene old; 70
  • So, then that vertue in season, and then this,
  • We might have seene, and said, that now he is
  • Witty, now wise, now temperate, now just:
  • In good short lives, vertues are faine to thrust,
  • And to be sure betimes to get a place, 75
  • When they would exercise, lacke time, and space.
  • So was it in this person, forc'd to bee
  • For lack of time, his owne epitome:
  • So to exhibit in few yeares as much,
  • As all the long breath'd Chronicles can touch. 80
  • As when an Angell down from heav'n doth flye,
  • Our quick thought cannot keepe him company,
  • Wee cannot thinke, now hee is at the Sunne,
  • Now through the Moon, now he through th'aire doth run,
  • Yet when he's come, we know he did repaire 85
  • To all twixt Heav'n and Earth, Sunne, Moon, and Aire;
  • And as this Angell in an instant knowes,
  • And yet wee know, this sodaine knowledge growes
  • By quick amassing severall formes of things,
  • Which he successively to order brings; 90
  • When they, whose slow-pac'd lame thoughts cannot goe
  • So fast as hee, thinke that he doth not so;
  • Just as a perfect reader doth not dwell,
  • On every syllable, nor stay to spell,
  • Yet without doubt, hee doth distinctly see 95
  • And lay together every A, and B;
  • So, in short liv'd good men, is'not understood
  • Each severall vertue, but the compound good;
  • For, they all vertues paths in that pace tread,
  • As Angells goe, and know, and as men read. 100
  • O why should then these men, these lumps of Balme
  • Sent hither, this worlds tempests to becalme,
  • Before by deeds they are diffus'd and spred,
  • And so make us alive, themselves be dead?
  • O Soule, O circle, why so quickly bee 105
  • Thy ends, thy birth and death, clos'd up in thee?
  • Since one foot of thy compasse still was plac'd
  • In heav'n, the other might securely'have pac'd
  • In the most large extent, through every path,
  • Which the whole world, or man the abridgment hath. 110
  • Thou knowst, that though the tropique circles have
  • (Yea and those small ones which the Poles engrave,)
  • All the same roundnesse, evennesse, and all
  • The endlesnesse of the equinoctiall;
  • Yet, when we come to measure distances, 115
  • How here, how there, the Sunne affected is,
  • When he doth faintly worke, and when prevaile,
  • Onely great circles, than can be our scale:
  • So, though thy circle to thy selfe expresse
  • All, tending to thy endlesse happinesse, 120
  • And wee, by our good use of it may trye,
  • Both how to live well young, and how to die,
  • Yet, since we must be old, and age endures
  • His Torrid Zone at Court, and calentures
  • Of hot ambitions, irrelegions ice, 125
  • Zeales agues, and hydroptique avarice,
  • Infirmities which need the scale of truth,
  • As well as lust, and ignorance of youth;
  • Why did'st thou not for these give medicines too,
  • And by thy doing tell us what to doe? 130
  • Though as small pocket-clocks, whose every wheele
  • Doth each mismotion and distemper feele,
  • Whose _hand_ gets shaking palsies, and whose _string_
  • (His sinewes) slackens, and whose _Soule_, the spring,
  • Expires, or languishes, whose pulse, the _flye_, 135
  • Either beates not, or beates unevenly,
  • Whose voice, the _Bell_, doth rattle, or grow dumbe,
  • Or idle,'as men, which to their last houres come,
  • If these clockes be not wound, or be wound still,
  • Or be not set, or set at every will; 140
  • So, youth is easiest to destruction,
  • If then wee follow all, or follow none.
  • Yet, as in great clocks, which in steeples chime,
  • Plac'd to informe whole towns, to'imploy their time,
  • An error doth more harme, being generall, 145
  • When, small clocks faults, only'on the wearer fall;
  • So worke the faults of age, on which the eye
  • Of children, servants, or the State relie.
  • Why wouldst not thou then, which hadst such a soule,
  • A clock so true, as might the Sunne controule, 150
  • And daily hadst from him, who gave it thee,
  • Instructions, such as it could never be
  • Disordered, stay here, as a generall
  • And great Sun-dyall, to have set us All?
  • O why wouldst thou be any instrument 155
  • To this unnaturall course, or why consent
  • To this, not miracle, but Prodigie,
  • That when the ebbs, longer then flowings be,
  • Vertue, whose flood did with thy youth begin,
  • Should so much faster ebb out, then flow in? 160
  • Though her flood was blowne in, by thy first breath,
  • All is at once sunke in the whirle-poole death.
  • Which word I would not name, but that I see
  • Death, else a desert, growne a Court by thee.
  • Now I grow sure, that if a man would have 165
  • Good companie, his entry is a grave.
  • Mee thinkes all Cities, now, but Anthills bee,
  • Where, when the severall labourers I see,
  • For children, house, Provision, taking paine,
  • They'are all but Ants, carrying eggs, straw, and grain; 170
  • And Church-yards are our cities, unto which
  • The most repaire, that are in goodnesse rich.
  • There is the best concourse, and confluence,
  • There are the holy suburbs, and from thence
  • Begins Gods City, New Jerusalem, 175
  • Which doth extend her utmost gates to them.
  • At that gate then Triumphant soule, dost thou
  • Begin thy Triumph; But since lawes allow
  • That at the Triumph day, the people may,
  • All that they will, 'gainst the Triumpher say, 180
  • Let me here use that freedome, and expresse
  • My griefe, though not to make thy Triumph lesse.
  • By law, to Triumphs none admitted bee,
  • Till they as Magistrates get victorie;
  • Though then to thy force, all youthes foes did yield, 185
  • Yet till fit time had brought thee to that field,
  • To which thy ranke in this state destin'd thee,
  • That there thy counsailes might get victorie,
  • And so in that capacitie remove
  • All jealousies 'twixt Prince and subjects love, 190
  • Thou could'st no title, to this triumph have,
  • Thou didst intrude on death, usurp'dst a grave.
  • Then (though victoriously) thou hadst fought as yet
  • But with thine owne affections, with the heate
  • Of youths desires, and colds of ignorance, 195
  • But till thou should'st successefully advance
  • Thine armes 'gainst forraine enemies, which are
  • Both Envy, and acclamations popular,
  • (For, both these engines equally defeate,
  • Though by a divers Mine, those which are great,) 200
  • Till then thy War was but a civill War,
  • For which to Triumph, none admitted are.
  • No more are they, who though with good successe,
  • In a defensive war, their power expresse;
  • Before men triumph, the dominion 205
  • Must be _enlarg'd_ and not _preserv'd_ alone;
  • Why should'st thou then, whose battailes were to win
  • Thy selfe, from those straits nature put thee in,
  • And to deliver up to God that state,
  • Of which he gave thee the vicariate, 210
  • (Which is thy soule and body) as intire
  • As he, who takes endeavours, doth require,
  • But didst not stay, t'enlarge his kingdome too,
  • By making others, what thou didst, to doe;
  • Why shouldst thou Triumph now, when Heav'n no more 216
  • Hath got, by getting thee, then't had before?
  • For, Heav'n and thou, even when thou livedst here,
  • Of one another in possession were.
  • But this from Triumph most disables thee,
  • That, that place which is conquered, must bee 220
  • Left safe from present warre, and likely doubt
  • Of imminent commotions to breake out:
  • And hath he left us so? or can it bee
  • His territory was no more then Hee?
  • No, we were all his charge, the Diocis 225
  • Of ev'ry exemplar man, the whole world is,
  • And he was joyned in commission
  • With Tutelar Angels, sent to every one.
  • But though this freedome to upbraid, and chide
  • Him who Triumph'd, were lawfull, it was ty'd 230
  • With this, that it might never reference have
  • Unto the Senate, who this triumph gave;
  • Men might at Pompey jeast, but they might not
  • At that authoritie, by which he got
  • Leave to Triumph, before, by age, he might; 235
  • So, though, triumphant soule, I dare to write,
  • Mov'd with a reverentiall anger, thus,
  • That thou so earely wouldst abandon us;
  • Yet I am farre from daring to dispute
  • With that great soveraigntie, whose absolute 240
  • Prerogative hath thus dispens'd with thee,
  • 'Gainst natures lawes, which just impugners bee
  • Of early triumphs; And I (though with paine)
  • Lessen our losse, to magnifie thy gaine
  • Of triumph, when I say, It was more fit, 245
  • That all men should lacke thee, then thou lack it.
  • Though then in our time, be not suffered
  • That testimonie of love, unto the dead,
  • To die with them, and in their graves be hid,
  • As Saxon wives, and French soldurii did; 250
  • And though in no degree I can expresse
  • Griefe in great Alexanders great excesse,
  • Who at his friends death, made whole townes devest
  • Their walls and bullwarks which became them best:
  • Doe not, faire soule, this sacrifice refuse, 255
  • That in thy grave I doe interre my Muse,
  • Who, by my griefe, great as thy worth, being cast
  • Behind hand, yet hath spoke, and spoke her last.
  • [Obsequies to _&c._ _B_, _S96_ _and similarly_ _A25_, _C_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD:_ Obsequies
  • to the Lord Harringtons brother. To the Countesse of Bedford.
  • _1633-54:_ Obsequies on the Lord Harrington, &c. To the
  • Countess of Bedford. _1669_]
  • [7 mans _1633_, _D_, _H49:_ mens _1635-69 and most MSS_.]
  • [11 these _1633-69:_ those _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [15 midnight, now _1633-69:_ midnight; now _Chambers:_
  • midnight now, _Grolier_]
  • [26 that Sunne] this Sunne _N_, _TCD_]
  • [30 hardest] hardyest _1669_]
  • [34 end. _D:_ end; _1633-69_]
  • [35 our true glasse, _1633-69_ (glass, _1633_): truly our
  • glass _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCD_
  • see] see. _1633_ _some copies_, _1635_]
  • [38 Things, in proportion fit, by perspective, _D:_ Things, in
  • proportion fit by perspective, _1633:_ Things, in proportion,
  • fit by perspective, _1635-54_, _Chambers:_ Things in
  • proportion, fit by perspective, _1669_. _See note_]
  • [39 men; _D:_ men, _1633:_ men: _1635-69_]
  • living _1633:_ beeing _1635-69_, _Chambers and Grolier_]
  • [40 neare. _1635-69:_ nere; _1633_]
  • [44 contemplation. _Ed:_ contemplation; _1633-69_]
  • [51 on; _Ed:_ on, _1633-69_]
  • [52 was. _Ed:_ was; _1633-69_]
  • [53 feed _1635-69 and MSS.:_ feeds _1633_]
  • [63 would _1633:_ should _1635-69_]
  • [69 to have his _1633_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD:_ to'have had his _1635-69_, _O'F_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [70 old; _Ed:_ old, _1633-39:_ old. _1650-69_]
  • [71 So, then that _Ed:_ So then, that _1633:_ So, then, that
  • _1635-69_]
  • [76 exercise] exercse _1633_ _some copies:_ encrease _D_,
  • _H49_, _Lec:_ exercise: they _S_
  • lacke _1633-54:_ last _1669_
  • time] room _A25_, _B_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [78 epitome: _D:_ epitome. _1633-69_]
  • [80 Chronicles] Chroniclers _1669_
  • can touch.] can touch; _1633_]
  • [84 he] _om. 1669_, _O'F_]
  • [86 Aire; _1669:_ Aire. _1633-35:_ Air, _1639-54_]
  • [87 instant] instant, _1633_]
  • [98 good; _Ed:_ good. _1633-69_]
  • [102 this _A25_, _B_, _C_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _TCD:_ the _1633-69_
  • tempests _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _S96_, _TCD:_ tempest
  • _1633-69_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [106 death, _Ed:_ death _1633-69_]
  • [110 man] man, _1633_
  • hath.] hath, _1633_ _some copies_, _1633-39_]
  • [117 When ... when _1633-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ Where ...
  • where _rest of MSS._]
  • [118 circles, than can _D:_ circles, then, can _1633-69_]
  • [121 it] that _many MSS._]
  • [125 ambitions,] ambition, _1669_]
  • [126 agues, _Ed:_ agues; _1633-69_]
  • [127-8 _in brackets_ _1635-69_]
  • [128 As well as lust, _1669:_ As well, as lust _1633-54_]
  • [130 tell us _1633_, _1669_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _S_,
  • _TCD:_ set us _1635-54_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _and Chambers_]
  • [133 _hand_ gets _A25_, _B_, _C_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _S_,
  • _TCD:_ _hands_ get _1633-54:_ _hands_ gets _1669_. _See note_]
  • [135 _flye_, _1633:_ _flee_, _1635-69_]
  • [138 houres come, _1633-54:_ hour come, _1669:_ hours are
  • come, _Chambers_]
  • [142 none. _1635-69:_ none; _1633_]
  • [146 fall; _Ed:_ fall. _1633-69_]
  • [154 great] grave _A25_, _C_]
  • [155 wouldst] wouldest _1639-54_
  • any _1633-35_, _and MSS.:_ an _1639-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [158 when _1633-69:_ where _C_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _TCD:_ whereas _B_]
  • [161 was _1633:_ were _1635-69_]
  • [165 grow sure, _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ am sure, _1635-69_]
  • [170 and _1633-69:_ or _A25_, _B_, _C_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [176 them. _D:_ them; _1633_, _1639-69:_ them, _1635_]
  • [178 Triumph; _1633:_ Triumph. _1635-69_]
  • [184 victorie; _Ed:_ victorie, _1633-69_]
  • [186 brought] wrought _1639_, _Chambers_]
  • [192 usurp'dst _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TCD:_ usurp'st
  • _1633_, _Lec_, _S96:_ usurpe _1635-69_, _A25_, _JC_, _O'F_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [193 Then _1635-69:_ That _1633_]
  • [198 acclamations _1669_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD:_ acclamation _1633-54_]
  • [202 are. _D:_ are; _1633-69_]
  • [204 expresse; _Ed:_ expresse. _1633-69_]
  • [212 endeavours, _1633-54_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD:_ Indentours, _1669_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [216 'thad] t'had _1633-39_]
  • [218 were. _D:_ were; _1633-69_]
  • [222 out: _1635-69:_ out. _1633_]
  • [224 His _1633-54:_ This _1669_
  • then _1633-69:_ but _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • [231 reference] reverence _1650-54_]
  • [239 I am] am I _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [241 with _1633-69_, _O'F:_ for _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [247 time,] times, _1669_, _B_, _JC_, _O'F_, _N_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [250 soldurii _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ soldarii _1633-69_]
  • [251 expresse] expresse, _1633_]
  • [257 Who, _1633:_ Which, _1639-69_]
  • _Elegie on the Lady_ Marckham.
  • Man is the World, and death th'Ocean,
  • To which God gives the lower parts of man.
  • This Sea invirons all, and though as yet
  • God hath set markes, and bounds, twixt us and it,
  • Yet doth it rore, and gnaw, and still pretend, 5
  • And breaks our bankes, when ere it takes a friend.
  • Then our land waters (teares of passion) vent;
  • Our waters, then, above our firmament,
  • (Teares which our Soule doth for her sins let fall)
  • Take all a brackish taft, and Funerall, 10
  • And even these teares, which should wash sin, are sin.
  • We, after Gods _Noe_, drowne our world againe.
  • Nothing but man of all invenom'd things
  • Doth worke upon itselfe, with inborne stings.
  • Teares are false Spectacles, we cannot see 15
  • Through passions mist, what wee are, or what shee.
  • In her this sea of death hath made no breach,
  • But as the tide doth wash the slimie beach,
  • And leaves embroder'd workes upon the sand,
  • So is her flesh refin'd by deaths cold hand. 20
  • As men of China,'after an ages stay,
  • Do take up Porcelane, where they buried Clay;
  • So at this grave, her limbecke, which refines
  • The Diamonds, Rubies, Saphires, Pearles, and Mines,
  • Of which this flesh was, her soule shall inspire 25
  • Flesh of such stuffe, as God, when his last fire
  • Annuls this world, to recompence it, shall,
  • Make and name then, th'Elixar of this All.
  • They say, the sea, when it gaines, loseth too;
  • If carnall Death (the yonger brother) doe 30
  • Usurpe the body,'our soule, which subject is
  • To th'elder death, by sinne, is freed by this;
  • They perish both, when they attempt the just;
  • For, graves our trophies are, and both deaths dust.
  • So, unobnoxious now, she'hath buried both; 35
  • For, none to death sinnes, that to sinne is loth,
  • Nor doe they die, which are not loth to die;
  • So hath she this, and that virginity.
  • Grace was in her extremely diligent,
  • That kept her from sinne, yet made her repent. 40
  • Of what small spots pure white complaines! Alas,
  • How little poyson cracks a christall glasse!
  • She sinn'd, but just enough to let us see
  • That God's word must be true, All, sinners be.
  • Soe much did zeale her conscience rarefie 45
  • That, extreme truth lack'd little of a lye,
  • Making omissions, acts; laying the touch
  • Of sinne, on things that sometimes may be such.
  • As _Moses_ Cherubines, whose natures doe
  • Surpasse all speed, by him are winged too: 50
  • So would her soule, already'in heaven, seeme then,
  • To clyme by teares, the common staires of men.
  • How fit she was for God, I am content
  • To speake, that Death his vaine hast may repent.
  • How fit for us, how even and how sweet, 55
  • How good in all her titles, and how meet,
  • To have reform'd this forward heresie,
  • That women can no parts of friendship bee;
  • How Morall, how Divine shall not be told,
  • Lest they that heare her vertues, thinke her old: 60
  • And lest we take Deaths part, and make him glad
  • Of such a prey, and to his tryumph adde.
  • [Elegie _&c._ _1633-54:_ An Elegie _&c._ _1669:_ _similarly_,
  • _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _C_, _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [6 And breaks _1633-54:_ To break _1669_
  • bankes _D_, _Cy_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _TCC:_ bounds _A25_, _C:_ banke, _1633-69_, _N_ (s _added_),
  • _TCD_]
  • [8 firmament,] firmament. _1633_]
  • [10 Funerall, _Ed:_ Funerall. _1633-69_]
  • [11 these _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ those _1633-69_]
  • [12 after Gods _Noe_, drowne _1633-54_ (_No_, _1633-54_):
  • after God, new drown _1669_
  • our world _1669_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S96_, _TCD:_ the world _1633-54_, _A18_, _A25_, _JC_,
  • _TCC_]
  • [16 mist] mistes _Cy_, _L74_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [19 embroder'd _1635-54:_ embroderd _1633:_ embroider'd
  • _1669_]
  • [21 stay, _Ed:_ stay _1633-69_]
  • [25 which _Ed:_ which, _1633-69_]
  • [28 then, _1633:_ then _1635-39:_ them _1650-69_]
  • [34 and both deaths dust. _Ed:_ and both Deaths' dust.
  • _Grolier:_ and both, deaths dust. _1633:_ and both death's
  • dust. _1635-69 and Chambers:_ and both dead dust. _D_, _Cy_,
  • _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _S96_. _See note_]
  • [36 loth, _Ed:_ loth. _1633-69_]
  • [37 die; _Ed:_ die, _1633-69_]
  • [42 cracks _1633-69_, _A25_, _Cy_, _P_ (crackt): breakes
  • _A18_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _TC_
  • glasse! _Ed:_ glasse? _1633-69_]
  • [44-5 _omitted in 1633 between foot of one page and top of
  • next_]
  • [45 rarefie,] rectify, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _S96_]
  • [48 sometimes _1633 and MSS.:_ sometime _1635-69_, _and
  • Chambers_]
  • [52 teares,] tears _Chambers_
  • the ... men _in brackets_ _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [54 Death _D:_ death _1633-69_]
  • [58 women _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _P_, _TC:_ woman _1633_, _Cy_
  • parts] parte _Cy_, _JC_. _This line written in large letters
  • in several MSS._]
  • [60 vertues, _1633-35_, _1669:_ vertue, _1639-54_
  • thinke] thinks _1639_
  • old: _Ed:_ old. _1633-69_]
  • [62 tryumph _1633-69_, _A25_, _D_, _H40_, _Lec:_ triumphes
  • _A18_, _B_, _H49_, _JC_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • _Elegie on M^{ris}_ Boulstred.
  • Death I recant, and say, unsaid by mee
  • What ere hath slip'd, that might diminish thee.
  • Spirituall treason, atheisme 'tis, to say,
  • That any can thy Summons disobey.
  • Th'earths face is but thy Table; there are set 5
  • Plants, cattell, men, dishes for Death to eate.
  • In a rude hunger now hee millions drawes
  • Into his bloody, or plaguy, or sterv'd jawes.
  • Now hee will seeme to spare, and doth more wast,
  • Eating the best first, well preserv'd to last. 10
  • Now wantonly he spoiles, and eates us not,
  • But breakes off friends, and lets us peecemeale rot.
  • Nor will this earth serve him; he sinkes the deepe
  • Where harmelesse fish monastique silence keepe,
  • Who (were Death dead) by Roes of living sand, 15
  • Might spunge that element, and make it land.
  • He rounds the aire, and breakes the hymnique notes
  • In birds (Heavens choristers,) organique throats,
  • Which (if they did not dye) might seeme to bee
  • A tenth ranke in the heavenly hierarchie. 20
  • O strong and long-liv'd death, how cam'st thou in?
  • And how without Creation didst begin?
  • Thou hast, and shalt see dead, before thou dyest,
  • All the foure Monarchies, and Antichrist.
  • How could I thinke thee nothing, that see now 25
  • In all this All, nothing else is, but thou.
  • Our births and lives, vices, and vertues, bee
  • Wastfull consumptions, and degrees of thee.
  • For, wee to live, our bellowes weare, and breath,
  • Nor are wee mortall, dying, dead, but death. 30
  • And though thou beest, O mighty bird of prey,
  • So much reclaim'd by God, that thou must lay
  • All that thou kill'st at his feet, yet doth hee
  • Reserve but few, and leaves the most to thee.
  • And of those few, now thou hast overthrowne 35
  • One whom thy blow makes, not ours, nor thine own.
  • She was more stories high: hopelesse to come
  • To her Soule, thou'hast offer'd at her lower roome.
  • Her Soule and body was a King and Court:
  • But thou hast both of Captaine mist and fort. 40
  • As houses fall not, though the King remove,
  • Bodies of Saints rest for their soules above.
  • Death gets 'twixt soules and bodies such a place
  • As sinne insinuates 'twixt just men and grace,
  • Both worke a separation, no divorce. 45
  • Her Soule is gone to usher up her corse
  • Which shall be'almost another soule, for there
  • Bodies are purer, then best Soules are here,
  • Because in her, her virtues did outgoe
  • Her yeares, would'st thou, O emulous death, do so? 50
  • And kill her young to thy losse? must the cost
  • Of beauty,'and wit, apt to doe harme, be lost?
  • What though thou found'st her proofe 'gainst sins of youth?
  • Oh, every age a diverse sinne pursueth.
  • Thou should'st have stay'd, and taken better hold, 55
  • Shortly, ambitious; covetous, when old,
  • She might have prov'd: and such devotion
  • Might once have stray'd to superstition.
  • If all her vertues must have growne, yet might
  • Abundant virtue'have bred a proud delight. 60
  • Had she persever'd just, there would have bin
  • Some that would sinne, mis-thinking she did sinne.
  • Such as would call her friendship, love, and faine
  • To sociablenesse, a name profane;
  • Or sinne, by tempting, or, not daring that, 65
  • By wishing, though they never told her what.
  • Thus might'st thou'have slain more soules, had'st thou not crost
  • Thy selfe, and to triumph, thine army lost.
  • Yet though these wayes be lost, thou hast left one,
  • Which is, immoderate griefe that she is gone. 70
  • But we may scape that sinne, yet weepe as much,
  • Our teares are due, because we are not such.
  • Some teares, that knot of friends, her death must cost,
  • Because the chaine is broke, though no linke lost.
  • [Elegie on M^{ris} Boulstred. _1633-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _Cy_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ _in_ _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_ _this and the_ Elegie,
  • Death, be not proud (_p._ 416) _are given as one poem_. _See
  • note_]
  • [5 there are set] and the meate _A18_, _L74_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [6 dishes _1633_, _1650-69:_ dished _1635-39_, _A18_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [10 first,] fruite _or_ fruites _A18_, _H49_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _TC:_ first fruit _P_]
  • [14 keepe, _1635-39:_ keepe. _1633_, _1650-69_]
  • [15 by Roes _1633:_ the Roes _1635-54:_ the Rows _1669:_ by
  • rows _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [18 birds _Ed:_ birds, _1633-69_ (Heavens choristers)]
  • _brackets from HN_]
  • [27 lives, _1635-69_, _A25_, _Cy_, _O'F_, _P_, _S:_ lifes,
  • _HN:_ life, _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [34 to thee. _1633:_ for thee. _1635-69_]
  • [35 thou hast _1633-69:_ hast thou _HN_]
  • [36 blow] blow, _1633_]
  • [41 King _1633_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _HN_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _TC:_ Kings _1635-69_]
  • [45 worke _1633-69_, _HN_, _O'F_, _S:_ workes _A18_, _Cy_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _L74_, _N_, _P_, _TC:_ makes _Lec_. _See note_]
  • [56 Shortly,] Shortly _1633_
  • ambitious; _1635-69:_ ambitious, _1633_]
  • [62 mis-thinking] mistaking _Cy_, _HN_, _O'F_ (_but altered to
  • text_)]
  • [64 profane; _1669:_ profane, _1635-54:_ profane. _1633_]
  • [74 though _1635-69_, _A18_, _A25_, _HN_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ but _1633_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _Lec_]
  • [_Here follow in 1635-54_ By our first strange (_p._ 111),
  • Madame, That I (_p._ 291), _and_ Death be not proud, (_p._
  • 422). _In 1669_ My Fortune and (_p._ 292) _precedes_ Madame,
  • That I]
  • ELEGIE.
  • _Death._
  • Language thou art too narrow, and too weake
  • To ease us now; great sorrow cannot speake;
  • If we could sigh out accents, and weepe words,
  • Griefe weares, and lessens, that tears breath affords.
  • Sad hearts, the lesse they seeme the more they are, 5
  • (So guiltiest men stand mutest at the barre)
  • Not that they know not, feele not their estate,
  • But extreme sense hath made them desperate.
  • Sorrow, to whom we owe all that we bee;
  • Tyrant, in the fift and greatest Monarchy, 10
  • Was't, that she did possesse all hearts before,
  • Thou hast kil'd her, to make thy Empire more?
  • Knew'st thou some would, that knew her not, lament,
  • As in a deluge perish th'innocent?
  • Was't not enough to have that palace wonne, 15
  • But thou must raze it too, that was undone?
  • Had'st thou staid there, and look'd out at her eyes,
  • All had ador'd thee that now from thee flies,
  • For they let out more light, then they tooke in,
  • They told not when, but did the day beginne. 20
  • She was too Saphirine, and cleare for thee;
  • Clay, flint, and jeat now thy fit dwellings be;
  • Alas, shee was too pure, but not too weake;
  • Who e'r saw Christall Ordinance but would break?
  • And if wee be thy conquest, by her fall 25
  • Th'hast lost thy end, for in her perish all;
  • Or if we live, we live but to rebell,
  • They know her better now, that knew her well.
  • If we should vapour out, and pine, and die;
  • Since, shee first went, that were not miserie. 30
  • Shee chang'd our world with hers; now she is gone,
  • Mirth and prosperity is oppression;
  • For of all morall vertues she was all,
  • The Ethicks speake of vertues Cardinall.
  • Her soule was Paradise; the Cherubin 35
  • Set to keepe it was grace, that kept out sinne.
  • Shee had no more then let in death, for wee
  • All reape consumption from one fruitfull tree.
  • God tooke her hence, lest some of us should love
  • Her, like that plant, him and his lawes above, 40
  • And when wee teares, hee mercy shed in this,
  • To raise our mindes to heaven where now she is;
  • Who if her vertues would have let her stay
  • Wee'had had a Saint, have now a holiday.
  • Her heart was that strange bush, where, sacred fire, 45
  • Religion, did not consume, but'inspire
  • Such piety, so chast use of Gods day,
  • That what we turne to _feast_, she turn'd to _pray_,
  • And did prefigure here, in devout tast,
  • The rest of her high Sabaoth, which shall last. 50
  • Angels did hand her up, who next God dwell,
  • (For she was of that order whence most fell)
  • Her body left with us, lest some had said,
  • Shee could not die, except they saw her dead;
  • For from lesse vertue, and lesse beautiousnesse, 55
  • The Gentiles fram'd them Gods and Goddesses.
  • The ravenous earth that now wooes her to be
  • Earth too, will be a _Lemnia_; and the tree
  • That wraps that christall in a wooden Tombe,
  • Shall be tooke up spruce, fill'd with diamond; 60
  • And we her sad glad friends all beare a part
  • Of griefe, for all would waste a Stoicks heart.
  • [Elegie. _1633:_ Elegie XI. Death. _1635-54_ (_being places
  • among the_ Elegies): Elegie XI. _1669:_ An Elegie upon the
  • death of M^{ris} Boulstred. _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ _no title, HN_]
  • [2 sorrow _1633_, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _HN_, _L74_, _N_, _P_,
  • _TC:_ sorrowes _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [8 desperate. _Ed:_ desperate; _1633-69_]
  • [10 Tyrant, _1633_, _1669_ (_no comma_): Tyran, _1635-54_]
  • [20 beginne. _Ed:_ beginne; _1633-69_]
  • [21 for _1635-69:_ to _1633_]
  • [26 for in her _1633 and all the MSS.:_ in her we _1635-69_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [28 They ... that ... well; _1633_, _Cy_, _H40_, _HN_, _L74_,
  • _N_, _S_, _TC:_ That know her better now, who knew her well.
  • _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [29 and pine, and] or pine, or _Cy_, _H40_, _HN_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _S_, _S96:_ or pine, and _L74_, _TCC_]
  • [30 miserie. _Ed:_ miserie; _1633-69_]
  • [34 The Ethicks speake _1633_, _A18_, _Cy_, _H40_, _L74_, _N_,
  • _P_, _TC:_ That Ethickes speake _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S:_
  • The ethenickes spake _HN_
  • Cardinall. _Ed:_ Cardinall; _1633-69_]
  • [36 that kept out] to keep out _HN_, _P_
  • sinne. _Ed:_ sinne; _1633-69_]
  • [37 She had no more; then let in death for we _1669_]
  • [38 tree. _Ed:_ tree; _1633-69_]
  • [41-2 And when we see his mercy shewne in this 'Twill _&c._
  • _S_]
  • [44 holiday. _Ed:_ holiday; _1633-69_
  • _All the MSS. omit_ have, _but O'F inserts it later_]
  • [48 That what _1633-69:_ That when _HN_
  • turne] turn'd _Cy_, _HN_, _P_, _S96_
  • to _feast_, _Ed:_ to feast, _1633-69_
  • feast] feasts _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_
  • to _pray_, _Ed:_ to pray, _1633-69_]
  • [50 last.] last; _1633_]
  • [53 Her body left _1633_, _A18_, _HN_, _N_, _TC:_ Her bodie's
  • left _1635-69_]
  • [56 fram'd] fain'd _Cy_, _P:_ form'd _H40_, _HN_]
  • [57 wooes] woes _1633_
  • be] be, _1633_]
  • [58 _All the MSS. omit_ a _before_ Lemnia, _but O'F inserts_]
  • [61 sad glad _1633-69:_ glad sad _B_, _Cy_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [62 waste _1633_, _A18_, _Cy_, _H40_, _HN_, _L74_, _N_, _P_,
  • _TC:_ breake _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_]
  • _Elegie on the L. C._
  • Sorrow, who to this house scarce knew the way:
  • Is, Oh, heire of it, our All is his prey.
  • This strange chance claimes strange wonder, and to us
  • Nothing can be so strange, as to weepe thus.
  • 'Tis well his lifes loud speaking workes deserve, 5
  • And give praise too, our cold tongues could not serve:
  • 'Tis well, hee kept teares from our eyes before,
  • That to fit this deepe ill, we might have store.
  • Oh, if a sweet briar, climbe up by'a tree,
  • If to a paradise that transplanted bee, 10
  • Or fell'd, and burnt for holy sacrifice,
  • Yet, that must wither, which by it did rise,
  • As we for him dead: though no familie
  • Ere rigg'd a soule for heavens discoverie
  • With whom more Venturers more boldly dare 15
  • Venture their states, with him in joy to share.
  • Wee lose what all friends lov'd, him; he gaines now
  • But life by death, which worst foes would allow,
  • If hee could have foes, in whose practise grew
  • All vertues, whose names subtile Schoolmen knew. 20
  • What ease, can hope that wee shall see'him, beget,
  • When wee must die first, and cannot dye yet?
  • His children are his pictures, Oh they bee
  • Pictures of him dead, senselesse, cold as he.
  • Here needs no marble Tombe, since hee is gone, 25
  • He, and about him, his, are turn'd to stone.
  • [Elegie _&c._ _1635-69_, _following_ Death be not proud (_p._
  • 422): Elegie, Funerall Elegie, _or no title_, _B_, _Cy_, _HN_,
  • _O'F_, _S96:_ Elegie VI. (_being placed among the_ Elegies)
  • _1633:_ Elegie. (_being eighth among_ Elegies) _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec:_ Elegia tercia. _S:_ Elegie XIII^a. _JC_, _W_]
  • [1 who _1633-39:_ that _1650-69_]
  • [2 prey. _1633:_ prey, _1633-54:_ Pay. _1669_]
  • [4 thus. _1669:_ thus; _1633-54_]
  • [13 dead: _1633-69:_ dead. _HN_, _Grolier_]
  • [16 Venture their states] Venter estates _B_
  • share. _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _W:_ share _1633:_ share, _1635-69_,
  • _Chambers and Grolier_. _See note_]
  • [17 him;] him, _1633_]
  • [20 names] name _1635-69_
  • knew. _Ed:_ knew; _1635-69_]
  • [24 he. _1650-69:_ he, _1633-39_]
  • _An hymne to the Saints, and to Marquesse Hamylton._
  • _To Sir Robert Carr._
  • SIR,
  • _I Presume you rather try what you can doe in me, then what I can
  • doe in verse; you know my uttermost when it was best, and even then
  • I did best when I had least truth for my subjects. In this present
  • case there is so much truth as it defeats all Poetry.
  • Call therefore this paper by what name you will, and, if it bee not
  • worthy of him, nor of you, nor of mee, smother it, and bee that the
  • sacrifice. If you had commanded mee to have waited on his body to
  • Scotland and preached there, I would have embraced the obligation
  • with more alacrity; But, I thanke you that you would command me
  • that which I was loath to doe, for, even that hath given a
  • tincture of merit to the obedience of_
  • Your poore friend and
  • servant in Christ Jesus
  • I. D.
  • [2 verse; _1635-69:_ verse, _1633_]
  • [3 best] at the best _A18_, _TCC_
  • subjects. _1635-69:_ subjects, _1633:_ subject, _A18_, _TCC_]
  • [6-7 of him ... sacrifice. _1635-69:_ of you nor of him, we
  • will smother it, and be it your sacrifice. _1633:_ of him, nor
  • of you, nor of anye; smother it, and bee that the sacrifice.
  • _A18_, _TCC_]
  • [9 the _1635-69:_ your _1633_, _A18_, _TCC_
  • more] much _1633_]
  • [10 loath] loather _1633_]
  • in Christ Jesus] _om._ _A18_, _TCC_]
  • Whether that soule which now comes up to you
  • Fill any former ranke or make a new;
  • Whether it take a name nam'd there before,
  • Or be a name it selfe, and _order_ more
  • Then was in heaven till now; (for may not hee 5
  • Bee so, if every severall Angell bee
  • A _kind_ alone?) What ever order grow
  • Greater by him in heaven, wee doe not so.
  • One of your orders growes by his accesse;
  • But, by his losse grow all our _orders_ lesse; 10
  • The name of _Father_, _Master_, _Friend_, the name
  • Of _Subject_ and of _Prince_, in one are lame;
  • Faire mirth is dampt, and conversation black,
  • The _household_ widdow'd, and the _garter_ slack;
  • The _Chappell_ wants an eare, _Councell_ a tongue; 15
  • _Story_, a theame; and _Musicke_ lacks a song;
  • Blest _order_ that hath him! the losse of him
  • Gangreend all _Orders_ here; all lost a limbe.
  • Never made body such hast to confesse
  • What a soule was; All former comelinesse 20
  • Fled, in a minute, when the soule was gone,
  • And, having lost that beauty, would have none;
  • So fell our _Monasteries_, in one instant growne
  • Not to lesse houses, but, to heapes of stone;
  • So sent this body that faire forme it wore, 25
  • Unto the spheare of formes, and doth (before
  • His soule shall fill up his sepulchrall stone,)
  • Anticipate a Resurrection;
  • For, as in his fame, now, his soule is here,
  • So, in the forme thereof his bodie's there. 30
  • And if, faire soule, not with first _Innocents_
  • Thy station be, but with the _Pænitents_,
  • (And, who shall dare to aske then when I am
  • Dy'd scarlet in the blood of that pure Lambe,
  • Whether that colour, which is scarlet then, 35
  • Were black or white before in eyes of men?)
  • When thou rememb'rest what sins thou didst finde
  • Amongst those many friends now left behinde,
  • And seest such sinners as they are, with thee
  • Got thither by repentance, Let it bee 40
  • Thy wish to wish all there, to wish them cleane;
  • Wim _him_ a _David_, _her_ a _Magdalen_.
  • [An hymne _&c._ _1633-69_, _in all of which it is classed with
  • the_ Divine Poems, _following_ Resurrection. _In 1635-69 it
  • is preceded by the letter_ To Sir Robert Carr.: _in 1633 the
  • letter follows_, _and has no heading:_ _similarly in_ _A18_,
  • _O'F_, _TCC_. _See note_]
  • [1 Whether] Whither _1633_, _and so in_ 3]
  • [2 new; _Ed:_ new, _1633-69_]
  • [6 so,] so? _1633_]
  • [7 alone?) _1635-54:_ alone;) _1633:_ alone) _1669_]
  • [8 so. _Ed:_ so; _1633-69_]
  • [12 are _1633_, _A18_, _TCC:_ is _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [16 song; _1633:_ song. _1635-69_]
  • [17 him! _Ed:_ him, _1633-69_]
  • [18 Gangreend _1635-69:_ Gangred _1633_
  • limbe. _1633-35:_ limbe: _1639-69_]
  • [22 none; _Ed:_ none: _1650-69:_ none, _1633-39_]
  • [23 one instant _1633:_ an instant _1635-69_]
  • [25 this _1633_, _A18_, _TCC:_ his _1635-69_]
  • [29 For, as in his _1633-39:_ For, as it his _1650-54:_ For,
  • as it is his _1669_]
  • [30 there. _Ed:_ there; _1633-39:_ there, _1650-69_]
  • [36 in eyes] in the eyes _A18_, _O'F_, _TCC_]
  • EPITAPHS.
  • EPITAPH ON HIMSELFE.
  • _To the Countesse of Bedford._
  • MADAME,
  • That I might make your Cabinet my tombe,
  • And for my fame which I love next my soule,
  • Next to my soule provide the happiest roome,
  • Admit to that place this last funerall Scrowle.
  • Others by Wills give Legacies, but I 5
  • Dying, of you doe beg a Legacie.
  • My fortune and my will this custome breake,
  • When we are senselesse grown to make stones speak,
  • Though no stone tell thee what I was, yet thou
  • In my graves inside see what thou art now: 10
  • Yet th'art not yet so good; till us death lay
  • To ripe and mellow there, w'are stubborne clay,
  • Parents make us earth, and soules dignifie
  • Vs to be glasse, here to grow gold we lie;
  • Whilst in our soules sinne bred and pampered is, 15
  • Our soules become worme-eaten Carkasses.
  • [Epitaph. _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_
  • On himselfe. _1635-69_
  • To the Countesse of Bedford. _O'F_, _S96:_ _no heading, and
  • epistle only_, _A25_, _C_ _The introductory epistle, and
  • the first ten lines of the epitaph, the whole with heading_
  • Elegie., _is printed 1635-54 among the_ Funerall Elegies. _The
  • full epitaph without epistle and with heading_ On himselfe.
  • _is included among the_ Divine Poems, _where it follows the_
  • Lamentations of Jeremy. _In his note Chambers_ (II. 234)
  • _reverses these facts_. _In 1669_ On himselfe. _is transferred
  • to the_ Funerall Elegies _and is followed immediately by the_
  • Elegie, _i.e. the epistle and incomplete epitaph_. _They are
  • here given for the first time in a separate group_]
  • [5 Others by Wills _1635-69:_ Others by testaments _A25_, _C_,
  • _O'F_ (_altered to_ wills), _S96:_ Men by testament _B:_ Then
  • by testament _H40:_ O then by testament _D_, _H49_]
  • [10 now: _1650-69:_ now, _1635-39_]
  • [12 there, _1635_, _1669:_ thee, _1639-54_]
  • _Omnibus._
  • My Fortune and my choice this custome break,
  • When we are speechlesse grown, to make stones speak,
  • Though no stone tell thee what I was, yet thou
  • In my graves inside seest what thou art now:
  • Yet thou'art not yet so good, till death us lay 5
  • To ripe and mellow here, we are stubborne Clay.
  • Parents make us earth, and soules dignifie
  • Vs to be glasse; here to grow gold we lie.
  • Whilst in our soules sinne bred and pamper'd is,
  • Our soules become wormeaten carkases; 10
  • So we our selves miraculously destroy.
  • Here bodies with lesse miracle enjoy
  • Such priviledges, enabled here to scale
  • Heaven, when the Trumpets ayre shall them exhale.
  • Heare this, and mend thy selfe, and thou mendst me, 15
  • By making me being dead, doe good to thee,
  • And thinke me well compos'd, that I could now
  • A last-sicke houre to syllables allow.
  • [Omnibus. _D_, _H49:_ To all. _H40_, _RP31:_ Another on the
  • same. (_i.e. M^{rs} Boulstred_) _P:_ On himselfe. _1635-69:_
  • _no title_, _B_, _S96:_ _in MSS. this complete epitaph follows
  • the epistle_ (_p._ 291); _but in B they are separated by
  • various poems and in P the epistle is not given_]
  • [3 tell] tel _1635_]
  • [4 seest] see _D_, _H49:_ _compare incomplete version_.]
  • [5 Yet _1635-69:_ Nay _S96_
  • thou'art _Ed:_ thou art _1635-69_]
  • [8 lie. _Ed:_ lie; _1635-69_]
  • [14 them] then _1669_]
  • [16 to thee, _B_, _D_, _H40_, _H49_, _O'F_, _S96:_ for thee,
  • _1635-69_]
  • INFINITATI SACRUM,
  • 16. _Augusti_ 1601.
  • METEMPSYCHOSIS.
  • _Poêma Satyricon._
  • * * * * *
  • EPISTLE.
  • Others at the Porches and entries of their Buildings set their Armes;
  • I, my picture; if any colours can deliver a minde so plaine, and flat,
  • and through light as mine. Naturally at a new Author, I doubt, and
  • sticke, and doe not say quickly, good. I censure much and taxe; And
  • this liberty costs mee more then others, by how much my owne things
  • are worse then others. Yet I would not be so rebellious against my
  • selfe, as not to doe it, since I love it; nor so unjust to others, to
  • do it _sine talione_. As long as I give them as good hold upon mee,
  • they must pardon mee my bitings. I forbid no reprehender, but him that
  • like the Trent Councell forbids not bookes, but Authors, damning what
  • ever such a name hath or shall write. None writes so ill, that he
  • gives not some thing exemplary, to follow, or flie. Now when I beginne
  • this booke, I have no purpose to come into any mans debt[1]; how my
  • stocke will hold out I know not; perchance waste, perchance increase
  • in use; if I doe borrow any thing of Antiquitie, besides that I make
  • account that I pay it to posterity, with as much and as good: You
  • shall still finde mee to acknowledge it, and to thanke not him onely
  • that hath digg'd out treasure for mee, but that hath lighted mee a
  • candle to the place. All which I will bid you remember, (for I will
  • have no such Readers as I can teach) is, that the Pithagorian doctrine
  • doth not onely carry one soule from man to man, nor man to beast, but
  • indifferently to plants also: and therefore you must not grudge to
  • finde the same soule in an Emperour, in a Post-horse, and in a
  • Mucheron,[2] since no unreadinesse in the soule, but an indisposition
  • in the organs workes this. And therefore though this soule could not
  • move when it was a Melon, yet it may remember, and now tell mee,[3] at
  • what lascivious banquet it was serv'd. And though it could not speake,
  • when it was a spider, yet it can remember and now tell me, who used it
  • for poyson to attaine dignitie. How ever the bodies have dull'd her
  • other faculties, her memory hath ever been her owne,
  • which makes me so seriously deliver you by her
  • relation all her passages from her first making
  • when shee was that apple[4] which Eve
  • eate,[5] to this time when shee is
  • hee,[6] whose life you shall
  • finde in the end of
  • this booke.
  • [Infinitati _&c._ _1633-69:_ (_in 1633 it is the first poem;
  • in 1633-69 it follows the_ Funerall Elegies, _from which it
  • is separated by some prose letters, and precedes_ Divine Poems
  • _as here_), _A18_, _G_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_
  • Metempsychosis. _1650-69:_ Metempsycosis. _1633-39_]
  • [Footnote 1: debt; _Ed:_ debt, _1633-69_]
  • [Footnote 2: Mucheron, _1633_, _N_, _TC:_ Mushrome, _G:_
  • Maceron, _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [Footnote 3: and can now tell mee, _1635-69_]
  • [Footnote 4: apple] aple _1633_]
  • [Footnote 5: eate, _1633-69:_ ate, _O'F:_ eat, _mod. editors_]
  • [Footnote 6: shee is hee, _1633_, _A18_, _G_, _N_, _TC:_ shee
  • is shee, _1635-69_]
  • THE PROGRESSE OF THE SOULE.
  • _First Song._
  • I.
  • I sing the progresse of a deathlesse soule,
  • Whom Fate, which God made, but doth not controule,
  • Plac'd in most shapes; all times before the law
  • Yoak'd us, and when, and since, in this I sing.
  • And the great world to his aged evening; 5
  • From infant morne, through manly noone I draw.
  • What the gold Chaldee, or silver Persian saw,
  • Greeke brasse, or Roman iron, is in this one;
  • A worke t'outweare _Seths_ pillars, bricke and stone,
  • And (holy writt excepted) made to yeeld to none. 10
  • II.
  • Thee, eye of heaven, this great Soule envies not,
  • By thy male force, is all wee have, begot.
  • In the first East, thou now beginst to shine,
  • Suck'st early balme, and Iland spices there,
  • And wilt anon in thy loose-rein'd careere 15
  • At Tagus, Po, Sene, Thames, and Danow dine,
  • And see at night thy Westerne land of Myne,
  • Yet hast thou not more nations seene then shee,
  • That before thee, one day beganne to bee,
  • And thy fraile light being quench'd, shall long,
  • long out live thee. 20
  • III.
  • Nor, holy _Ianus_, in whose soveraigne boate
  • The Church, and all the Monarchies did floate;
  • That swimming Colledge, and free Hospitall
  • Of all mankinde, that cage and vivarie
  • Of fowles, and beasts, in whose wombe, Destinie 25
  • Us, and our latest nephewes did install
  • (From thence are all deriv'd, that fill this All,)
  • Did'st thou in that great stewardship embarke
  • So diverse shapes into that floating parke,
  • As have beene moved, and inform'd by this heavenly sparke. 30
  • IV.
  • Great Destiny the Commissary of God,
  • That hast mark'd out a path and period
  • For every thing; who, where wee of-spring tooke,
  • Our wayes and ends seest at one instant; Thou
  • Knot of all causes, thou whose changelesse brow 35
  • Ne'r smiles nor frownes, O vouch thou safe to looke
  • And shew my story, in thy eternall booke:
  • That (if my prayer be fit) I may'understand
  • So much my selfe, as to know with what hand,
  • How scant, or liberall this my lifes race is spand. 40
  • V.
  • To my sixe lustres almost now outwore,
  • Except thy booke owe mee so many more,
  • Except my legend be free from the letts
  • Of steepe ambition, sleepie povertie,
  • Spirit-quenching sicknesse, dull captivitie, 45
  • Distracting businesse, and from beauties nets,
  • And all that calls from this, and to others whets,
  • O let me not launch out, but let mee save
  • Th'expense of braine and spirit; that my grave
  • His right and due, a whole unwasted man may have. 50
  • VI.
  • But if my dayes be long, and good enough,
  • In vaine this sea shall enlarge, or enrough
  • It selfe; for I will through the wave, and fome,
  • And shall, in sad lone wayes a lively spright,
  • Make my darke heavy Poëm light, and light. 55
  • For though through many streights, and lands I roame,
  • I launch at paradise, and I saile towards home;
  • The course I there began, shall here be staid,
  • Sailes hoised there, stroke here, and anchors laid
  • In Thames, which were at Tigrys, and Euphrates waide. 60
  • VII.
  • For the great soule which here amongst us now
  • Doth dwell, and moves that hand, and tongue, and brow,
  • Which, as the Moone the sea, moves us; to heare
  • Whose story, with long patience you will long;
  • (For 'tis the crowne, and last straine of my song) 65
  • This soule to whom _Luther_, and _Mahomet_ were
  • Prisons of flesh; this soule which oft did teare,
  • And mend the wracks of th'Empire, and late Rome,
  • And liv'd when every great change did come,
  • Had first in paradise, a low, but fatall roome. 70
  • VIII.
  • Yet no low roome, nor then the greatest, lesse,
  • If (as devout and sharpe men fitly guesse)
  • That Crosse, our joy, and griefe, where nailes did tye
  • That All, which alwayes was all, every where;
  • Which could not sinne, and yet all sinnes did beare; 75
  • Which could not die, yet could not chuse but die;
  • Stood in the selfe same roome in Calvarie,
  • Where first grew the forbidden learned tree,
  • For on that tree hung in security
  • This Soule, made by the Makers will from pulling free. 80
  • IX.
  • Prince of the orchard, faire as dawning morne,
  • Fenc'd with the law, and ripe as soone as borne
  • That apple grew, which this Soule did enlive,
  • Till the then climing serpent, that now creeps
  • For that offence, for which all mankinde weepes, 85
  • Tooke it, and t'her whom the first man did wive
  • (Whom and her race, only forbiddings drive)
  • He gave it, she, t'her husband, both did eate;
  • So perished the eaters, and the meate:
  • And wee (for treason taints the blood) thence die and sweat. 90
  • X.
  • Man all at once was there by woman slaine,
  • And one by one we'are here slaine o'er againe
  • By them. The mother poison'd the well-head,
  • The daughters here corrupt us, Rivolets;
  • No smalnesse scapes, no greatnesse breaks their nets; 95
  • She thrust us out, and by them we are led
  • Astray, from turning, to whence we are fled.
  • Were prisoners Judges, 'twould seeme rigorous,
  • Shee sinn'd, we beare; part of our paine is, thus
  • To love them, whose fault to this painfull love yoak'd us. 100
  • XI.
  • So fast in us doth this corruption grow,
  • That now wee dare aske why wee should be so.
  • Would God (disputes the curious Rebell) make
  • A law, and would not have it kept? Or can
  • His creatures will, crosse his? Of every man 105
  • For one, will God (and be just) vengeance take?
  • Who sinn'd? t'was not forbidden to the snake
  • Nor her, who was not then made; nor is't writ
  • That Adam cropt, or knew the apple; yet
  • The worme and she, and he, and wee endure for it. 110
  • XII.
  • But snatch mee heavenly Spirit from this vaine
  • Reckoning their vanities, lesse is their gaine
  • Then hazard still, to meditate on ill,
  • Though with good minde; their reasons, like those toyes
  • Of glassie bubbles, which the gamesome boyes 115
  • Stretch to so nice a thinnes through a quill
  • That they themselves breake, doe themselves spill:
  • Arguing is heretiques game, and Exercise
  • As wrastlers, perfects them; Not liberties
  • Of speech, but silence; hands, not tongues, end heresies. 120
  • XIII.
  • Just in that instant when the serpents gripe,
  • Broke the slight veines, and tender conduit-pipe,
  • Through which this soule from the trees root did draw
  • Life, and growth to this apple, fled away
  • This loose soule, old, one and another day. 125
  • As lightning, which one scarce dares say, he saw,
  • 'Tis so soone gone, (and better proofe the law
  • Of sense, then faith requires) swiftly she flew
  • To a darke and foggie Plot; Her, her fates threw
  • There through th'earths pores, and in a Plant hous'd her anew. 130
  • XIV.
  • The plant thus abled, to it selfe did force
  • A place, where no place was; by natures course
  • As aire from water, water fleets away
  • From thicker bodies, by this root thronged so
  • His spungie confines gave him place to grow: 135
  • Just as in our streets, when the people stay
  • To see the Prince, and have so fill'd the way
  • That weesels scarce could passe, when she comes nere
  • They throng and cleave up, and a passage cleare,
  • As if, for that time, their round bodies flatned were. 140
  • XV.
  • His right arme he thrust out towards the East,
  • West-ward his left; th'ends did themselves digest
  • Into ten lesser strings, these fingers were:
  • And as a slumberer stretching on his bed,
  • This way he this, and that way scattered 145
  • His other legge, which feet with toes upbeare.
  • Grew on his middle parts, the first day, haire,
  • To show, that in loves businesse hee should still
  • A dealer bee, and be us'd well, or ill:
  • His apples kindle, his leaves, force of conception kill. 150
  • XVI.
  • A mouth, but dumbe, he hath; blinde eyes, deafe eares,
  • And to his shoulders dangle subtile haires;
  • A young _Colossus_ there hee stands upright,
  • And as that ground by him were conquered
  • A leafie garland weares he on his head 155
  • Enchas'd with little fruits, so red and bright
  • That for them you would call your Loves lips white;
  • So, of a lone unhaunted place possest,
  • Did this soules second Inne, built by the guest,
  • This living buried man, this quiet mandrake, rest. 160
  • XVII.
  • No lustfull woman came this plant to grieve,
  • But 'twas because there was none yet but Eve:
  • And she (with other purpose) kill'd it quite;
  • Her sinne had now brought in infirmities,
  • And so her cradled child, the moist red eyes 165
  • Had never shut, nor slept since it saw light;
  • Poppie she knew, she knew the mandrakes might,
  • And tore up both, and so coold her childs blood;
  • Unvirtuous weeds might long unvex'd have stood;
  • But hee's short liv'd, that with his death can doe most good. 170
  • XVIII.
  • To an unfetterd soules quick nimble hast
  • Are falling stars, and hearts thoughts, but slow pac'd:
  • Thinner then burnt aire flies this soule, and she
  • Whom foure new comming, and foure parting Suns
  • Had found, and left the Mandrakes tenant, runnes 175
  • Thoughtlesse of change, when her firme destiny
  • Confin'd, and enjayld her, that seem'd so free,
  • Into a small blew shell, the which a poore
  • Warme bird orespread, and sat still evermore,
  • Till her inclos'd child kickt, and pick'd it selfe a dore. 180
  • XIX.
  • Outcrept a sparrow, this soules moving Inne,
  • On whose raw armes stiffe feathers now begin,
  • As childrens teeth through gummes, to breake with paine,
  • His flesh is jelly yet, and his bones threds,
  • All a new downy mantle overspreads, 185
  • A mouth he opes, which would as much containe
  • As his late house, and the first houre speaks plaine,
  • And chirps alowd for meat. Meat fit for men
  • His father steales for him, and so feeds then
  • One, that within a moneth, will beate him from his hen. 190
  • XX.
  • In this worlds youth wise nature did make hast,
  • Things ripened sooner, and did longer last;
  • Already this hot cocke, in bush and tree,
  • In field and tent, oreflutters his next hen;
  • He asks her not, who did so tast, nor when, 195
  • Nor if his sister, or his neece shee be;
  • Nor doth she pule for his inconstancie
  • If in her sight he change, nor doth refuse
  • The next that calls; both liberty doe use;
  • Where store is of both kindes, both kindes may freely chuse. 200
  • XXI.
  • Men, till they tooke laws which made freedome lesse,
  • Their daughters, and their sisters did ingresse;
  • Till now unlawfull, therefore ill, 'twas not.
  • So jolly, that it can move, this soule is,
  • The body so free of his kindnesses, 205
  • That selfe-preserving it hath now forgot,
  • And slackneth so the soules, and bodies knot,
  • Which temperance streightens; freely on his she friends
  • He blood, and spirit, pith, and marrow spends,
  • Ill steward of himself, himselfe in three yeares ends. 210
  • XXII.
  • Else might he long have liv'd; man did not know
  • Of gummie blood, which doth in holly grow,
  • How to make bird-lime, nor how to deceive
  • With faind calls, hid nets, or enwrapping snare,
  • The free inhabitants of the Plyant aire. 215
  • Man to beget, and woman to conceive
  • Askt not of rootes, nor of cock-sparrowes, leave:
  • Yet chuseth hee, though none of these he feares,
  • Pleasantly three, then streightned twenty yeares
  • To live, and to encrease his race, himselfe outweares. 220
  • XXIII.
  • This cole with overblowing quench'd and dead,
  • The Soule from her too active organs fled
  • T'a brooke. A female fishes sandie Roe
  • With the males jelly, newly lev'ned was,
  • For they had intertouch'd as they did passe, 225
  • And one of those small bodies, fitted so,
  • This soule inform'd, and abled it to rowe
  • It selfe with finnie oares, which she did fit:
  • Her scales seem'd yet of parchment, and as yet
  • Perchance a fish, but by no name you could call it. 230
  • XXIV.
  • When goodly, like a ship in her full trim,
  • A swan, so white that you may unto him
  • Compare all whitenesse, but himselfe to none,
  • Glided along, and as he glided watch'd,
  • And with his arched necke this poore fish catch'd. 235
  • It mov'd with state, as if to looke upon
  • Low things it scorn'd, and yet before that one
  • Could thinke he sought it, he had swallowed cleare
  • This, and much such, and unblam'd devour'd there
  • All, but who too swift, too great, or well armed were. 240
  • XXV.
  • Now swome a prison in a prison put,
  • And now this Soule in double walls was shut,
  • Till melted with the Swans digestive fire,
  • She left her house the fish, and vapour'd forth;
  • Fate not affording bodies of more worth 245
  • For her as yet, bids her againe retire
  • T'another fish, to any new desire
  • Made a new prey; For, he that can to none
  • Resistance make, nor complaint, sure is gone.
  • Weaknesse invites, but silence feasts oppression. 250
  • XXVI.
  • Pace with her native streame, this fish doth keepe,
  • And journeyes with her, towards the glassie deepe,
  • But oft retarded, once with a hidden net
  • Though with greate windowes, for when Need first taught
  • These tricks to catch food, then they were not wrought 255
  • As now, with curious greedinesse to let
  • None scape, but few, and fit for use, to get,
  • As, in this trap a ravenous pike was tane,
  • Who, though himselfe distrest, would faine have slain
  • This wretch; So hardly are ill habits left again. 260
  • XXVII.
  • Here by her smallnesse shee two deaths orepast,
  • Once innocence scap'd, and left the oppressor fast.
  • The net through-swome, she keepes the liquid path,
  • And whether she leape up sometimes to breath
  • And suck in aire, or finde it underneath, 265
  • Or working parts like mills or limbecks hath
  • To make the water thinne, and airelike faith
  • Cares not; but safe the Place she's come unto
  • Where fresh, with salt waves meet, and what to doe
  • She knowes not, but betweene both makes a boord or two. 270
  • XXVIII.
  • So farre from hiding her guests, water is,
  • That she showes them in bigger quantities
  • Then they are. Thus doubtfull of her way,
  • For game and not for hunger a sea Pie
  • Spied through this traiterous spectacle, from high, 275
  • The seely fish where it disputing lay,
  • And t'end her doubts and her, beares her away:
  • Exalted she'is, but to the exalters good,
  • As are by great ones, men which lowly stood.
  • It's rais'd, to be the Raisers instrument and food. 280
  • XXIX.
  • Is any kinde subject to rape like fish?
  • Ill unto man, they neither doe, nor wish:
  • Fishers they kill not, nor with noise awake,
  • They doe not hunt, nor strive to make a prey
  • Of beasts, nor their yong sonnes to beare away; 285
  • Foules they pursue not, nor do undertake
  • To spoile the nests industrious birds do make;
  • Yet them all these unkinde kinds feed upon,
  • To kill them is an occupation,
  • And lawes make Fasts, and Lents for their destruction. 290
  • XXX.
  • A sudden stiffe land-winde in that selfe houre
  • To sea-ward forc'd this bird, that did devour
  • The fish; he cares not, for with ease he flies,
  • Fat gluttonies best orator: at last
  • So long hee hath flowen, and hath flowen so fast 295
  • That many leagues at sea, now tir'd hee lyes,
  • And with his prey, that till then languisht, dies:
  • The soules no longer foes, two wayes did erre,
  • The fish I follow, and keepe no calender
  • Of the other; he lives yet in some great officer. 300
  • XXXI.
  • Into an embrion fish, our Soule is throwne,
  • And in due time throwne out againe, and growne
  • To such vastnesse as, if unmanacled
  • From Greece, Morea were, and that by some
  • Earthquake unrooted, loose Morea swome, 305
  • Or seas from Africks body had severed
  • And torne the hopefull Promontories head,
  • This fish would seeme these, and, when all hopes faile,
  • A great ship overset, or without faile
  • Hulling, might (when this was a whelp) be like this whale. 310
  • XXXII.
  • At every stroake his brazen finnes do take,
  • More circles in the broken sea they make
  • Then cannons voices, when the aire they teare:
  • His ribs are pillars, and his high arch'd roofe
  • Of barke that blunts best steele, is thunder-proofe: 315
  • Swimme in him swallow'd Dolphins, without feare,
  • And feele no sides, as if his vast wombe were
  • Some Inland sea, and ever as hee went
  • Hee spouted rivers up, as if he ment
  • To joyne our seas, with seas above the firmament. 320
  • XXXIII.
  • He hunts not fish, but as an officer,
  • Stayes in his court, at his owne net, and there
  • All suitors of all sorts themselves enthrall;
  • So on his backe lyes this whale wantoning,
  • And in his gulfe-like throat, sucks every thing 325
  • That passeth neare. Fish chaseth fish, and all,
  • Flyer and follower, in this whirlepoole fall;
  • O might not states of more equality
  • Consist? and is it of necessity
  • That thousand guiltlesse smals, to make one great, must die? 330
  • XXXIV.
  • Now drinkes he up seas, and he eates up flocks,
  • He justles Ilands, and he shakes firme rockes.
  • Now in a roomefull house this Soule doth float,
  • And like a Prince she sends her faculties
  • To all her limbes, distant as Provinces. 335
  • The Sunne hath twenty times both crab and goate
  • Parched, since first lanch'd forth this living boate;
  • 'Tis greatest now, and to destruction
  • Nearest; There's no pause at perfection;
  • Greatnesse a period hath, but hath no station. 340
  • XXXV.
  • Two little fishes whom hee never harm'd,
  • Nor fed on their kinde, two not throughly arm'd
  • With hope that they could kill him, nor could doe
  • Good to themselves by his death (they did not eate
  • His flesh, nor suck those oyles, which thence outstreat) 345
  • Conspir'd against him, and it might undoe
  • The plot or all, that the plotters were two,
  • But that they fishes were, and could not speake.
  • How shall a Tyran wife strong projects breake,
  • If wreches can on them the common anger wreake? 350
  • XXXVI.
  • The flaile-finn'd Thresher, and steel-beak'd Sword-fish
  • Onely attempt to doe, what all doe wish.
  • The Thresher backs him, and to beate begins;
  • The sluggard Whale yeelds to oppression,
  • And t'hide himselfe from shame and danger, downe 355
  • Begins to sinke; the Swordfish upward spins,
  • And gores him with his beake; his staffe-like finnes,
  • So well the one, his sword the other plyes,
  • That now a scoffe, and prey, this tyran dyes,
  • And (his owne dole) feeds with himselfe all companies. 360
  • XXXVII.
  • Who will revenge his death? or who will call
  • Those to account, that thought, and wrought his fall?
  • The heires of slaine kings, wee see are often so
  • Transported with the joy of what they get,
  • That they, revenge and obsequies forget, 365
  • Nor will against such men the people goe,
  • Because h'is now dead, to whom they should show
  • Love in that act; Some kings by vice being growne
  • So needy of subjects love, that of their own
  • They thinke they lose, if love be to the dead Prince shown. 370
  • XXXVIII.
  • This Soule, now free from prison, and passion,
  • Hath yet a little indignation
  • That so small hammers should so soone downe beat
  • So great a castle. And having for her house
  • Got the streight cloyster of a wreched mouse 375
  • (As basest men that have not what to eate,
  • Nor enjoy ought, doe farre more hate the great
  • Then they, who good repos'd estates possesse)
  • This Soule, late taught that great things might by lesse
  • Be slain, to gallant mischiefe doth herselfe addresse. 380
  • XXXIX.
  • Natures great master-peece, an Elephant,
  • The onely harmlesse great thing; the giant
  • Of beasts; who thought, no more had gone, to make one wise
  • But to be just, and thankfull, loth to offend,
  • (Yet nature hath given him no knees to bend) 385
  • Himselfe he up-props, on himselfe relies,
  • And foe to none, suspects no enemies,
  • Still sleeping stood; vex't not his fantasie
  • Blacke dreames; like an unbent bow, carelesly
  • His sinewy Proboscis did remisly lie: 390
  • XL.
  • In which as in a gallery this mouse
  • Walk'd, and surveid the roomes of this vast house,
  • And to the braine, the soules bedchamber, went,
  • And gnaw'd the life cords there; Like a whole towne
  • Cleane undermin'd, the slaine beast tumbled downe; 395
  • With him the murtherer dies, whom envy sent
  • To kill, not scape, (for, only hee that ment
  • To die, did ever kill a man of better roome,)
  • And thus he made his foe, his prey, and tombe:
  • Who cares not to turn back, may any whither come. 400
  • XLI.
  • Next, hous'd this Soule a Wolves yet unborne whelp,
  • Till the best midwife, Nature, gave it helpe,
  • To issue. It could kill, as soone as goe.
  • Abel, as white, and milde as his sheepe were,
  • (Who, in that trade, of Church, and kingdomes, there 405
  • Was the first type) was still infested soe,
  • With this wolfe, that it bred his losse and woe;
  • And yet his bitch, his sentinell attends
  • The flocke so neere, so well warnes and defends,
  • That the wolfe, (hopelesse else) to corrupt her, intends. 410
  • XLII.
  • Hee tooke a course, which since, succesfully,
  • Great men have often taken, to espie
  • The counsels, or to breake the plots of foes.
  • To Abels tent he stealeth in the darke,
  • On whose skirts the bitch slept; ere she could barke, 415
  • Attach'd her with streight gripes, yet hee call'd those,
  • Embracements of love; to loves worke he goes,
  • Where deeds move more then words; nor doth she show,
  • Nor resist, nor needs hee streighten so
  • His prey, for, were shee loose, she would nor barke, nor goe. 420
  • XLIII.
  • Hee hath engag'd her; his, she wholy bides;
  • Who not her owne, none others secrets hides.
  • If to the flocke he come, and Abell there,
  • She faines hoarse barkings, but she biteth not,
  • Her faith is quite, but not her love forgot. 425
  • At last a trap, of which some every where
  • Abell had plac'd, ends all his losse, and feare,
  • By the Wolves death; and now just time it was
  • That a quicke soule should give life to that masse
  • Of blood in Abels bitch, and thither this did passe. 430
  • XLIV.
  • Some have their wives, their sisters some begot,
  • But in the lives of Emperours you shall not
  • Reade of a lust the which may equall this;
  • This wolfe begot himselfe, and finished
  • What he began alive, when hee was dead; 435
  • Sonne to himselfe, and father too, hee is
  • A ridling lust, for which Schoolemen would misse
  • A proper name. The whelpe of both these lay
  • In Abels tent, and with soft Moaba,
  • His sister, being yong, it us'd to sport and play. 440
  • XLV.
  • Hee soone for her too harsh, and churlish grew,
  • And Abell (the dam dead) would use this new
  • For the field. Being of two kindes thus made,
  • He, as his dam, from sheepe drove wolves away,
  • And as his Sire, he made them his owne prey. 445
  • Five yeares he liv'd, and cosened with his trade,
  • Then hopelesse that his faults were hid, betraid
  • Himselfe by flight, and by all followed,
  • From dogges, a wolfe; from wolves, a dogge he fled;
  • And, like a spie to both sides false, he perished. 450
  • XLVI.
  • It quickned next a toyfull Ape, and so
  • Gamesome it was, that it might freely goe
  • From tent to tent, and with the children play.
  • His organs now so like theirs hee doth finde,
  • That why he cannot laugh, and speake his minde, 455
  • He wonders. Much with all, most he doth stay
  • With Adams fift daughter _Siphatecia_,
  • Doth gaze on her, and, where she passeth, passe,
  • Gathers her fruits, and tumbles on the grasse,
  • And wisest of that kinde, the first true lover was. 460
  • XLVII.
  • He was the first that more desir'd to have
  • One then another; first that ere did crave
  • Love by mute signes, and had no power to speake;
  • First that could make love faces, or could doe
  • The valters sombersalts, or us'd to wooe 465
  • With hoiting gambolls, his owne bones to breake
  • To make his mistresse merry; or to wreake
  • Her anger on himselfe. Sinnes against kinde
  • They easily doe, that can let feed their minde
  • With outward beauty; beauty they in boyes and beasts do find 470
  • XLVIII.
  • By this misled, too low things men have prov'd,
  • And too high; beasts and angels have beene lov'd.
  • This Ape, though else through-vaine, in this was wise,
  • He reach'd at things too high, but open way
  • There was, and he knew not she would say nay; 475
  • His toyes prevaile not, likelier meanes he tries,
  • He gazeth on her face with teare-shot eyes,
  • And up lifts subtly with his russet pawe
  • Her kidskinne apron without feare or awe
  • Of nature; nature hath no gaole, though shee hath law. 480
  • XLIX.
  • First she was silly and knew not what he ment.
  • That vertue, by his touches, chaft and spent,
  • Succeeds an itchie warmth, that melts her quite;
  • She knew not first, nowe cares not what he doth,
  • And willing halfe and more, more then halfe , 485
  • She neither puls nor pushes, but outright
  • Now cries, and now repents; when _Tethlemite_
  • Her brother, entred, and a great stone threw
  • After the Ape, who, thus prevented, flew.
  • This house thus batter'd downe, the Soule possest a new. 490
  • L.
  • And whether by this change she lose or win,
  • She comes out next, where the Ape would have gone in.
  • _Adam_ and _Eve_ had mingled bloods, and now
  • Like Chimiques equall fires, her temperate wombe
  • Had stew'd and form'd it: and part did become 495
  • A spungie liver, that did richly allow,
  • Like a free conduit, on a high hils brow,
  • Life-keeping moisture unto every part;
  • Part hardned it selfe to a thicker heart,
  • Whose busie furnaces lifes spirits do impart. 500
  • LI.
  • Another part became the well of sense,
  • The tender well-arm'd feeling braine, from whence,
  • Those sinowie strings which do our bodies tie,
  • Are raveld out; and fast there by one end,
  • Did this Soule limbes, these limbes a soule attend; 505
  • And now they joyn'd: keeping some quality
  • Of every past shape, she knew treachery,
  • Rapine, deceit, and lust, and ills enow
  • To be a woman. _Themech_ she is now,
  • Sister and wife to _Caine_, _Caine_ that first did plow. 510
  • LII.
  • Who ere thou beest that read'st this sullen Writ,
  • Which just so much courts thee, as thou dost it,
  • Let me arrest thy thoughts; wonder with mee,
  • Why plowing, building, ruling and the rest,
  • Or most of those arts, whence our lives are blest, 515
  • By cursed _Cains_ race invented be,
  • And blest _Seth_ vext us with Astronomie.
  • Ther's nothing simply good, nor ill alone,
  • Of every quality comparison,
  • The onely measure is, and judge, opinion. 520
  • _The end of the Progresse of the Soule._
  • [7 gold] cold _1635-54_]
  • [10 writt _1635-69_, _G:_ writs _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_
  • Writ's _Chambers_]
  • [12 begot.] begot, _1633_]
  • [13 East] east _1633 some copies_
  • beginst] begins _1633_]
  • [16 Danow dine,] Danon dine, _1633_]
  • [17 Myne, _1633_ (_but_ mine, _in some copies_): Mine,
  • _1635-69_]
  • [19 one day before thee _O'F_]
  • [21 Nor, holy _Ianus_, _Ed:_ Nor holy _Ianus_ _1633-69_]
  • [27 From thence] For, thence _G_
  • All,)] All) _1633-69_]
  • [31 Commissary] commissary _1633 some copies_]
  • [33 every thing; _Ed:_ every thing, _1633-69_]
  • [34 instant; _1633:_ instant. _1635-69_]
  • [36 vouch thou safe _A18_, _G_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ vouch safe
  • thou _1633-69_]
  • [37 booke: _Ed:_ booke. _1633-69_]
  • [45 Spirit-quenching] Spright-quenching _G_]
  • [54 shall, _Ed:_ shall _1633:_ hold _1635-69_
  • lone _1635-69:_ love _1633_, _A18_, _G_, _N_, _TC_
  • wayes _Ed:_ wayes, _1633-69_
  • spright, _Ed:_ spright _1633-69_]
  • [59 hoised] hoisted _G_]
  • [61 For the] For this _G_, _N_, _TCD:_ For that _O'F_]
  • [63 Which, _Ed:_ Which _1633-69_]
  • us; _Ed:_ us, _1633-69_]
  • [69 when] where _A18_, _G_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [71 no low] nor low _Chambers_]
  • [74 every where; _Ed:_ every where _1633:_ every where,
  • _1635-69_]
  • [83 enlive, _G:_ enlive _1633-69:_ _om._ _1633_ _some copies,
  • and_ _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [93 poyson'd _1669:_ poisoned _1633-54_]
  • [94 corrupt us, _1635-69:_ corrupts us, _1633:_ corrupt as _G_
  • Rivolets; _Ed:_ Rivolets, _1635-69:_ _om._ _1633_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [95 breaks] breake _1633_ _some copies_
  • nets; _Ed:_ nets, _1633-69_]
  • [96 thrust] thrusts _1633_ (thrust _in some copies_)]
  • [97 fled.] fled, _1633_]
  • [99 beare; _1635-69_, _G:_ here, _1633:_ heare, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [108 is't] i'st _1633_]
  • [112 vanities, _1633_, _G:_ vanitie, _1635-69_]
  • [114 minde; _Ed:_ minde, _1633-69_ reasons, _Ed:_ reasons
  • _1633:_ reason's _1635-69_, _Chambers and Grolier_]
  • [115 which] with _1633_ _some copies_]
  • [117 breake, doe _1633_, _A18_, _G_, _N_, _TC:_ breake, and
  • doe _1635-69_, _Chambers_
  • spill: _Ed:_ spill, _1633-69_]
  • [119 perfects] perfect _1633_ _some copies_]
  • [125 day. _1635-69:_ day, _1633_ (_corrected in some copies_)]
  • [126 dares] dare _1669_]
  • [127 proofe] proofes _O'F_]
  • [130 earths pores, _1669_, _A18_, _G_, _N:_ earths-pores,
  • _1633:_ earth-pores, _1633_ (_some copies_), _1635-54_
  • anew] a new _1633_]
  • [135 grow: _1650-69:_ grow, _1633-39_]
  • [137 the Prince, and have so fill'd _G:_ the Princesse, and
  • so fill'd _1633_ (_but some copies read_ the Prince, and so
  • fill'd): the Prince, and so fill up _1635-69:_ the Prince, and
  • so fill'd _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [144 bed, _Ed:_ bed; _1633-69_]
  • [146 upbeare. _Ed:_ upbeare; _1633:_ up beare; _1635-69_]
  • [147 middle parts _1633_, _G_, _O'F:_ middle part _1635-69:_
  • mid-parts _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [150 kindle, _G:_ kinde, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_
  • kindle; _1635-69_]
  • [157 white; _1633:_ white, _1635-69_]
  • [159 guest, _Ed:_ guest _1633-69_. _See note_]
  • [165 moist red _1633-35:_ moist-red _1639-69_]
  • [166 slept] sleept _1633-35_
  • light; _Ed:_ light, _1633-69_]
  • [167 mandrakes might, _Ed:_ mandrakes might; _1633-54:_
  • mandrakes-might: _1669_]
  • [180 inclos'd _1635-69_, _G:_ encloth'd _A18_, _N_, _TC:_
  • encloth'd _altered to_ unclothed _then to_ enclosed _O'F:_
  • uncloath'd _1633_
  • pick'd] peck'd _A18_, _G_, _TC_]
  • [181 Outcrept _1633-35:_ Out crept _1639-69_]
  • [185 a new downy _1635-69_, _A18_, _G_, _TC:_ downy a new
  • _1633_
  • overspreades, _1633-39:_ overspreads _1650-69_]
  • [193 cocke, _Ed:_ cocke _1633-69_
  • tree,] tree _1633_]
  • [194 tent, _Ed:_ tent _1633-69_
  • hen; _Ed:_ hen, _1633-69_]
  • [196 be; _Ed:_ be, _1633-69_]
  • [202 ingresse; _Ed:_ ingresse, _1633-69_]
  • [203-5
  • Till now unlawfull, therefore ill; 'twas not
  • So jolly, that it can move this soule; Is
  • The body so free of his kindnesses,
  • _1633_, _and 1669_ (Till now,):
  • Till now, unlawfull, therefore ill 'twas not
  • So jolly, that it can more this soule. Is
  • The body, so free of his kindnesses,
  • _1635-54_
  • Till now, unlawful, therefore ill 'twas not.
  • So jolly, that it can move this soul, is
  • The body, so free of his kindnesses,
  • _Chambers_, _and Grolier but_ 203 not; _and no commas in_ 204.
  • _See note_]
  • [206 selfe-preserving] _no hyphen_ _1633-39_]
  • [207 soules,] souls _1669_]
  • [208 temperance] têperance _1633-39_]
  • [212 grow,] grow _1633-39_]
  • [214 hid _G:_ his _1633-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_
  • snare,] snare _1633-69_]
  • [220 encrease his race,] encrease, _1633_]
  • [223 brooke. A _Ed:_ brooke; a _1633-69_]
  • [225 they had intertouch'd _1635-69_, _G_, _O'F:_ they
  • intertouched _1633:_ they intertouch'd _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [227 abled] able _1669_
  • rowe] roe _1633_]
  • [228 fit: _Ed:_ fit, _1633-69_]
  • [240 armed were.] arm'd were _1633_]
  • [249 sure is gone, _1633-39:_ is sure gone. _1650-54:_ is sure
  • gone, _1669_]
  • [251 her _A18_, _G_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ the _1633-69_]
  • [254-7 for when ... use, to get,] _in brackets_ _1635-69_]
  • [254 Need _G:_ need _1633-69_]
  • [255 then] thê _1633_]
  • [257 use, _Ed:_ use _1633-69_]
  • [262 fast. _Ed:_ fast; _1633-69_]
  • [266 mills _Ed:_ mills, _1633-69_]
  • [267 water _1635-69_, _G:_ wether _1633_, _A18_, _TC_
  • airelike _1633-35:_ ayre like _1639-69_ _and Chambers_
  • faith _1633-69:_ faith, _Chambers_. _See note_]
  • [268 not; _Ed:_ not, _1633-69_]
  • [270 two.] two _1633_]
  • [271 is,] is _1633_]
  • [273 Thus doubtfull _1633_, _A18_, _G_, _N_, _TC:_ Thus her
  • doubtfull _1635-69_]
  • [277 away: _Ed:_ away, _1633-69_]
  • [279 _in brackets_ _1635-69_
  • stood. _1633-39:_ stood, _1650-69_]
  • [280 It's rais'd _1633-69:_ It rais'd _some copies of 1633_,
  • _A18_, _G_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [287 industrious] industruous _1633_]
  • [290 Fasts, and Lents _1635-69:_ fasts, and lents _1633_]
  • [296 That many leagues at sea, _G:_ That leagues
  • o'er-past at sea, _1633-69:_ That leagues at sea, _A18_, _N_,
  • _O'F_ (_which inserts_ o'r past), _TC_. _See note_]
  • [297 dies:] dies, _1633_]
  • [301 throwne,] throwne _1633_]
  • [303 vastnesse as, if _Grolier:_ vastnesse, as if _1633-69_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [307 head, _1633:_ head; _1635-69:_ head. _Chambers_. _See
  • note_]
  • [311 take,] take _1633_]
  • [315 thunder-proofe: _Ed:_ thunder-proofe, _1633-69_]
  • [316 swallow'd] swallowed _1633_]
  • [322 at] as _A18_, _G_, _TCC_]
  • [337 this _1633:_ his _1635-69_
  • boate; _Ed:_ boate, _1635-69:_ boate. _1633_]
  • [339 perfection; _Ed:_ perfection. _1633-35:_ perfection,
  • _1639-69_]
  • [344-5 _brackets_, _1719:_ death: ... outstreat, _1633-69_
  • did not eate] doe not eate _G_]
  • [349 Tyran] Tyrant _1669_]
  • [351 flaile-finn'd] flaile-find _1633:_ flaile-finnd
  • _1635-39_]
  • [358 well] were _1633_]
  • [359 tyran] tyrant _1669_]
  • [365 they, revenge _1635-69:_ they revenge, _1633:_ they,
  • revenge, _1633_ _some copies_]
  • [367 h'is _1633:_ he's _1635-69_]
  • [368 act; _Ed:_ act. _1633-69_]
  • [383 who thought, no more had gone, to make one wise _1633_,
  • _G_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_ (_the last four MSS. all drop_ more, _N
  • and TCD leaving a space_): who thought none had, to make him
  • wise, _1635-69_]
  • [386 relies,] relies _1633_]
  • [389 dreames; _Ed:_ dreames, _1633-69_]
  • [390: lie: _1635:_ lie. _1633, 1639-69_]
  • [395 downe; _Ed:_ downe, _1633-69_]
  • [396 dies,] dies _1633_]
  • [397-8 _brackets_, _Ed:_ scape, ... roome, _1633:_ scape; ...
  • roome, _1635-69_
  • ment] went _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [403 goe. _Ed:_ goe, _1633:_ goe: _1635-69_]
  • [405 Who,] Who _1633_
  • trade, _1635-69:_ trade _1633_]
  • [413 foes. _Ed:_ foes, _1633-69_]
  • [419 Nor resist, _Ed:_ Nor much resist, _1633-69:_ Nowe
  • must resist _N:_ Nowe much resist _A18_, _G_, _TC:_ Resistance
  • much _O'F_
  • needs] need _O'F_]
  • [420 nor barke, _1633-39:_ not barke _1650-69_, _A18_, _N_,
  • _TC_]
  • [422 hides.] hides, _1633_]
  • [427 plac'd, ends] plac'd end _1633_ _some copies_]
  • [435 dead; _Ed:_ dead, _1633-39:_ dead. _1650-69_]
  • [443 field. Being _Ed:_ field, being _1633-69_
  • thus] _om._ _1633_]
  • [453 play. _Ed:_ play, _1633-69_]
  • [470 beauty; _Ed:_ beauty, _1633-69_]
  • [472 lov'd. _Ed:_ lov'd; _1633-69_]
  • [479 or] of _1669_]
  • [480 shee hath] shee have _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [481 ment. _Ed:_ ment, _1633-69_]
  • 483 quite; _Ed:_ quite, _1633-69_]
  • [484 nowe _1633_, _G:_ nor _1635-69_, _Chambers:_ then _A18_,
  • _TC_]
  • [485 , _Ed:_ Tooth _1633_, _G:_ _A18_, _N_, _TC_ _leave
  • a blank space: in TCC a later hand has inserted_ loath: wroth,
  • _1635-69_]
  • [487 Tethlemite _A18_, _G_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC:_ Tethelemite
  • _1633:_ Thelemite _1635-69_]
  • [489 flew. _1635-69:_ flew, _1633_]
  • [492 in. _1650-69:_ in, _1633-39_]
  • [498 Life-keeping] Life keeping _1633_
  • part; _Ed:_ part, _1633-69_]
  • [502 well-arm'd _1669:_ well arm'd _1633-54_]
  • [503 sinowie] sinewy _1639-54:_ sinew _1669_]
  • [504 out; _Ed:_ out, _1633-69_]
  • [505 this Soule] a Soule _A18_, _N_, _TC_ attend; _Ed:_
  • attend, _1633-69_]
  • [506-7 joyn'd: ... past shape, _1633:_ joyn'd, ... past shape;
  • _1635-69_, _Chambers_, _Grolier_. _See note_]
  • [513 thoughts; _1650-69:_ thoughts, _1633-39_]
  • [517 Astronomie.] Astronomie, _1633_]
  • [519 comparison, _1633_, _1669_ (_no comma_): Comparison,
  • _1635-54_]
  • [520 opinion. _1633:_ Opinion. _1635-69_]
  • [The end _&c._ _1635-69:_ _om._ _1633_]
  • DIVINE POEMS.
  • To _E._ of _D._ with six holy Sonnets.
  • See Sir, how as the Suns hot Masculine flame
  • Begets strange creatures on Niles durty slime,
  • In me, your fatherly yet lusty Ryme
  • (For, these songs are their fruits) have wrought the same;
  • But though the ingendring force from whence they came 5
  • Bee strong enough, and nature doe admit
  • Seaven to be borne at once, I send as yet
  • But six; they say, the seaventh hath still some maime.
  • I choose your judgement, which the same degree
  • Doth with her sister, your invention, hold, 10
  • As fire these drossie Rymes to purifie,
  • Or as Elixar, to change them to gold;
  • You are that Alchimist which alwaies had
  • Wit, whose one spark could make good things of bad.
  • [Divine Poems. _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ _In 1635-69 this is the title
  • at head of each page, but the new section is headed_ Holy
  • Sonnets.
  • To E. of D. _&c._ _so headed 1633-69 but placed among_
  • Letters _&c._, _and so in O'F and_ (_but_ L. of D.) _W:_
  • _removed hither by Grosart_.]
  • [4 their fruits] the fruit _W_]
  • [6 doe _1633:_ doth _1635-69_]
  • [8 six;] six, _1633_
  • maime. _W:_ maime; _1633-69_]
  • [11 drossie] drosse _1650-54_]
  • _To the Lady Magdalen Herbert: of St. Mary Magdalen._
  • Her of your name, whose fair inheritance
  • Bethina was, and jointure Magdalo:
  • An active faith so highly did advance,
  • That she once knew, more than the Church did know,
  • The Resurrection; so much good there is 5
  • Deliver'd of her, that some Fathers be
  • Loth to believe one Woman could do this;
  • But, think these Magdalens were two or three.
  • Increase their number, Lady, and their fame:
  • To their Devotion, add your Innocence; 10
  • Take so much of th'example, as of the name;
  • The latter half; and in some recompence
  • That they did harbour Christ himself, a Guest,
  • Harbour these Hymns, to his dear name addrest.
  • J.D.
  • [To the Lady Magdalen Herbert: _&c._ _Ed:_ To the Lady
  • Magdalen Herbert, of _&c._ _Walton's_ The Life of M^r George
  • Herbert. (1670, _pp._ 25-6.) _See note_]
  • [4 know, _1675:_ know _1670_]
  • HOLY SONNETS.
  • _La Corona._
  • 1. _Deigne at my hands this crown of prayer and praise_,
  • Weav'd in my low devout melancholie,
  • Thou which of good, hast, yea art treasury,
  • All changing unchang'd Antient of dayes;
  • But doe not, with a vile crowne of fraile bayes, 5
  • Reward my muses white sincerity,
  • But what thy thorny crowne gain'd, that give mee,
  • A crowne of Glory, which doth flower alwayes;
  • The ends crowne our workes, but thou crown'st our ends,
  • For, at our end begins our endlesse rest; 10
  • The first last end, now zealously possest,
  • With a strong sober thirst, my soule attends.
  • 'Tis time that heart and voice be lifted high,
  • _Salvation to all that will is nigh_.
  • [HOLY SONNETS. _1633-69_, _being general title to the two
  • groups:_ Holy Sonnets written 20 years since. _H49_.]
  • [La Corona. _1633-69_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _S_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD_, _W:_ The Crowne. _B_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [2 low _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TC_, _W_ (_spelt_
  • lowe _in MSS._): lone _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S:_ loves
  • _S96_]
  • [3 treasury, _1633-69:_ a Treasurie, _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [4 dayes; _Ed:_ dayes, _1633-69_]
  • [10 For] So _W_ end _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _TC_, _W:_ ends _1635-69_, _S96_
  • rest; _Ed:_ rest, _1633-69_]
  • [11 The] This _B_, _S_, _S96_, _W_
  • zealously] soberly _B_, _S96_, _W:_ _O'F corrects_]
  • [13 heart and voice] voice and heart _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _W_]
  • [14 _nigh_.] _nigh_, _1633_]
  • ANNVNCIATION.
  • 2. _Salvation to all that will is nigh_;
  • That All, which alwayes is All every where,
  • Which cannot sinne, and yet all sinnes must beare,
  • Which cannot die, yet cannot chuse but die,
  • Loe, faithfull Virgin, yeelds himselfe to lye 5
  • In prison, in thy wombe; and though he there
  • Can take no sinne, nor thou give, yet he'will weare
  • Taken from thence, flesh, which deaths force may trie.
  • Ere by the spheares time was created, thou
  • Wast in his minde, who is thy Sonne, and Brother; 10
  • Whom thou conceiv'st, conceiv'd; yea thou art now
  • Thy Makers maker, and thy Fathers mother;
  • Thou'hast light in darke; and shutst in little roome,
  • _Immensity cloysterd in thy deare wombe_.
  • [Annunciation.]
  • [1 _nigh;_ _1669:_ _nigh_, _1633-54_]
  • [9 created,] begotten, _B_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ _O'F corrects_]
  • [10 Brother; _Ed:_ Brother, _1633-69_]
  • [11 conceiv'st, _1633:_ conceiv'st _1635-69:_ conceiv'dst,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _W_, _and Grolier_ conceiv'd;] conceived;
  • _1635-69_]
  • [12 mother; _Ed:_ mother, _1633-69_]
  • NATIVITIE.
  • 3. _Immensitie cloysterd in thy deare wombe_,
  • Now leaves his welbelov'd imprisonment,
  • There he hath made himselfe to his intent
  • Weake enough, now into our world to come;
  • But Oh, for thee, for him, hath th'Inne no roome? 5
  • Yet lay him in this stall, and from the Orient,
  • Starres, and wisemen will travell to prevent
  • Th'effect of _Herods_ jealous generall doome.
  • Seest thou, my Soule, with thy faiths eyes, how he
  • Which fils all place, yet none holds him, doth lye? 10
  • Was not his pity towards thee wondrous high,
  • That would have need to be pittied by thee?
  • Kisse him, and with him into Egypt goe,
  • _With his kinde mother, who partakes thy woe_.
  • [Nativitie.]
  • [6 this] his _1669_]
  • [7 will] shall _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [8 effect _1669_, _A18_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_,
  • _W:_ effects _1633-54_, _D_, _H49_ jealous] dire and _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ zealous _A18, N, TC_
  • doome.] doome; _1633_]
  • [9 eyes, _1633_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ eye,
  • _1635-69_, _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • TEMPLE.
  • 4. _With his kinde mother who partakes thy woe_,
  • _Ioseph_ turne backe; see where your child doth sit,
  • Blowing, yea blowing out those sparks of wit,
  • Which himselfe on the Doctors did bestow;
  • The Word but lately could not speake, and loe, 5
  • It sodenly speakes wonders, whence comes it,
  • That all which was, and all which should be writ,
  • A shallow seeming child, should deeply know?
  • His Godhead was not soule to his manhood,
  • Nor had time mellowed him to this ripenesse, 10
  • But as for one which hath a long taske, 'tis good,
  • With the Sunne to beginne his businesse,
  • He in his ages morning thus began
  • _By miracles exceeding power of man_.
  • [Temple.]
  • [5 loe, _Ed:_ loe _1633-69_]
  • [6 wonders, _1633-39:_ wonders: _1650-69_]
  • [11 for] to _W_
  • a long taske, _1633-69_, _D_, _H49:_ long taskes _B_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_, _W:_ longe taske _A18_, _TCC_
  • 'tis] 'Tis _1633:_ thinks _W_]
  • CRVCIFYING.
  • 5. _By miracles exceeding power of man_,
  • Hee faith in some, envie in some begat,
  • For, what weake spirits admire, ambitious, hate;
  • In both affections many to him ran,
  • But Oh! the worst are most, they will and can, 5
  • Alas, and do, unto the immaculate,
  • Whose creature Fate is, now prescribe a Fate,
  • Measuring selfe-lifes infinity to'a span,
  • Nay to an inch. Loe, where condemned hee
  • Beares his owne crosse, with paine, yet by and by 10
  • When it beares him, he must beare more and die.
  • Now thou art lifted up, draw mee to thee,
  • And at thy death giving such liberall dole,
  • _Moyst, with one drop of thy blood, my dry soule_.
  • [Crucifying.]
  • [3 weake] meeke _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [8 to'a span, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ to span,
  • _1633-69_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_]
  • [9 inch. Loe, _1635-69:_ inch, loe, _1633_]
  • [11 die. _1635-69:_ die; _1633_]
  • RESVRRECTION.
  • 6. _Moyst with one drop of thy blood, my dry soule_
  • Shall (though she now be in extreme degree
  • Too stony hard, and yet too fleshly,) bee
  • Freed by that drop, from being starv'd, hard, or foule,
  • And life, by this death abled, shall controule 5
  • Death, whom thy death slue; nor shall to mee
  • Feare of first or last death, bring miserie,
  • If in thy little booke my name thou enroule,
  • Flesh in that long sleep is not putrified,
  • But made that there, of which, and for which 'twas; 10
  • Nor can by other meanes be glorified.
  • May then sinnes sleep, and deaths soone from me passe,
  • That wak't from both, I againe risen may
  • _Salute the last, and everlasting day_.
  • [Resurrection.]
  • [1 _soule_ _1635:_ _soule_, _1633_, _1639-69_]
  • [5 this] thy _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [6 shall to] shall nowe to _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_]
  • [8 little _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _TC:_ life _1635-69_,
  • _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [9 that long] that last long _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ that _D_,
  • _H49_]
  • [11 glorified] purified _S_, _S96_, _W_, _and O'F_ (_which
  • corrects to_ glorified)]
  • [12 deaths _A18_, _N_, _S96_, _TC_, _W:_ death _1633-69_, _D_,
  • _H49_]
  • ASCENTION.
  • 7. _Salute the last and everlasting day_,
  • Joy at the uprising of this Sunne, and Sonne,
  • Yee whose just teares, or tribulation
  • Have purely washt, or burnt your drossie clay;
  • Behold the Highest, parting hence away, 5
  • Lightens the darke clouds, which hee treads upon,
  • Nor doth hee by ascending, show alone,
  • But first hee, and hee first enters the way.
  • O strong Ramme, which hast batter'd heaven for mee,
  • Mild Lambe, which with thy blood, hast mark'd the path; 10
  • Bright Torch, which shin'st, that I the way may see,
  • Oh, with thy owne blood quench thy owne just wrath,
  • And if thy holy Spirit, my Muse did raise,
  • _Deigne at my hands this crowne of prayer and praise_.
  • [Ascention.]
  • [3 just _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TC:_ true _1635-69_,
  • _B_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [8 way.] way, _1633_]
  • [10 Lambe, _D_, _W:_ lambe _1633-69_]
  • [11 Torch, _D_, _W:_ torch, _1633-69_
  • the way] thy wayes _B_, _S_, _S96_, _W:_ thee _A18_, _TCC_]
  • _Holy Sonnets._
  • I.
  • Thou hast made me, And shall thy worke decay?
  • Repaire me now, for now mine end doth haste,
  • I runne to death, and death meets me as fast,
  • And all my pleasures are like yesterday;
  • I dare not move my dimme eyes any way, 5
  • Despaire behind, and death before doth cast
  • Such terrour, and my feeble flesh doth waste
  • By sinne in it, which it t'wards hell doth weigh;
  • Onely thou art above, and when towards thee
  • By thy leave I can looke, I rise againe; 10
  • But our old subtle foe so tempteth me,
  • That not one houre my selfe I can sustaine;
  • Thy Grace may wing me to prevent his art,
  • And thou like Adamant draw mine iron heart.
  • [Holy Sonnets. _1633-69_ (_following_ La Corona _as second
  • group under the same general title_), _W:_ Devine Meditations.
  • _B_, _O'F_, _S96:_ _no title_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TCC_,
  • _TCD_. _See note_]
  • [I. _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_ _omitted_ _1633_,
  • _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [4 yesterday; _Ed:_ yesterday, _1635-69_]
  • [7 feeble _1635-69:_ febled _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [12 my selfe I can _1635-69:_ I can myself _B_, _S96_, _W_
  • sustaine; _1669:_ sustaine, _1635-54_]
  • II.
  • As due by many titles I resigne
  • My selfe to thee, O God, first I was made
  • By thee, and for thee, and when I was decay'd
  • Thy blood bought that, the which before was thine;
  • I am thy sonne, made with thy selfe to shine, 5
  • Thy servant, whose paines thou hast still repaid,
  • Thy sheepe, thine Image, and, till I betray'd
  • My selfe, a temple of thy Spirit divine;
  • Why doth the devill then usurpe on mee?
  • Why doth he steale, nay ravish that's thy right? 10
  • Except thou rise and for thine owne worke fight,
  • Oh I shall soone despaire, when I doe see
  • That thou lov'st mankind well, yet wilt'not chuse me,
  • And Satan hates mee, yet is loth to lose mee.
  • [II. _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_ I. _1633_, _A18_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [2 God, first _1633:_ God. First _1635-69_]
  • [4 thine; _1650-69:_ thine, _1633-39:_ thine. _W_]
  • [7 and, _Ed:_ and _1633-69_]
  • [9 on _1633-69_, _D_, _H49:_ in _A18_, _B_, _N_, _S96_, _TC_,
  • _W_]
  • [10 steale,] steale _1633-39_
  • that's] what's _A18_, _TCC_]
  • [12 doe _1633 and most MSS.:_ shall _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [13 me,] me. _1633_]
  • III.
  • O might those sighes and teares returne againe
  • Into my breast and eyes, which I have spent,
  • That I might in this holy discontent
  • Mourne with some fruit, as I have mourn'd in vaine;
  • In mine Idolatry what showres of raine 5
  • Mine eyes did waste? what griefs my heart did rent?
  • That sufferance was my sinne; now I repent;
  • 'Cause I did suffer I must suffer paine.
  • Th'hydroptique drunkard, and night-scouting thiefe,
  • The itchy Lecher, and selfe tickling proud 10
  • Have the remembrance of past joyes, for reliefe
  • Of comming ills. To (poore) me is allow'd
  • No ease; for, long, yet vehement griefe hath beene
  • Th'effect and cause, the punishment and sinne.
  • [III. _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_ _omitted_ _1633_,
  • _A18_, _D_, _&c._]
  • [7 sinne; now I _Ed:_ sinne, now I _B_, _W:_ sinne I now
  • _1635-69_
  • repent; _Ed:_ repent, _1633-69_]
  • IV.
  • Oh my blacke Soule! now thou art summoned
  • By sicknesse, deaths herald, and champion;
  • Thou art like a pilgrim, which abroad hath done
  • Treason, and durst not turne to whence hee is fled,
  • Or like a thiefe, which till deaths doome be read, 5
  • Wisheth himselfe delivered from prison;
  • But damn'd and hal'd to execution,
  • Wisheth that still he might be imprisoned.
  • Yet grace, if thou repent, thou canst not lacke;
  • But who shall give thee that grace to beginne? 10
  • Oh make thy selfe with holy mourning blacke,
  • And red with blushing, as thou art with sinne;
  • Or wash thee in Christs blood, which hath this might
  • That being red, it dyes red soules to white.
  • [IV. _1635-69:_ II. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ V. _B_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _W_]
  • [1 Soule! _1633:_ Soule _1635-69_]
  • [8 imprisoned. _W:_ imprisoned; _1633-69_]
  • V.
  • I am a little world made cunningly
  • Of Elements, and an Angelike spright,
  • But black sinne hath betraid to endlesse night
  • My worlds both parts, and (oh) both parts must die.
  • You which beyond that heaven which was most high 5
  • Have found new sphears, and of new lands can write,
  • Powre new seas in mine eyes, that so I might
  • Drowne my world with my weeping earnestly,
  • Or wash it, if it must be drown'd no more:
  • But oh it must be burnt! alas the fire 10
  • Of lust and envie have burnt it heretofore,
  • And made it fouler; Let their flames retire,
  • And burne me ô Lord, with a fiery zeale
  • Of thee and thy house, which doth in eating heale.
  • [V. _1635-69:_ _omitted_ _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ VII. _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [6 lands _B_, _S96_, _W:_ land _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [7 I _1635-54:_ he _1669_]
  • [9 it, _Ed:_ it: _W:_ it _1635-69_]
  • [10 burnt! _Ed:_ burnt, _1635-69_]
  • [11 have _B_, _S96_, _W:_ hath _O'F:_ _om._ _1635-69_]
  • [12 fouler; _W:_ fouler, _1635-69_
  • their] those _W_]
  • [13 Lord] God _W_]
  • VI.
  • This is my playes last scene, here heavens appoint
  • My pilgrimages last mile; and my race
  • Idly, yet quickly runne, hath this last pace,
  • My spans last inch, my minutes latest point,
  • And gluttonous death, will instantly unjoynt 5
  • My body, and soule, and I shall sleepe a space,
  • But my'ever-waking part shall see that face,
  • Whose feare already shakes my every joynt:
  • Then, as my soule, to'heaven her first seate, takes flight,
  • And earth-borne body, in the earth shall dwell, 10
  • So, fall my sinnes, that all may have their right,
  • To where they'are bred, and would presse me, to hell.
  • Impute me righteous, thus purg'd of evill,
  • For thus I leave the world, the flesh, the devill.
  • [VI. _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_ III. _1633_, _A18_,
  • _D_, _&c._]
  • [6 and soule, _1635-69:_ and my soule, _1633_]
  • [7 Or presently, I know not, see that Face, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [10 earth-borne _1635-69:_ earth borne _1633_]
  • [14 flesh,] flesh _1633_
  • the devill.] and devill. _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _TC_, _W_]
  • VII.
  • At the round earths imagin'd corners, blow
  • Your trumpets, Angells, and arise, arise
  • From death, you numberlesse infinities
  • Of soules, and to your scattred bodies goe,
  • All whom the flood did, and fire shall o'erthrow, 5
  • All whom warre, dearth, age, agues, tyrannies,
  • Despaire, law, chance, hath slaine, and you whose eyes,
  • Shall behold God, and never tast deaths woe.
  • But let them sleepe, Lord, and mee mourne a space,
  • For, if above all these, my sinnes abound, 10
  • 'Tis late to aske abundance of thy grace,
  • When wee are there; here on this lowly ground,
  • Teach mee how to repent; for that's as good
  • As if thou'hadst seal'd my pardon, with thy blood.
  • [VII. _1635-69:_ IV. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ VIII. _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [5 o'erthrow] overthrow _1669_]
  • [6 dearth, _W:_ death, _1633-69_, _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [8 woe. _W:_ woe, _1633-54:_ owe; _1669_]
  • [12 lowly] holy _1669_]
  • [14 thy] my _1669_]
  • VIII.
  • If faithfull soules be alike glorifi'd
  • As Angels, then my fathers soule doth see,
  • And adds this even to full felicitie,
  • That valiantly I hels wide mouth o'rstride:
  • But if our mindes to these soules be descry'd 5
  • By circumstances, and by signes that be
  • Apparent in us, not immediately,
  • How shall my mindes white truth by them be try'd?
  • They see idolatrous lovers weepe and mourne,
  • And vile blasphemous Conjurers to call 10
  • On Iefus name, and Pharisaicall
  • Dissemblers feigne devotion. Then turne
  • O pensive soule, to God, for he knowes best
  • Thy true griefe, for he put it in my breast.
  • [VIII. _1635-69:_ _omitted_ _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ X. _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [7 in us, _W:_ in us _1635-69_. _See note_]
  • [8 by] to _B_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [10 vile _W:_ vilde _B_, _O'F_, _S96:_ stile _1635-69_]
  • [14 true _W:_ _om. 1635-69_, _B_, _S96_ in _W:_ into
  • _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_
  • my] thy _B_, _S96_]
  • IX.
  • If poysonous mineralls, and if that tree,
  • Whose fruit threw death on else immortall us,
  • If lecherous goats, if serpents envious
  • Cannot be damn'd; Alas; why should I bee?
  • Why should intent or reason, borne in mee, 5
  • Make sinnes, else equall, in mee more heinous?
  • And mercy being easie, and glorious
  • To God; in his sterne wrath, why threatens hee?
  • But who am I, that dare dispute with thee
  • O God? Oh! of thine onely worthy blood, 10
  • And my teares, make a heavenly Lethean flood,
  • And drowne in it my sinnes blacke memorie;
  • That thou remember them, some claime as debt,
  • I thinke it mercy, if thou wilt forget.
  • [IX. _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_ V. _1633_, _A18_, _D_,
  • _&c._]
  • [1 poysonous] poysons _1639-54_
  • and if that] or if the _B_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [2 (else immortal) _1635-69_]
  • [5 or] and _B_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [6 mee] mee, _1633_]
  • [8 God;] God, _1633_]
  • [9-10 thee O God? _W:_ thee? O God, _1633-69_]
  • [12 memorie;] memorie, _1633_]
  • [14 forget.] forget, _1633_]
  • X.
  • Death be not proud, though some have called thee
  • Mighty and dreadfull, for, thou art not soe,
  • For, those, whom thou think'st, thou dost overthrow,
  • Die not, poore death, nor yet canst thou kill mee.
  • From rest and sleepe, which but thy pictures bee, 5
  • Much pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow,
  • And soonest our best men with thee doe goe,
  • Rest of their bones, and soules deliverie.
  • Thou art slave to Fate, Chance, kings, and desperate men,
  • And dost with poyson, warre, and sicknesse dwell, 10
  • And poppie, or charmes can make us sleepe as well,
  • And better then thy stroake; why swell'st thou then?
  • One short sleepe past, wee wake eternally,
  • And death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die.
  • [X. _1635-69:_ VI. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ XI. _B_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _W_]
  • [4 mee.] mee; _1633_]
  • [5 pictures _1633 and MSS.:_ picture _1635-69_]
  • [8 deliverie.] deliverie _1633-69_]
  • [9 Chance, _W:_ chance, _1633-69_]
  • [10 dost] doth _1633_
  • dwell,] dwell. _1633_]
  • [12 better] easier _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [13 wake] live _B_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [14 more; death, _Ed:_ more, death _1633-69_]
  • XI.
  • Spit in my face you Jewes, and pierce my side,
  • Buffet, and scoffe, scourge, and crucifie mee,
  • For I have sinn'd, and sinn'd, and onely hee,
  • Who could do no iniquitie, hath dyed:
  • But by my death can not be satisfied 5
  • My sinnes, which passe the Jewes impiety:
  • They kill'd once an inglorious man, but I
  • Crucifie him daily, being now glorified.
  • Oh let mee then, his strange love still admire:
  • Kings pardon, but he bore our punishment. 10
  • And _Iacob_ came cloth'd in vile harsh attire
  • But to supplant, and with gainfull intent:
  • God cloth'd himselfe in vile mans flesh, that so
  • Hee might be weake enough to suffer woe.
  • [XI. _1635-69:_ VII. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ _omitted_ _B_,
  • _S96:_ _added among_ Other Meditations. _O'F:_ XIII. _W_]
  • [3 onely] humbly _W_]
  • [6 impiety] iniquitye _D_, _H49_]
  • [8 glorified.] glorified; _1633_]
  • [12 intent:] intent _1633_]
  • XII.
  • Why are wee by all creatures waited on?
  • Why doe the prodigall elements supply
  • Life and food to mee, being more pure then I,
  • Simple, and further from corruption?
  • Why brook'st thou, ignorant horse, subjection? 5
  • Why dost thou bull, and bore so seelily
  • Dissemble weaknesse, and by'one mans stroke die,
  • Whose whole kinde, you might swallow and feed upon?
  • Weaker I am, woe is mee, and worse then you,
  • You have not sinn'd, nor need be timorous. 10
  • But wonder at a greater wonder, for to us
  • Created nature doth these things subdue,
  • But their Creator, whom sin, nor nature tyed,
  • For us, his Creatures, and his foes, hath dyed.
  • [XII. _1635-69:_ VIII. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ _omitted_
  • _B_, _S96:_ _among_ Other Meditations. _O'F:_ XIV. _W_]
  • [1 are wee] ame I _W_]
  • [4 Simple, _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _W:_ Simpler _1635-69_, _A18_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _Chambers_]
  • [9 Weaker I am,] Alas I am weaker, _W_]
  • [10 timorous. _W:_ timorous, _1633-69_]
  • [11 a greater wonder, _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_ (greate),
  • _TC_, _W:_ a greater, _1635-69_]
  • XIII.
  • What if this present were the worlds last night?
  • Marke in my heart, O Soule, where thou dost dwell,
  • The picture of Christ crucified, and tell
  • Whether that countenance can thee affright,
  • Teares in his eyes quench the amasing light, 5
  • Blood fills his frownes, which from his pierc'd head fell.
  • And can that tongue adjudge thee unto hell,
  • Which pray'd forgivenesse for his foes fierce spight?
  • No, no; but as in my idolatrie
  • I said to all my profane mistresses, 10
  • Beauty, of pitty, foulnesse onely is
  • A signe of rigour: so I say to thee,
  • To wicked spirits are horrid shapes assign'd,
  • This beauteous forme assures a pitious minde.
  • [XIII _1635-69:_ IX. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ _om. B_,
  • _S96:_ _among_ Other Meditations. _O'F:_ XV. _W_]
  • [2 Marke] Looke _W_]
  • [4 that _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _W:_ his _1633-69_, _D_,
  • _H49_]
  • [6 fell. _1639-69:_ fell _1633-35_]
  • [8 fierce] ranck _W_]
  • [14 assures _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _O'F_, _TC_, _W:_ assumes
  • _1633-69_]
  • XIV.
  • Batter my heart, three person'd God; for, you
  • As yet but knocke, breathe, shine, and seeke to mend;
  • That I may rise, and stand, o'erthrow mee,'and bend
  • Your force, to breake, blowe, burn and make me new.
  • I, like an usurpt towne, to'another due, 5
  • Labour to'admit you, but Oh, to no end,
  • Reason your viceroy in mee, mee should defend,
  • But is captiv'd, and proves weake or untrue.
  • Yet dearely'I love you,'and would be loved faine,
  • But am betroth'd unto your enemie: 10
  • Divorce mee,'untie, or breake that knot againe,
  • Take mee to you, imprison mee, for I
  • Except you'enthrall mee, never shall be free,
  • Nor ever chast, except you ravish mee.
  • [XIV. _1635-69:_ X. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ _om. B_, _O'F_,
  • _S96:_ XVI. _W_]
  • [7 mee should] wee should _1669_]
  • [8 untrue. _W:_ untrue, _1633-69_]
  • [9 loved _MSS.:_ lov'd _1633-69_]
  • [10 enemie: _W:_ enemie, _1633-69_]
  • XV.
  • Wilt thou love God, as he thee! then digest,
  • My Soule, this wholsome meditation,
  • How God the Spirit, by Angels waited on
  • In heaven, doth make his Temple in thy brest.
  • The Father having begot a Sonne most blest, 5
  • And still begetting, (for he ne'r begonne)
  • Hath deign'd to chuse thee by adoption,
  • Coheire to'his glory,'and Sabbaths endlesse rest.
  • And as a robb'd man, which by search doth finde
  • His stolne stuffe sold, must lose or buy'it againe: 10
  • The Sonne of glory came downe, and was slaine,
  • Us whom he'had made, and Satan stolne, to unbinde.
  • 'Twas much, that man was made like God before,
  • But, that God should be made like man, much more.
  • [XV. _1635-69:_ XI. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ XII. _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [4 brest. _W:_ brest, _1633-69_]
  • [8 rest.] rest; _1633_]
  • [11 Sonne _1633:_ Sunne _1633-69_]
  • [12 stolne, _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TC:_ stole,
  • _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W_, _Chambers_]
  • XVI.
  • Father, part of his double interest
  • Unto thy kingdome, thy Sonne gives to mee,
  • His joynture in the knottie Trinitie
  • Hee keepes, and gives to me his deaths conquest.
  • This Lambe, whose death, with life the world hath blest, 5
  • Was from the worlds beginning slaine, and he
  • Hath made two Wills, which with the Legacie
  • Of his and thy kingdome, doe thy Sonnes invest.
  • Yet such are thy laws, that men argue yet
  • Whether a man those statutes can fulfill; 10
  • None doth; but all-healing grace and spirit
  • Revive againe what law and letter kill.
  • Thy lawes abridgement, and thy last command
  • Is all but love; Oh let this last Will stand!
  • [XVI. _1635-69:_ XII. _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _&c.:_ IV. _B_,
  • _O'F_, _S96_, _W_]
  • [3 Trinitie] Trinitie, _1633_]
  • [8 doe _1633:_ _om. 1635-69:_ doth _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC_, _W_
  • invest. _W:_ invest, _1633-39:_ invest: _1650-69_]
  • [9 thy _O'F_, _S96_, _W:_ these _1633-69:_ those _A18_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [11 doth;] doth, _1633_
  • but all-healing _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_ but thy
  • all-healing _1633-69_. _See note_
  • spirit] Spirit, _1633-69_]
  • [12 Revive againe] Revive and quicken _B_, _O'F_, _S96_, _W_
  • kill. _1635-69:_ kill, _1633_]
  • [14 this _1633-69:_ that _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _TC_, _W:_
  • thy _B_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • XVII.
  • Since she whom I lov'd hath payd her last debt
  • To Nature, and to hers, and my good is dead,
  • And her Soule early into heaven ravished,
  • Wholly on heavenly things my mind is sett.
  • Here the admyring her my mind did whett 5
  • To seeke thee God; so streames do shew their head;
  • But though I have found thee, and thou my thirst hast fed,
  • A holy thirsty dropsy melts mee yett.
  • But why should I begg more Love, when as thou
  • Dost wooe my soule for hers; offring all thine: 10
  • And dost not only feare least I allow
  • My Love to Saints and Angels things divine,
  • But in thy tender jealosy dost doubt
  • Least the World, Fleshe, yea Devill putt thee out.
  • [XVII. _W:_ _first printed in Gosse's_ Life and Letters of
  • John Donne, 1899]
  • [2 dead,] dead _W_]
  • [6 their] y^r _W_
  • head;] head, _W_]
  • [10 wooe] _spelt_ woe _W_]
  • [12 divine,] divine _W_]
  • XVIII.
  • Show me deare Christ, thy spouse, so bright and clear.
  • What! is it She, which on the other shore
  • Goes richly painted? or which rob'd and tore
  • Laments and mournes in Germany and here?
  • Sleepes she a thousand, then peepes up one yeare? 5
  • Is she selfe truth and errs? now new, now outwore?
  • Doth she, and did she, and shall she evermore
  • On one, on seaven, or on no hill appeare?
  • Dwells she with us, or like adventuring knights
  • First travaile we to seeke and then make Love? 10
  • Betray kind husband thy spouse to our sights,
  • And let myne amorous soule court thy mild Dove,
  • Who is most trew, and pleasing to thee, then
  • When she'is embrac'd and open to most men.
  • [XVIII. _W:_ _first printed in Gosse's_ Life _&c._]
  • [2 What!] What _W_]
  • [3 tore] _so I read W:_ lore _Gosse_]
  • XIX.
  • Oh, to vex me, contraryes meet in one:
  • Inconstancy unnaturally hath begott
  • A constant habit; that when I would not
  • I change in vowes, and in devotione.
  • As humorous is my contritione 5
  • As my prophane Love, and as soone forgott:
  • As ridlingly distemper'd, cold and hott,
  • As praying, as mute; as infinite, as none.
  • I durst not view heaven yesterday; and to day
  • In prayers, and flattering speaches I court God: 10
  • To morrow I quake with true feare of his rod.
  • So my devout fitts come and go away
  • Like a fantastique Ague: save that here
  • Those are my best dayes, when I shake with feare.
  • [XIX. _W:_ _first printed in Gosse's_ Life _&c._]
  • [3 that] y^t _W_, _so always_]
  • [4 and] & _W_, _so always_]
  • _The Crosse._
  • Since Christ embrac'd the Crosse it selfe, dare I
  • His image, th'image of his Crosse deny?
  • Would I have profit by the sacrifice,
  • And dare the chosen Altar to despise?
  • It bore all other sinnes, but is it fit 5
  • That it should beare the sinne of scorning it?
  • Who from the picture would avert his eye,
  • How would he flye his paines, who there did dye?
  • From mee, no Pulpit, nor misgrounded law,
  • Nor scandall taken, shall this Crosse withdraw, 10
  • It shall not, for it cannot; for, the losse
  • Of this Crosse, were to mee another Crosse;
  • Better were worse, for, no affiction,
  • No Crosse is so extreme, as to have none.
  • Who can blot out the Crosse, which th'instrument 15
  • Of God, dew'd on mee in the Sacrament?
  • Who can deny mee power, and liberty
  • To stretch mine armes, and mine owne Crosse to be?
  • Swimme, and at every stroake, thou art thy Crosse;
  • The Mast and yard make one, where seas do tosse; 20
  • Looke downe, thou spiest out Crosses in small things;
  • Looke up, thou seest birds rais'd on crossed wings;
  • All the Globes frame, and spheares, is nothing else
  • But the Meridians crossing Parallels.
  • Materiall Crosses then, good physicke bee, 25
  • But yet spirituall have chiefe dignity.
  • These for extracted chimique medicine serve,
  • And cure much better, and as well preserve;
  • Then are you your own physicke, or need none,
  • When Still'd, or purg'd by tribulation. 30
  • For when that Crosse ungrudg'd, unto you stickes,
  • Then are you to your selfe, a Crucifixe.
  • As perchance, Carvers do not faces make,
  • But that away, which hid them there, do take;
  • Let Crosses, soe, take what hid Christ in thee, 35
  • And be his image, or not his, but hee.
  • But, as oft Alchimists doe coyners prove,
  • So may a selfe-dispising, get selfe-love,
  • And then as worst surfets, of best meates bee,
  • Soe is pride, issued from humility, 40
  • For, 'tis no child, but monster; therefore Crosse
  • Your joy in crosses, else, 'tis double losse.
  • And crosse thy senses, else, both they, and thou
  • Must perish soone, and to destruction bowe.
  • For if the'eye seeke good objects, and will take 45
  • No crosse from bad, wee cannot scape a snake.
  • So with harsh, hard, sowre, stinking, crosse the rest,
  • Make them indifferent all; call nothing best.
  • But most the eye needs crossing, that can rome,
  • And move; To th'other th'objects must come home. 50
  • And crosse thy heart: for that in man alone
  • Points downewards, and hath palpitation.
  • Crosse those dejections, when it downeward tends,
  • And when it to forbidden heights pretends.
  • And as the braine through bony walls doth vent 55
  • By sutures, which a Crosses forme present,
  • So when thy braine workes, ere thou utter it,
  • Crosse and correct concupiscence of witt.
  • Be covetous of Crosses, let none fall.
  • Crosse no man else, but crosse thy selfe in all. 60
  • Then doth the Crosse of Christ worke fruitfully
  • Within our hearts, when wee love harmlesly
  • That Crosses pictures much, and with more care
  • That Crosses children, which our Crosses are.
  • [The Crosse. _1633-69_ (_following_, _1635-69_, In that, ô
  • Queene _&c._ _p._ 427): _similarly_, _A18_, _A25_, _B_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [8 paines] pangs _JC_]
  • [12 Crosse; _1635-69:_ Crosse. _1633_]
  • [13 affliction, _Ed:_ affliction _1633-69_]
  • [14 none. _Ed:_ none; _1633-54:_ none: _1669_]
  • [19 Crosse; _Ed:_ Crosse, _1633:_ Crosse, _1635-69_]
  • [20 make] makes _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _S_
  • where] when _O'F_
  • tosse; _1635-69:_ tosse. _1633_]
  • [21 out] our _1669_]
  • [23 is] are _A25_, _B_]
  • [26 But yet] And yet _A18_, _D_, _JC_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [27 medicine] medicines _A25_, _B_, _JC_]
  • [33 make, _1635-69:_ make: _1633_]
  • [34 take; _Ed:_ take. _1633:_ take: _1635-69_]
  • [37 oft _Ed:_ oft, _1633-69_]
  • [38 selfe-love, _D:_ selfe-love. _1633-69_]
  • [42 losse. _Ed:_ losse, _1633-69_]
  • [44 destruction] corruption _O'F_]
  • [45 seeke] see _1650-69_]
  • [48 all; call nothing best. _Ed:_ indifferent; call nothing
  • best. _1633 and MSS:_ indifferent; all, nothing best.
  • _1635-69_]
  • [50 To th'other th'objects _1633:_ To th'others objects
  • _1635-69_]
  • [52 Points _A18_, _A25_, _N_, _P_, _S_, _TC:_ Pants _1633-69_,
  • _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _O'F_]
  • [53 dejections _1633:_ detorsions _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [55 the] thy _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_,
  • _TC_]
  • [61 fruitfully _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TC:_ faithfully _1633-69_]
  • [63 That _A18_, _A25_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _N_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _TC:_ The _1633-69_]
  • _Resurrection, imperfect._
  • Sleep sleep old Sun, thou canst not have repast
  • As yet, the wound thou took'st on friday last;
  • Sleepe then, and rest; The world may beare thy stay,
  • A better Sun rose before thee to day,
  • Who, not content to'enlighten all that dwell 5
  • On the earths face, as thou, enlightned hell,
  • And made the darke fires languish in that vale,
  • As, at thy presence here, our fires grow pale.
  • Whose body having walk'd on earth, and now
  • Hasting to Heaven, would, that he might allow 10
  • Himselfe unto all stations, and fill all,
  • For these three daies become a minerall;
  • Hee was all gold when he lay downe, but rose
  • All tincture, and doth not alone dispose
  • Leaden and iron wills to good, but is 15
  • Of power to make even sinfull flesh like his.
  • Had one of those, whose credulous pietie
  • Thought, that a Soule one might discerne and see
  • Goe from a body,'at this sepulcher been,
  • And, issuing from the sheet, this body seen, 20
  • He would have justly thought this body a soule,
  • If not of any man, yet of the whole.
  • _Desunt cætera._
  • [Resurrection, imperfect. _1633-69_ (_following_ By
  • Euphrates _&c._ _p._ 424), _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [15 good, _1633-69 and MSS.: Chambers queries_ gold]
  • [22 If] If, _1633-69_]
  • _The Annuntiation and Passion._
  • Tamely, fraile body,'abstaine to day; to day
  • My soule eates twice, Christ hither and away.
  • She sees him man, so like God made in this,
  • That of them both a circle embleme is,
  • Whose first and last concurre; this doubtfull day 5
  • Of feast or fast, Christ came, and went away.
  • Shee sees him nothing twice at once, who'is all;
  • Shee sees a Cedar plant it selfe, and fall,
  • Her Maker put to making, and the head
  • Of life, at once, not yet alive, yet dead. 10
  • She sees at once the virgin mother stay
  • Reclus'd at home, Publique at Golgotha;
  • Sad and rejoyc'd shee's seen at once, and seen
  • At almost fiftie, and at scarce fifteene.
  • At once a Sonne is promis'd her, and gone, 15
  • Gabriell gives Christ to her, He her to John;
  • Not fully a mother, Shee's in Orbitie,
  • At once receiver and the legacie.
  • All this, and all betweene, this day hath showne,
  • Th'Abridgement of Christs story, which makes one 20
  • (As in plaine Maps, the furthest West is East)
  • Of the'Angels _Ave_,'and _Consummatum est_.
  • How well the Church, Gods Court of faculties
  • Deales, in some times, and seldome joyning these!
  • As by the selfe-fix'd Pole wee never doe 25
  • Direct our course, but the next starre thereto,
  • Which showes where the'other is, and which we say
  • (Because it strayes not farre) doth never stray;
  • So God by his Church, neerest to him, wee know,
  • And stand firme, if wee by her motion goe; 30
  • His Spirit, as his fiery Pillar doth
  • Leade, and his Church, as cloud; to one end both.
  • This Church, by letting these daies joyne, hath shown
  • Death and conception in mankinde is one;
  • Or'twas in him the same humility, 35
  • That he would be a man, and leave to be:
  • Or as creation he hath made, as God,
  • With the last judgement, but one period,
  • His imitating Spouse would joyne in one
  • Manhoods extremes: He shall come, he is gone: 40
  • Or as though one blood drop, which thence did fall,
  • Accepted, would have serv'd, he yet shed all;
  • So though the least of his paines, deeds, or words,
  • Would busie a life, she all this day affords;
  • This treasure then, in grosse, my Soule uplay, 45
  • And in my life retaile it every day.
  • [The Annuntiation and Passion. _1633-69:_ Upon the
  • Annuntiation and Passion falling upon one day. Anno D[^n]i
  • 1608. _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96:_ _similarly_, _N_, _TCD:_ The
  • Annuntiation. _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ _no title_, _P_]
  • [1 Tamely, fraile body, _Ed:_ Tamely fraile body _1633:_
  • Tamely fraile flesh, _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S96_ (_1650-69
  • accidentally drop second_ to day)]
  • [6 away.] away; _1633:_ away, _1635-39_]
  • [10 yet dead. _Ed:_ yet dead; _1633_, _B_, _P_, _S:_ and dead;
  • _1635-69_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD_ (_full stop_,
  • _MSS._)]
  • [12 at Golgotha; _Ed:_ at Golgotha. _1633-69_]
  • [13 Sad and rejoyc'd] Rejoyc'd and sad _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_,
  • _S96_]
  • [18 legacie. _Ed:_ legacie; _1633-69_]
  • [24 these! _Ed:_ these? _D_, _TCD:_ these; _1633:_ these.
  • _1635-69_]
  • [31 as _1633:_ and _1635-69_]
  • [32 both. _1635-69:_ both: _1633_]
  • [33 these _B_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_,
  • _TCD:_ those _1633-69_
  • daies _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TCD:_ feasts _1635-69_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [34 one; _Ed:_ one. _1633:_ are one. _1635-69_ (one _1669_)]
  • [37 hath] had _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_]
  • _Goodfriday_, 1613. _Riding Westward._
  • Let mans Soule be a Spheare, and then, in this,
  • The intelligence that moves, devotion is,
  • And as the other Spheares, by being growne
  • Subject to forraigne motions, lose their owne,
  • And being by others hurried every day, 5
  • Scarce in a yeare their naturall forme obey:
  • Pleasure or businesse, so, our Soules admit
  • For their first mover, and are whirld by it.
  • Hence is't, that I am carryed towards the West
  • This day, when my Soules forme bends toward the East. 10
  • There I should see a Sunne, by rising set,
  • And by that setting endlesse day beget;
  • But that Christ on this Crosse, did rise and fall,
  • Sinne had eternally benighted all.
  • Yet dare I'almost be glad, I do not see 15
  • That spectacle of too much weight for mee.
  • Who sees Gods face, that is selfe life, must dye;
  • What a death were it then to see God dye?
  • It made his owne Lieutenant Nature shrinke,
  • It made his footstoole crack, and the Sunne winke. 20
  • Could I behold those hands which span the Poles,
  • And turne all spheares at once, peirc'd with those holes?
  • Could I behold that endlesse height which is
  • Zenith to us, and our Antipodes,
  • Humbled below us? or that blood which is 25
  • The seat of all our Soules, if not of his,
  • Made durt of dust, or that flesh which was worne
  • By God, for his apparell, rag'd, and torne?
  • If on these things I durst not looke, durst I
  • Upon his miserable mother cast mine eye, 30
  • Who was Gods partner here, and furnish'd thus
  • Halfe of that Sacrifice, which ransom'd us?
  • Though these things, as I ride, be from mine eye,
  • They'are present yet unto my memory,
  • For that looks towards them; and thou look'st towards mee, 35
  • O Saviour, as thou hang'st upon the tree;
  • I turne my backe to thee, but to receive
  • Corrections, till thy mercies bid thee leave.
  • O thinke mee worth thine anger, punish mee,
  • Burne off my rusts, and my deformity, 40
  • Restore thine Image, so much, by thy grace,
  • That thou may'st know mee, and I'll turne my face.
  • [Goodfriday, _&c._ _1633-69:_ Good Friday (_with or without
  • date and_ Riding _&c._) _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _N_, _S_, _S96_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ Good Friday. 1613. Riding towards Wales. _D_,
  • _Lec_, _O'F:_ Good Friday. 1613. Riding to S^r Edward Harbert
  • in Wales. _H49:_ M^r J. Duñ goeing from Sir H. G. on good
  • friday sent him back this meditation on the way. _A25_]
  • [4 motions _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S_, _S96_, _TC:_ motion, _1633-69_]
  • [8 and] _bis_ _1650-54_]
  • [10 toward _1633:_ _do. or_ towards _MSS.:_ to _1635-69_,
  • _O'F_]
  • [12 beget _1633:_ beget. _1635-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [13 this Crosse, _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S_,
  • _S96_, _TCC:_ his Crosse, _1635-69_, _B_, _Cy_, _N_, _TCD_]
  • [16 too] two _1639-69_]
  • [22 turne _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _N_, _S_, _TC:_ tune _1633-69_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _O'F_, _S96_
  • once,] once _1633_]
  • [30 Upon his miserable _1633_, _A18_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TC:_
  • On his distressed _1635-69_]
  • [40 rusts, _1633_, _B_, _Cy_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_,
  • _S96_, _TCD:_ rust, _1635-69_, _A18_, _S_, _TCC_]
  • THE LITANIE.
  • I.
  • _The_ FATHER.
  • Father of Heaven, and him, by whom
  • It, and us for it, and all else, for us
  • Thou madest, and govern'st ever, come
  • And re-create mee, now growne ruinous:
  • My heart is by dejection, clay, 5
  • And by selfe-murder, red.
  • From this red earth, O Father, purge away
  • All vicious tinctures, that new fashioned
  • I may rise up from death, before I'am dead.
  • II.
  • _The_ SONNE.
  • O Sonne of God, who seeing two things, 10
  • Sinne, and death crept in, which were never made,
  • By bearing one, tryed'st with what stings
  • The other could thine heritage invade;
  • O be thou nail'd unto my heart,
  • And crucified againe, 15
  • Part not from it, though it from thee would part,
  • But let it be, by applying so thy paine,
  • Drown'd in thy blood, and in thy passion slaine.
  • III.
  • _The_ HOLY GHOST.
  • O Holy Ghost, whose temple I
  • Am, but of mudde walls, and condensed dust, 20
  • And being sacrilegiously
  • Halfe wasted with youths fires, of pride and lust,
  • Must with new stormes be weatherbeat;
  • Double in my heart thy flame,
  • Which let devout sad teares intend; and let 25
  • (Though this glasse lanthorne, flesh, do suffer maime)
  • Fire, Sacrifice, Priest, Altar be the same.
  • IV.
  • _The_ TRINITY.
  • O Blessed glorious Trinity,
  • Bones to Philosophy, but milke to faith,
  • Which, as wise serpents, diversly 30
  • Most slipperinesse, yet most entanglings hath,
  • As you distinguish'd undistinct
  • By power, love, knowledge bee,
  • Give mee a such selfe different instinct
  • Of these; let all mee elemented bee, 35
  • Of power, to love, to know, you unnumbred three.
  • V.
  • _The Virgin_ MARY.
  • For that faire blessed Mother-maid,
  • Whose flesh redeem'd us; That she-Cherubin,
  • Which unlock'd Paradise, and made
  • One claime for innocence, and disseiz'd sinne, 40
  • Whose wombe was a strange heav'n, for there
  • God cloath'd himselfe, and grew,
  • Our zealous thankes wee poure. As her deeds were
  • Our helpes, so are her prayers; nor can she sue
  • In vaine, who hath such titles unto you. 45
  • VI.
  • _The Angels._
  • And since this life our nonage is,
  • And wee in Wardship to thine Angels be,
  • Native in heavens faire Palaces,
  • Where we shall be but denizen'd by thee,
  • As th'earth conceiving by the Sunne, 50
  • Yeelds faire diversitie,
  • Yet never knowes which course that light doth run,
  • So let mee study, that mine actions bee
  • Worthy their sight, though blinde in how they see.
  • VII.
  • _The Patriarches._
  • And let thy Patriarches Desire 55
  • (Those great Grandfathers of thy Church, which saw
  • More in the cloud, then wee in fire,
  • Whom Nature clear'd more, then us Grace and Law,
  • And now in Heaven still pray, that wee
  • May use our new helpes right,) 60
  • Be satisfy'd, and fructifie in mee;
  • Let not my minde be blinder by more light
  • Nor Faith, by Reason added, lose her sight.
  • VIII.
  • _The Prophets._
  • Thy Eagle-sighted Prophets too,
  • Which were thy Churches Organs, and did sound 65
  • That harmony, which made of two
  • One law, and did unite, but not confound;
  • Those heavenly Poëts which did see
  • Thy will, and it expresse
  • In rythmique feet, in common pray for mee, 70
  • That I by them excuse not my excesse
  • In seeking secrets, or Poëtiquenesse.
  • IX.
  • _The Apostles._
  • And thy illustrious Zodiacke
  • Of twelve Apostles, which ingirt this All,
  • (From whom whosoever do not take 75
  • Their light, to darke deep pits, throw downe, and fall,)
  • As through their prayers, thou'hast let mee know
  • That their bookes are divine;
  • May they pray still, and be heard, that I goe
  • Th'old broad way in applying; O decline 80
  • Mee, when my comment would make thy word mine.
  • X.
  • _The Martyrs._
  • And since thou so desirously
  • Did'st long to die, that long before thou could'st,
  • And long since thou no more couldst dye,
  • Thou in thy scatter'd mystique body wouldst 85
  • In Abel dye, and ever since
  • In thine; let their blood come
  • To begge for us, a discreet patience
  • Of death, or of worse life: for Oh, to some
  • Not to be Martyrs, is a martyrdome. 90
  • XI.
  • _The Confessors._
  • Therefore with thee triumpheth there
  • A Virgin Squadron of white Confessors,
  • Whose bloods betroth'd, not marryed were,
  • Tender'd, not taken by those Ravishers:
  • They know, and pray, that wee may know, 95
  • In every Christian
  • Hourly tempestuous persecutions grow;
  • Tentations martyr us alive; A man
  • Is to himselfe a Dioclesian.
  • XII.
  • _The Virgins._
  • The cold white snowie Nunnery, 100
  • Which, as thy mother, their high Abbesse, sent
  • Their bodies backe againe to thee,
  • As thou hadst lent them, cleane and innocent,
  • Though they have not obtain'd of thee,
  • That or thy Church, or I, 105
  • Should keep, as they, our first integrity;
  • Divorce thou sinne in us, or bid it die,
  • And call chast widowhead Virginitie.
  • XIII.
  • _The Doctors._
  • Thy sacred Academic above
  • Of Doctors, whose paines have unclasp'd, and taught 110
  • Both bookes of life to us (for love
  • To know thy Scriptures tells us, we are wrote
  • In thy other booke) pray for us there
  • That what they have misdone
  • Or mis-said, wee to that may not adhere; 115
  • Their zeale may be our sinne. Lord let us runne
  • Meane waies, and call them stars, but not the Sunne.
  • XIV.
  • And whil'st this universall Quire,
  • That Church in triumph, this in warfare here,
  • Warm'd with one all-partaking fire 120
  • Of love, that none be lost, which cost thee deare,
  • Prayes ceaslesly,'and thou hearken too,
  • (Since to be gratious
  • Our taske is treble, to pray, beare, and doe)
  • Heare this prayer Lord: O Lord deliver us 125
  • From trusting in those prayers, though powr'd out thus.
  • XV.
  • From being anxious, or secure,
  • Dead clods of sadnesse, or light squibs of mirth,
  • From thinking, that great courts immure
  • All, or no happinesse, or that this earth 130
  • Is only for our prison fram'd,
  • Or that thou art covetous
  • To them whom thou lovest, or that they are maim'd
  • From reaching this worlds sweet, who seek thee thus,
  • With all their might, Good Lord deliver us. 135
  • XVI.
  • From needing danger, to bee good,
  • From owing thee yesterdaies teares to day,
  • From trusting so much to thy blood,
  • That in that hope, wee wound our soule away,
  • From bribing thee with Almes, to excuse 140
  • Some sinne more burdenous,
  • From light affecting, in religion, newes,
  • From thinking us all soule, neglecting thus
  • Our mutuall duties, Lord deliver us.
  • XVII.
  • From tempting Satan to tempt us, 145
  • By our connivence, or slack companie,
  • From measuring ill by vitious,
  • Neglecting to choake sins spawne, Vanitie,
  • From indiscreet humilitie,
  • Which might be scandalous, 150
  • And cast reproach on Christianitie,
  • From being spies, or to spies pervious,
  • From thirst, or scorne of fame, deliver us.
  • XVIII.
  • Deliver us for thy descent
  • Into the Virgin, whose wombe was a place 155
  • Of middle kind; and thou being sent
  • To'ungratious us, staid'st at her full of grace;
  • And through thy poore birth, where first thou
  • Glorifiedst Povertie,
  • And yet soone after riches didst allow, 160
  • By accepting Kings gifts in the Epiphanie,
  • Deliver, and make us, to both waies free.
  • XIX.
  • And through that bitter agonie,
  • Which is still the agonie of pious wits,
  • Disputing what distorted thee, 165
  • And interrupted evennesse, with fits;
  • And through thy free confession
  • Though thereby they were then
  • Made blind, so that thou might'st from them have gone,
  • Good Lord deliver us, and teach us when 170
  • Wee may not, and we may blinde unjust men.
  • XX.
  • Through thy submitting all, to blowes
  • Thy face, thy clothes to spoile; thy fame to scorne,
  • All waies, which rage, or Justice knowes,
  • And by which thou could'st shew, that thou wast born; 175
  • And through thy gallant humblenesse
  • Which thou in death did'st shew,
  • Dying before thy soule they could expresse,
  • Deliver us from death, by dying so,
  • To this world, ere this world doe bid us goe. 180
  • XXI.
  • When senses, which thy souldiers are,
  • Wee arme against thee, and they fight for sinne,
  • When want, sent but to tame, doth warre
  • And worke despaire a breach to enter in,
  • When plenty, Gods image, and seale 185
  • Makes us Idolatrous,
  • And love it, not him, whom it should reveale,
  • When wee are mov'd to seeme religious
  • Only to vent wit, Lord deliver us.
  • XXII.
  • In Churches, when the'infirmitie 190
  • Of him which speakes, diminishes the Word,
  • When Magistrates doe mis-apply
  • To us, as we judge, lay or ghostly sword,
  • When plague, which is thine Angell, raignes,
  • Or wars, thy Champions, swaie, 195
  • When Heresie, thy second deluge, gaines;
  • In th'houre of death, the'Eve of last judgement day,
  • Deliver us from the sinister way.
  • XXIII.
  • Heare us, O heare us Lord; to thee
  • A sinner is more musique, when he prayes, 200
  • Then spheares, or Angels praises bee,
  • In Panegyrique Allelujaes;
  • Heare us, for till thou heare us, Lord
  • We know not what to say;
  • Thine eare to'our sighes, teares, thoughts gives voice and word. 205
  • O Thou who Satan heard'st in Jobs sicke day,
  • Heare thy selfe now, for thou in us dost pray.
  • XXIV.
  • That wee may change to evennesse
  • This intermitting aguish Pietie;
  • That snatching cramps of wickednesse 210
  • And Apoplexies of fast sin, may die;
  • That musique of thy promises,
  • Not threats in Thunder may
  • Awaken us to our just offices;
  • What in thy booke, thou dost, or creatures say, 215
  • That we may heare, Lord heare us, when wee pray.
  • XXV.
  • That our eares sicknesse wee may cure,
  • And rectifie those Labyrinths aright,
  • That wee, by harkning, not procure
  • Our praise, nor others dispraise so invite, 220
  • That wee get not a slipperinesse
  • And senslesly decline,
  • From hearing bold wits jeast at Kings excesse,
  • To'admit the like of majestie divine,
  • That we may locke our eares, Lord open thine. 225
  • XXVI.
  • That living law, the Magistrate,
  • Which to give us, and make us physicke, doth
  • Our vices often aggravate,
  • That Preachers taxing sinne, before her growth,
  • That Satan, and invenom'd men 230
  • Which well, if we starve, dine,
  • When they doe most accuse us, may see then
  • Us, to amendment, heare them; thee decline:
  • That we may open our eares, Lord lock thine.
  • XXVII.
  • That learning, thine Ambassador, 235
  • From thine allegeance wee never tempt,
  • That beauty, paradises flower
  • For physicke made, from poyson be exempt,
  • That wit, borne apt high good to doe,
  • By dwelling lazily 240
  • On Natures nothing, be not nothing too,
  • That our affections kill us not, nor dye,
  • Heare us, weake ecchoes, O thou eare, and cry.
  • XXVIII.
  • Sonne of God heare us, and since thou
  • By taking our blood, owest it us againe, 245
  • Gaine to thy self, or us allow;
  • And let not both us and thy selfe be slaine;
  • O Lambe of God, which took'st our sinne
  • Which could not stick to thee,
  • O let it not returne to us againe, 250
  • But Patient and Physition being free,
  • As sinne is nothing, let it no where be.
  • [The Litanie. _1633-69:_ A Letanie. _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_,
  • _JC_, _Lec_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_, _TCC_, _TCD_]
  • [17 be, _D:_ be _1633-69_]
  • [30 serpents, _Ed:_ serpents _1633-69_]
  • [34 a such _1633:_ such _1635-69_, _JC:_ such a _A18_, _D_,
  • _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TC_
  • instinct _1633:_ instinct, _1635-69_]
  • [35 these; _Ed:_ these, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ these _1633-69:_
  • thee _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [48 Native] Natives _B_, _JC_, _S_
  • in heavens faire Palaces, _D:_ in heavens faire Palaces
  • _1633-39:_ in heavens Palaces, _1650-69_]
  • [52 which _1633:_ what _1635-69_]
  • [56 Grandfathers] Grandfathers, _1633_]
  • [58 then] that _1635-39_]
  • [58 Grace and Law, _D:_ grace and law, _1633-69_]
  • [61 satisfy'd, _1635-69_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _N_, _S96_,
  • _TC:_ sanctified, _1633_
  • fructifie] fructified _A18_, _JC_]
  • [63 Faith, _D:_ Faith _1633-69_]
  • [93 were, _Ed:_ were; _1633-69_]
  • [97 grow; _Ed:_ grow, _1633-69_]
  • [100 The] Thy _B_, _D_, _H49_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_]
  • [109 Thy] The _1635-69_
  • Academie _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec:_ Academ _1635-69:_ Academe
  • _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC_]
  • [112 thy] the _1650-69_
  • Scriptures] Scripture _1669_
  • wrote] _spelt_ wrought _1633 and MSS._]
  • [115 adhere; _Ed:_ adhere, _1633-69_]
  • [122 too, _D:_ too _1633-69_]
  • [125 Lord: _Ed:_ Lord, _1633-69_]
  • [128 clods _1633:_ clouds _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_ (_which
  • corrects_), _S96_]
  • [133 whom] _om. D_, _H49_, _Lec_
  • them] _om. A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [134 sweet, _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _JC_, _Lec_, _S96:_ sweets,
  • _1635-69_, _A18_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TC_]
  • [137 owing] owning _1669_]
  • [139 soule] souls _1669_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [153 fame,] flame, _1633_]
  • [154 for _1633_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _S_, _TC:_ through
  • _1635-69_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S96_, _Chambers_]
  • [156 middle] midle _1633_, _D_]
  • [157 grace;] grace, _1633_]
  • [159 Glorifiedst] Glorifiest _1633 some copies_, _D_, _H49_]
  • [162 Deliver, and] Deliver us, and _Chambers_]
  • [163 through] though, _1633_
  • that] thy _B_, _JC_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [164 is still] still is _1633 some copies_, _1635-69_]
  • [166 fits;] fits, _1633_]
  • [173 clothes _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _S_, _TC:_
  • robes _1635-69_, _B_ (robe), _JC_, _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [175 born; _Ed:_ born, _1633-69_]
  • [196 When] Where _many MSS._]
  • [197 last judgement] the last _JC_, _S:_ Gods judgement _B_]
  • [202 Allelujaes; _1635-69:_ Allelujaes, _1633_]
  • [204 say; _D:_ say. _1633-69_]
  • [209 Pietie; _Ed:_ Pietie, _1633-69_]
  • [214 offices;] offices, _1633_]
  • [217 wee _1633:_ me _1635-69_]
  • [219 wee, _Ed:_ wee _1633-69_
  • harkning, not _1633-69:_ heark'ning not _Chambers_]
  • [231 well, _1633_ (_but altered to_ will, _in some copies_),
  • _A18_, _B_, _D_, _H49_, _N_, _S_, _TC:_ will, _1635-69_,
  • _Lec_, _Chambers_, _Grolier_]
  • [233 decline: _Ed:_ decline; _1633-69_]
  • [239 apt ... doe,] apt, ... doe _1633_]
  • [243 weake ecchoes, O thou eare, and cry. _1633-69_, _A18_,
  • _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _N_, _TC:_ weake wretches, O thou eare and
  • eye. _B_, _S_, _S96:_ _Chambers adopts_ Eye _from S_,
  • _O'F reads_ eye_, _and TCC alters_ crye _to_ eye, _all
  • retaining_ ecchoes. _See note_]
  • [245 againe,] againe _1633_]
  • [246 or us _1633_, _A18_, _D_, _H49_, _Lec_, _JC_, _N_, _S_,
  • _TC:_ and us _1635-69_, _O'F_, _S96_, _Chambers_]
  • [248 O Lambe] O lambe _1633_]
  • _Vpon the translation of the Psalmes by Sir_ Philip Sydney,
  • _and the Countesse of Pembroke his Sister._
  • Eternall God, (for whom who ever dare
  • Seeke new expressions, doe the Circle square,
  • And thrust into strait corners of poore wit
  • Thee, who art cornerlesse and infinite)
  • I would but blesse thy Name, not name thee now; 5
  • (And thy gifts are as infinite as thou:)
  • Fixe we our prayses therefore on this one,
  • That, as thy blessed Spirit fell upon
  • These Psalmes first Author in a cloven tongue;
  • (For 'twas a double power by which he sung 10
  • The highest matter in the noblest forme;)
  • So thou hast cleft that spirit, to performe
  • That worke againe, and shed it, here, upon
  • Two, by their bloods, and by thy Spirit one;
  • A Brother and a Sister, made by thee 15
  • The Organ, where thou art the Harmony.
  • Two that make one _Iohn Baptists_ holy voyce,
  • And who that Psalme, _Now let the Iles rejoyce_,
  • Have both translated, and apply'd it too,
  • Both told us what, and taught us how to doe. 20
  • They shew us Ilanders our joy, our King,
  • They tell us _why_, and teach us _how_ to sing;
  • Make all this All, three Quires, heaven, earth, and sphears;
  • The first, Heaven, hath a song, but no man heares,
  • The Spheares have Musick, but they have no tongue, 25
  • Their harmony is rather danc'd than sung;
  • But our third Quire, to which the first gives eare,
  • (For, Angels learne by what the Church does here)
  • This Quire hath all. The Organist is hee
  • Who hath tun'd God and Man, the Organ we: 30
  • The songs are these, which heavens high holy Muse
  • Whisper'd to _David_, _David_ to the Iewes:
  • And _Davids_ Successors, in holy zeale,
  • In formes of joy and art doe re-reveale
  • To us so sweetly and sincerely too, 35
  • That I must not rejoyce as I would doe
  • When I behold that these Psalmes are become
  • So well attyr'd abroad, so ill at home,
  • So well in Chambers, in thy Church so ill,
  • As I can scarce call that reform'd untill 40
  • This be reform'd; Would a whole State present
  • A lesser gift than some one man hath sent?
  • And shall our Church, unto our Spouse and King
  • More hoarse, more harm than any other, sing?
  • For _that_ we pray, we praise thy name for _this_, 45
  • Which, by this _Moses_ and this _Miriam_, is
  • Already done; and as those Psalmes we call
  • (Though some have other Authors) _Davids_ all:
  • So though some have, some may some Psalmes translate,
  • We thy Sydnean Psalmes shall celebrate, 50
  • And, till we come th'Extemporall song to sing,
  • (Learn'd the first hower, that we see the King,
  • Who hath translated those translators) may
  • These their sweet learned labours, all the way
  • Be as our tuning; that, when hence we part, 55
  • We may fall in with them, and sing our part.
  • [Vpon the _&c._ _1635-69:_ _no extant MSS._]
  • [17 voyce, _1635-39:_ voyce; _1650-69_]
  • [22 sing;] sing. _1635-69_]
  • [23 three Quires, _1669:_ 3 Quires, _1635-54_]
  • [28 here _1669:_ heare _1635-54_ (_the same word, not_ hear
  • _as in Chambers' note_)]
  • [46 this Moses _Grosart:_ thy _Moses_ _1635-69_]
  • [55: tuning; _1719:_ tuning, _1635-69_
  • part, _1719:_ part _1635-69_]
  • _Ode: Of our Sense of Sinne._
  • 1. Vengeance will sit above our faults; but till
  • She there doth sit,
  • We see _her_ not, nor _them_. Thus, blinde, yet still
  • We leade her way; and thus, whil'st we doe ill,
  • We suffer it. 5
  • 2. Vnhappy he, whom youth makes not beware
  • Of doing ill.
  • Enough we labour under age, and care;
  • In number, th'errours of the last place, are
  • The greatest still. 10
  • 3. Yet we, that should the ill we now begin
  • As soone repent,
  • (Strange thing!) perceive not; our faults are not seen,
  • But past us; neither felt, but onely in
  • The punishment. 15
  • 4. But we know our selves least; Mere outward shews
  • Our mindes so store,
  • That our soules, no more than our eyes disclose
  • But forme and colour. Onely he who knowes
  • Himselfe, knowes more. 20
  • _I. D._
  • [Ode. _1635-69_, _O'F:_ Of our Sense of Sinne.
  • _H40_, _RP31_ (_in margin_, S^{r} Edw. Herbert): _no title_,
  • _B_, _Cy_, _P_, _S_]
  • [2 doth _1635-39:_ do _1650-69_]
  • [11 now] new _B_]
  • [15 The _1635-69_, _Cy_, _P:_ Our _B_, _H40_, _O'F_]
  • _To M^{r}_ Tilman _after he had taken orders._
  • Thou, whose diviner soule hath caus'd thee now
  • To put thy hand unto the holy Plough,
  • Making Lay-scornings of the Ministry,
  • Not an impediment, but victory;
  • What bringst thou home with thee? how is thy mind 5
  • Affected since the vintage? Dost thou finde
  • New thoughts and stirrings in thee? and as Steele
  • Toucht with a Loadstone, dost new motions feele?
  • Or, as a Ship after much paine and care,
  • For Iron and Cloth brings home rich Indian ware, 10
  • Hast thou thus traffiqu'd, but with farre more gaine
  • Of noble goods, and with lesse time and paine?
  • Thou art the same materials, as before,
  • Onely the stampe is changed; but no more.
  • And as new crowned Kings alter the face, 15
  • But not the monies substance; so hath grace
  • Chang'd onely Gods old Image by Creation,
  • To Christs new stampe, at this thy Coronation;
  • Or, as we paint Angels with wings, because
  • They beare Gods message, and proclaime his lawes, 20
  • Since thou must doe the like, and so must move,
  • Art thou new feather'd with cœlestiall love?
  • Deare, tell me where thy purchase lies, and shew
  • What thy advantage is above, below.
  • But if thy gainings doe surmount expression, 25
  • Why doth the foolish world scorne that profession,
  • Whose joyes passe speech? Why do they think unfit
  • That Gentry should joyne families with it?
  • As if their day were onely to be spent
  • In dressing, Mistressing and complement; 30
  • Alas poore joyes, but poorer men, whose trust
  • Seemes richly placed in sublimed dust;
  • (For, such are cloathes and beauty, which though gay,
  • Are, at the best, but of sublimed clay.)
  • Let then the world thy calling disrespect, 35
  • But goe thou on, and pitty their neglect.
  • What function is so noble, as to bee
  • Embassadour to God and destinie?
  • To open life, to give kingdomes to more
  • Than Kings give dignities; to keepe heavens doore? 40
  • _Maries_ prerogative was to beare Christ, so
  • 'Tis preachers to convey him, for they doe
  • As Angels out of clouds, from Pulpits speake;
  • And blesse the poore beneath, the lame, the weake.
  • If then th'Astronomers, whereas they spie 45
  • A new-found Starre, their Opticks magnifie,
  • How brave are those, who with their Engine, can
  • Bring man to heaven, and heaven againe to man?
  • These are thy titles and preheminences,
  • In whom must meet Gods graces, mens offences, 50
  • And so the heavens which beget all things here,
  • And the earth our mother, which these things doth beare,
  • Both these in thee, are in thy Calling knit,
  • And make thee now a blest Hermaphrodite.
  • [To M^{r} Tilman _&c._ _1635-69:_ _no extant MSS._]
  • [18 Christs] Chists _1635_]
  • [34 clay.) _Ed:_ clay) _1635-69_]
  • [52 beare, _1650-69:_ beare _1635-39_]
  • _A Hymne to Christ, at the Authors last going into Germany._
  • In what torne ship soever I embarke,
  • That ship shall be my embleme of thy Arke;
  • What sea soever swallow mee, that flood
  • Shall be to mee an embleme of thy blood;
  • Though thou with clouds of anger do disguise 5
  • Thy race; yet through that maske I know those eyes,
  • Which, though they turne away sometimes,
  • They never will despise.
  • I sacrifice this Iland unto thee,
  • And all whom I lov'd there, and who lov'd mee; 10
  • When I have put our seas twixt them and mee,
  • Put thou thy sea betwixt my sinnes and thee.
  • As the trees sap doth seeke the root below
  • In winter, in my winter now I goe,
  • Where none but thee, th'Eternall root 15
  • Of true Love I may know.
  • Nor thou nor thy religion dost controule,
  • The amorousnesse of an harmonious Soule,
  • But thou would'st have that love thy selfe: As thou
  • Art jealous, Lord, so I am jealous now, 20
  • Thou lov'st not, till from loving more, thou free
  • My soule: Who ever gives, takes libertie:
  • O, if thou car'st not whom I love
  • Alas, thou lov'st not mee.
  • Seale then this bill of my Divorce to All, 25
  • On whom those fainter beames of love did fall;
  • Marry those loves, which in youth scattered bee
  • On Fame, Wit, Hopes (false mistresses) to thee.
  • Churches are best for Prayer, that have least light:
  • To see God only, I goe out of sight: 30
  • And to scape stormy dayes, I chuse
  • An Everlasting night.
  • [A Hymne _&c._ _1633-69:_ A Hymne to Christ. _A18_, _N_,
  • _TCC_, _TCD:_ At his going with my Lord of Doncaster 1619.
  • _B_, _and similarly_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96:_ _in MSS. last two
  • lines of each stanza given as one_]
  • [2 my ... thy] an ... the _P_]
  • [3 soever swallow mee, that] soe'er swallows me up, that
  • _O'F_]
  • [10 I lov'd there, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TCC:_ I love here,
  • _1635-69:_ I love there _P_
  • who lov'd mee; _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ who love mee;
  • _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [11 our seas _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ this flood _1635-69:_
  • these (_or_ those) seas _B_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [12 sea _A18_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S96_, _TC:_ seas _1633_, _P:_
  • blood _1635-69_]
  • [15 thee, th'Eternall root] thy eternall work _B_, _O'F_
  • (_where it is altered to reading of text_), _P_ (externall
  • workes), _S96_]
  • [28 Fame, _1633_, _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ Face, _1635-69_, _B_,
  • _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • _The Lamentations of Ieremy, for the most part according to
  • Tremelius._
  • CHAP. I.
  • 1 How sits this citie, late most populous,
  • Thus solitary, and like a widdow thus!
  • Amplest of Nations, Queene of Provinces
  • She was, who now thus tributary is!
  • 2 Still in the night shee weepes, and her teares fall 5
  • Downe by her cheekes along, and none of all
  • Her lovers comfort her; Perfidiously
  • Her friends have dealt, and now are enemie.
  • 3 Unto great bondage, and afflictions
  • Juda is captive led; Those nations 10
  • With whom shee dwells, no place of rest afford,
  • In streights shee meets her Persecutors sword.
  • 4 Emptie are the gates of Sion, and her waies
  • Mourne, because none come to her solemne dayes.
  • Her Priests doe groane, her maides are comfortlesse, 15
  • And shee's unto her selfe a bitternesse.
  • 5 Her foes are growne her head, and live at Peace,
  • Because when her transgressions did increase,
  • The Lord strooke her with sadnesse: Th'enemie
  • Doth drive her children to captivitie. 20
  • 6 From Sions daughter is all beauty gone,
  • Like Harts, which seeke for Pasture, and find none,
  • Her Princes are, and now before the foe
  • Which still pursues them, without strength they go.
  • 7 Now in her daies of Teares, Jerusalem 25
  • (Her men slaine by the foe, none succouring them)
  • Remembers what of old, shee esteemed most,
  • Whilest her foes laugh at her, for what she hath lost.
  • 8 Jerusalem hath sinn'd, therefore is shee
  • Remov'd, as women in uncleannesse bee; 30
  • Who honor'd, scorne her, for her foulnesse they
  • Have seene; her selfe doth groane, and turne away.
  • 9 Her foulnesse in her skirts was seene, yet she
  • Remembred not her end; Miraculously
  • Therefore shee fell, none comforting: Behold 35
  • O Lord my affliction, for the Foe growes bold.
  • 10 Upon all things where her delight hath beene,
  • The foe hath stretch'd his hand, for shee hath seene
  • Heathen, whom thou command'st, should not doe so,
  • Into her holy Sanctuary goe. 40
  • 11 And all her people groane, and seeke for bread;
  • And they have given, only to be fed,
  • All precious things, wherein their pleasure lay:
  • How cheape I'am growne, O Lord, behold, and weigh.
  • 12 All this concernes not you, who passe by mee, 45
  • O see, and marke if any sorrow bee
  • Like to my sorrow, which Jehova hath
  • Done to mee in the day of his fierce wrath?
  • 13 That fire, which by himselfe is governed
  • He hath cast from heaven on my bones, and spred 50
  • A net before my feet, and mee o'rthrowne,
  • And made me languish all the day alone.
  • 14 His hand hath of my sinnes framed a yoake
  • Which wreath'd, and cast upon my neck, hath broke
  • My strength. The Lord unto those enemies 55
  • Hath given mee, from whom I cannot rise.
  • 15 He under foot hath troden in my sight
  • My strong men; He did company invite
  • To breake my young men; he the winepresse hath
  • Trod upon Juda's daughter in his wrath. 60
  • 16 For these things doe I weepe, mine eye, mine eye
  • Casts water out; For he which should be nigh
  • To comfort mee, is now departed farre;
  • The foe prevailes, forlorne my children are.
  • 17 There's none, though _Sion_ do stretch out her hand, 65
  • To comfort her, it is the Lords command
  • That _Iacobs_ foes girt him. _Ierusalem_
  • Is as an uncleane woman amongst them.
  • 18 But yet the Lord is just, and righteous still,
  • I have rebell'd against his holy will; 70
  • O heare all people, and my sorrow see,
  • My maides, my young men in captivitie.
  • 19 I called for my _lovers_ then, but they
  • Deceiv'd mee, and my Priests, and Elders lay
  • Dead in the citie; for they sought for meat 75
  • Which should refresh their soules, they could not get.
  • 20 Because I am in streights, _Iehova_ see
  • My heart o'rturn'd, my bowells muddy bee,
  • Because I have rebell'd so much, as fast
  • The sword without, as death within, doth wast. 80
  • 21 Of all which heare I mourne, none comforts mee,
  • My foes have heard my griefe, and glad they be,
  • That thou hast done it; But thy promis'd day
  • Will come, when, as I suffer, so shall they.
  • 22 Let all their wickednesse appeare to thee, 85
  • Doe unto them, as thou hast done to mee,
  • For all my sinnes: The sighs which I have had
  • Are very many, and my heart is sad.
  • CHAP. II.
  • 1 How over Sions daughter hath God hung
  • His wraths thicke cloud! and from heaven hath flung 90
  • To earth the beauty of _Israel_, and hath
  • Forgot his foot-stoole in the day of wrath!
  • 2 The Lord unsparingly hath swallowed
  • All Jacobs dwellings, and demolished
  • To ground the strengths of _Iuda_, and prophan'd 95
  • The Princes of the Kingdome, and the land.
  • 3 In heat of wrath, the horne of _Israel_ hee
  • Hath cleane cut off, and lest the enemie
  • Be hindred, his right hand he doth retire,
  • But is towards _Iacob_, All-devouring fire. 100
  • 4 Like to an enemie he bent his bow,
  • His right hand was in posture of a foe,
  • To kill what _Sions_ daughter did desire,
  • 'Gainst whom his wrath, he poured forth, like fire.
  • 5 For like an enemie _Iehova_ is, 105
  • Devouring _Israel_, and his Palaces,
  • Destroying holds, giving additions
  • To _Iuda's_ daughters lamentations.
  • 6 Like to a garden hedge he hath cast downe
  • The place where was his congregation, 110
  • And _Sions_ feasts and sabbaths are forgot;
  • Her King, her Priest, his wrath regardeth not.
  • 7 The Lord forsakes his Altar, and detests
  • His Sanctuary, and in the foes hand rests
  • His Palace, and the walls, in which their cries 115
  • Are heard, as in the true solemnities.
  • 8 The Lord hath cast a line, so to confound
  • And levell _Sions_ walls unto the ground;
  • He drawes not back his hand, which doth oreturne
  • The wall, and Rampart, which together mourne. 120
  • 9 Their gates are sunke into the ground, and hee
  • Hath broke the barres; their King and Princes bee
  • Amongst the heathen, without law, nor there
  • Unto their Prophets doth the Lord appeare.
  • 10 There _Sions Elders_ on the ground are plac'd, 125
  • And silence keepe; Dust on their heads they cast,
  • In sackcloth have they girt themselves, and low
  • The Virgins towards ground, their heads do throw.
  • 11 My bowells are growne muddy, and mine eyes
  • Are faint with weeping: and my liver lies 130
  • Pour'd out upon the ground, for miserie
  • That sucking children in the streets doe die.
  • 12 When they had cryed unto their Mothers, where
  • Shall we have bread, and drinke? they fainted there,
  • And in the streets like wounded persons lay 135
  • Till 'twixt their mothers breasts they went away.
  • 13 _Daughter Ierusalem_, Oh what may bee
  • A witnesse, or comparison for thee?
  • Sion, to ease thee, what shall I name like thee?
  • Thy breach is like the sea, what help can bee? 140
  • 14 For thee vaine foolish things thy Prophets sought,
  • Thee, thine iniquities they have not taught,
  • Which might disturne thy bondage: but for thee
  • False burthens, and false causes they would see.
  • 15 The passengers doe clap their hands, and hisse, 145
  • And wag their head at thee, and say, Is this
  • That citie, which so many men did call
  • Joy of the earth, and perfectest of all?
  • 16 Thy foes doe gape upon thee, and they hisse,
  • And gnash their teeth, and say, Devoure wee this, 150
  • For this is certainly the day which wee
  • Expected, and which now we finde, and see.
  • 17 The Lord hath done that which he purposed,
  • Fulfill'd his word of old determined;
  • He hath throwne downe, and not spar'd, and thy foe 155
  • Made glad above thee, and advanc'd him so.
  • 18 But now, their hearts against the Lord do call,
  • Therefore, O walls of _Sion_, let teares fall
  • Downe like a river, day and night; take thee
  • No rest, but let thine eye incessant be. 160
  • 19 Arise, cry in the night, poure, for thy sinnes,
  • Thy heart, like water, when the watch begins;
  • Lift up thy hands to God, lest children dye,
  • Which, faint for hunger, in the streets doe lye.
  • 20 Behold O Lord, consider unto whom 165
  • Thou hast done this; what, shall the women come
  • To eate their children of a spanne? shall thy
  • Prophet and Priest be slaine in Sanctuary?
  • 21 On ground in streets, the yong and old do lye,
  • My virgins and yong men by sword do dye; 170
  • Them in the day of thy wrath thou hast slaine,
  • Nothing did thee from killing them containe.
  • 22 As to a solemne feast, all whom I fear'd
  • Thou call'st about mee; when his wrath appear'd,
  • None did remaine or scape, for those which I 175
  • Brought up, did perish by mine enemie.
  • CHAP. III.
  • 1 I am the man which have affliction seene,
  • Under the rod of Gods wrath having beene,
  • 2 He hath led mee to darknesse, not to light,
  • 3 And against mee all day, his hand doth fight. 180
  • 4 Hee hath broke my bones, worne out my flesh and skinne,
  • 5 Built up against mee; and hath girt mee in
  • With hemlocke, and with labour; 6 and set mee
  • In darke, as they who dead for ever bee.
  • 7 Hee hath hedg'd me lest I scape, and added more 185
  • To my steele fetters, heavier then before.
  • 8 When I crie out, he out shuts my prayer: 9 And hath
  • Stop'd with hewn stone my way, and turn'd my path.
  • 10 And like a Lion hid in secrecie,
  • Or Beare which lyes in wait, he was to mee. 190
  • 11 He stops my way, teares me, made desolate,
  • 12 And hee makes mee the marke he shooteth at.
  • 13 Hee made the children of his quiver passe
  • Into my reines, 14 I with my people was
  • All the day long, a song and mockery. 195
  • 15 Hee hath fill'd mee with bitternesse, and he
  • Hath made me drunke with wormewood. 16 He hath burst
  • My teeth with stones, and covered mee with dust;
  • 17 And thus my Soule farre off from peace was set,
  • And my prosperity I did forget. 200
  • 18 My strength, my hope (unto my selfe I said)
  • Which from the Lord should come, is perished.
  • 19 But when my mournings I do thinke upon,
  • My wormwood, hemlocke, and affliction,
  • 20 My Soule is humbled in remembring this; 205
  • 21 My heart considers, therefore, hope there is.
  • 22 'Tis Gods great mercy we'are not utterly
  • Consum'd, for his compassions do not die;
  • 23 For every morning they renewed bee,
  • For great, O Lord, is thy fidelity. 210
  • 24 The Lord is, saith my Soule, my portion,
  • And therefore in him will I hope alone.
  • 25 The Lord is good to them, who on him relie,
  • And to the Soule that seeks him earnestly.
  • 26 It is both good to trust, and to attend 215
  • (The Lords salvation) unto the end:
  • 27 'Tis good for one his yoake in youth to beare;
  • 28 He sits alone, and doth all speech forbeare,
  • Because he hath borne it. 29 And his mouth he layes
  • Deepe in the dust, yet then in hope he stayes. 220
  • 30 He gives his cheekes to whosoever will
  • Strike him, and so he is reproched still.
  • 31 For, not for ever doth the Lord forsake,
  • 32 But when he'hath strucke with sadnes, hee doth take
  • Compassion, as his mercy'is infinite; 225
  • 33 Nor is it with his heart, that he doth smite;
  • 34 That underfoot the prisoners stamped bee,
  • 35 That a mans right the Judge himselfe doth see
  • To be wrung from him, 36 That he subverted is
  • In his just cause; the Lord allowes not this. 230
  • 37 Who then will say, that ought doth come to passe,
  • But that which by the Lord commanded was?
  • 38 Both good and evill from his mouth proceeds;
  • 39 Why then grieves any man for his misdeeds?
  • 40 Turne wee to God, by trying out our wayes; 235
  • 41 To him in heaven, our hands with hearts upraise.
  • 42 Wee have rebell'd, and falne away from thee,
  • Thou pardon'st not; 43 Usest no clemencie;
  • Pursuest us, kill'st us, coverest us with wrath,
  • 44 Cover'st thy selfe with clouds, that our prayer hath 240
  • No power to passe. 45 And thou hast made us fall
  • As refuse, and off-scouring to them all.
  • 46 All our foes gape at us. 47 Feare and a snare
  • With ruine, and with waste, upon us are.
  • 48 With watry rivers doth mine eye oreflow 245
  • For ruine of my peoples daughter so;
  • 49 Mine eye doth drop downe teares incessantly,
  • 50 Untill the Lord looke downe from heaven to see.
  • 51 And for my citys daughters sake, mine eye
  • Doth breake mine heart. 52 Causles mine enemy, 250
  • Like a bird chac'd me. 53 In a dungeon
  • They have shut my life, and cast on me a stone.
  • 54 Waters flow'd o'r my head, then thought I, I am
  • Destroy'd; 55 I called Lord, upon thy name
  • Out of the pit. 56 And thou my voice didst heare; 255
  • Oh from my sigh, and crye, stop not thine eare.
  • 57 Then when I call'd upon thee, thou drew'st nere
  • Unto mee, and said'st unto mee, do not feare.
  • 58 Thou Lord my Soules cause handled hast, and thou
  • Rescud'st my life. 59 O Lord do thou judge now, 260
  • Thou heardst my wrong. 60 Their vengeance all they have wrought;
  • 61 How they reproach'd, thou hast heard, and what they thought,
  • 62 What their lips uttered, which against me rose,
  • And what was ever whisper'd by my foes.
  • 63 I am their song, whether they rise or sit, 265
  • 64 Give them rewards Lord, for their working fit,
  • 65 Sorrow of heart, thy curse. 66 And with thy might
  • Follow, and from under heaven destroy them quite.
  • CHAP. IV.
  • 1 How is the gold become so dimme? How is
  • Purest and finest gold thus chang'd to this? 270
  • The stones which were stones of the Sanctuary,
  • Scattered in corners of each street do lye.
  • 2 The pretious sonnes of Sion, which should bee
  • Valued at purest gold, how do wee see
  • Low rated now, as earthen Pitchers, stand, 275
  • Which are the worke of a poore Potters hand.
  • 3 Even the Sea-calfes draw their brests, and give
  • Sucke to their young; my peoples daughters live,
  • By reason of the foes great cruelnesse,
  • As do the Owles in the vast Wildernesse. 280
  • 4 And when the sucking child doth strive to draw,
  • His tongue for thirst cleaves to his upper jaw.
  • And when for bread the little children crye,
  • There is no man that doth them satisfie.
  • 5 They which before were delicately fed, 285
  • Now in the streets forlorne have perished,
  • And they which ever were in scarlet cloath'd,
  • Sit and embrace the dunghills which they loath'd.
  • 6 The daughters of my people have sinned more,
  • Then did the towne of _Sodome_ sinne before; 290
  • Which being at once destroy'd, there did remaine
  • No hands amongst them, to vexe them againe.
  • 7 But heretofore purer her Nazarite
  • Was then the snow, and milke was not so white;
  • As carbuncles did their pure bodies shine, 295
  • And all their polish'dnesse was Saphirine.
  • 8 They are darker now then blacknes, none can know
  • Them by the face, as through the streets they goe,
  • For now their skin doth cleave unto the bone,
  • And withered, is like to dry wood growne. 300
  • 9 Better by sword then famine 'tis to dye;
  • And better through pierc'd, then through penury.
  • 10 Women by nature pitifull, have eate
  • Their children drest with their owne hands for meat.
  • 11 _Iehova_ here fully accomplish'd hath 305
  • His indignation, and powr'd forth his wrath,
  • Kindled a fire in _Sion_, which hath power
  • To eate, and her foundations to devour.
  • 12 Nor would the Kings of the earth, nor all which live
  • In the inhabitable world beleeve, 310
  • That any adversary, any foe
  • Into _Ierusalem_ should enter so.
  • 13 For the Priests sins, and Prophets, which have shed
  • Blood in the streets, and the just murthered:
  • 14 Which when those men, whom they made blinde, did stray 315
  • Thorough the streets, defiled by the way
  • With blood, the which impossible it was
  • Their garments should scape touching, as they passe,
  • 15 Would cry aloud, depart defiled men,
  • Depart, depart, and touch us not; and then 320
  • They fled, and strayd, and with the _Gentiles_ were,
  • Yet told their friends, they should not long dwell there;
  • 16 For this they are scattered by Jehovahs face
  • Who never will regard them more; No grace
  • Unto their old men shall the foe afford, 325
  • Nor, that they are Priests, redeeme them from the sword.
  • 17 And wee as yet, for all these miseries
  • Desiring our vaine helpe, consume our eyes:
  • And such a nation as cannot save,
  • We in desire and speculation have. 330
  • 18 They hunt our steps, that in the streets wee feare
  • To goe: our end is now approached neere,
  • Our dayes accomplish'd are, this the last day.
  • 19 Eagles of heaven are not so swift as they
  • Which follow us, o'r mountaine tops they flye 335
  • At us, and for us in the desart lye.
  • 20 The annointed Lord, breath of our nostrils, hee
  • Of whom we said, under his shadow, wee
  • Shall with more ease under the Heathen dwell,
  • Into the pit which these men digged, fell. 340
  • 21 Rejoyce O _Edoms daughter_, joyfull bee
  • Thou which inhabitst _Huz_, for unto thee
  • This cup shall passe, and thou with drunkennesse
  • Shalt fill thy selfe, and shew thy nakednesse.
  • 22 And then thy sinnes O _Sion_, shall be spent, 345
  • The Lord will not leave thee in banishment.
  • Thy sinnes O _Edoms daughter_, hee will see,
  • And for them, pay thee with captivitie.
  • CHAP. V.
  • 1 Remember, O Lord, what is fallen on us;
  • See, and marke how we are reproached thus, 350
  • 2 For unto strangers our possession
  • Is turn'd, our houses unto Aliens gone,
  • 3 Our mothers are become as widowes, wee
  • As Orphans all, and without father be;
  • 4 Waters which are our owne, wee drunke, and pay, 355
  • And upon our owne wood a price they lay.
  • 5 Our persecutors on our necks do sit,
  • They make us travaile, and not intermit,
  • 6 We stretch our hands unto th'_Egyptians_
  • To get us bread; and to the _Assyrians_. 360
  • 7 Our Fathers did these sinnes, and are no more,
  • But wee do beare the sinnes they did before.
  • 8 They are but servants, which do rule us thus,
  • Yet from their hands none would deliver us.
  • 9 With danger of our life our bread wee gat; 365
  • For in the wildernesse, the sword did wait.
  • 10 The tempests of this famine wee liv'd in,
  • Black as an Oven colour'd had our skinne:
  • 11 In _Iudaes_ cities they the maids abus'd
  • By force, and so women in _Sion_ us'd. 370
  • 12 The Princes with their hands they hung; no grace
  • Nor honour gave they to the Elders face.
  • 13 Unto the mill our yong men carried are,
  • And children fell under the wood they bare.
  • 14 Elders, the gates; youth did their songs forbeare, 375
  • 15 Gone was our joy; our dancings, mournings were.
  • 16 Now is the crowne falne from our head; and woe
  • Be unto us, because we'have sinned so.
  • 17 For this our hearts do languish, and for this
  • Over our eyes a cloudy dimnesse is. 380
  • 18 Because mount _Sion_ desolate doth lye,
  • And foxes there do goe at libertie:
  • 19 But thou O Lord art ever, and thy throne
  • From generation, to generation.
  • 20 Why should'st thou forget us eternally? 385
  • Or leave us thus long in this misery?
  • 21 Restore us Lord to thee, that so we may
  • Returne, and as of old, renew our day.
  • 22 For oughtest thou, O Lord, despise us thus,
  • And to be utterly enrag'd at us? 390
  • [The Lamentations _&c._ _1633-69_ (Tremellius _1639-69_), _B_,
  • _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ _Tr in the notes stands for_ Tremellius,
  • _Vulg for_ Vulgate. _See note:_ _full-stops after
  • verse-numbers_ _1635-69_]
  • [2-4 thus! ... is!] thus? ... is? _1633-69_]
  • [22 Harts] hearts _1669_]
  • [25 her _O'F:_ their _1633-69_, _N_, _TCD:_ the _B:_ diebus
  • afflictionis suae et ploratuum suorum _Tr_]
  • [28 Whilest _B_, _O'F:_ Whiles _1633-69_]
  • [32 seene;] seene, _1633_]
  • [43 pleasure] pleasures _N_]
  • [53 hand] hands _1650-69:_ manu ejus _Tr_]
  • [56 from whom _1635-69_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ from whence
  • _1633_]
  • [58 invite _1633_, _N_, _TCD:_ accite _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_]
  • [59 men; _Ed:_ men, _1633-69_]
  • [63 farre;] farre _1633_]
  • [65 hand,] hand _1633-35_]
  • [76 they could not get. _1633:_ and none could get. _1635-69_]
  • [_Norton conjectures that in_ 75 _we should read_ the
  • sought-for meat: _but see note_]
  • [78 o'rturn'd,] return'd, _1633_]
  • [81 heare I mourne, _1633-35_, _B_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ heare
  • me mourn, _N:_ here I mourn, _1639-69_, _and mod. edd.:_
  • Audientium me in gemitu esse nemo consolatur me. _Tr_]
  • [87 sighs] sights _1669_]
  • [90 cloud! _Ed:_ cloud? _1633-69_
  • flung] flung. _1633_]
  • [92 wrath! _Ed:_ wrath? _1633-69_]
  • [95 strengths _1633_, _N_, _TCD:_ strength _1635_, _B_, _O'F:_
  • munitiones _Tr and Vulg_]
  • [110 where] which _B_, _O'F:_ locum conventus sui _Tr_]
  • [112 regardeth] regarded _1669_]
  • [114 hand _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ hands _1633-69:_ tradit in
  • manum inimici muros, palatia illius _Tr_]
  • [118-9 ground; ... hand,] ground, ... hand; _1633_]
  • [121 Their _1633:_ The _1635-69_]
  • [122 barres; _B_, _O'F:_ barre; _1633-69_, _N_, _TCD:_ vectes
  • ejus _Tr_]
  • [124 their] the _1669_]
  • [134 there,] there _1633-39_]
  • [135 streets, _B_, _O'F:_ street _1633-69_, _N_, _TCD:_ in
  • plateis civitatis _Tr_]
  • [141 For thee _1635-54:_ For, the _1633:_ For the _1669_]
  • [143 disturne _1633-54 and MSS.:_ dis-urn _1669:_ disturb
  • _Chambers:_ ad avertendum captivitatem tuam _Tr_]
  • [145 hisse, _Ed:_ hisse _1633-39_]
  • [157 against _1633:_ unto _1635-69_, _and MSS.:_ clamat cor
  • istorum contra Dominum _Tr:_ ad Dominum _Vulg_]
  • [161 poure, for _1633 and MSS.:_ poure out _1635-69_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [174 his, _1633:_ thy _1635-69_]
  • [CHAP.] _ital._ _1633_]
  • [182 girt] hemde _B_, _O'F_]
  • [186 before. _1650-69:_ before, _1633-39_]
  • [187 8 _Ed:_ 8. _1635-69_; _om. 1633_]
  • [190 mee.] mee, _1633_]
  • [202 perished. _1633:_ perished, _1635-69_]
  • [203 mournings _1633-69_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ mourning _B_]
  • [216 (The Lords salvation) _1633:_ _no brackets_, _1635-69_]
  • [226 smite; _Ed:_ smite, _1633-69_]
  • [229 wrung] wrong _1633_
  • him, _Ed:_ him. _1633-69_]
  • [230 this.] this: _1633_]
  • [231 doth] will _B_, _O'F_]
  • [238 not; _1650-69:_ not. _1633-35:_ not _1639_]
  • [239 coverest us with wrath] coverest with thy wrath _B, O'F_]
  • [243 47 _Ed:_ 47, _1633:_ 47. _1635-69_]
  • [245 watry] water _1633_]
  • [246 daughter _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ daughters _1633-69:_
  • propter contritionem filiae populi mei _Tr_]
  • [249 citys _O'F:_ city _1633-69:_ propter omnes filias
  • civitatis meae _Tr_]
  • [252 on me _B_, _N_, _TCD:_ me on _1633-69:_ projiciunt
  • lapides in me. _Tr:_ posuerunt lapidem super me. _Vulg_]
  • [256 sigh,] sight, _1650-69_]
  • [260 Rescud'st _B_, _O'F:_ Rescuest _1633-69_, _N_, _TCD:_
  • vindicabas _Tr_
  • now, _1633-39:_ now. _1650-69_, _Chambers_]
  • [CHAP.] CAP. _1633_]
  • [270 Purest] P _dropped_ _1650-54_]
  • [274 at _1633-39:_ as _1650-69_, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD:_ qui
  • taxandi erant auro purgatissimo _Tr_]
  • [278 live,] live _1633_]
  • [283 little children] little _om. Chambers_]
  • [296 Saphirine. _1635-69:_ Seraphine. _1633:_ Sapphirina
  • polities eorum _Tr_]
  • [298 streets _B_, _O'F:_ street _1633-69_, _N_, _TCD:_ in
  • vicis _Tr:_ in plateis _Vulg_]
  • [299 the _B_, _O'F:_ their _1633-69_]
  • [302 through penury.] by penury, _1633_, _N_, _TCD:_ confossi
  • gladio quam confossi fame. _Tr_ _See note_]
  • [304 hands _B_, _O'F:_ hand _1633-69_]
  • [312 so.] so; _1633_]
  • [316 Thorough] Through _1669_]
  • [318 garments _1633:_ garment _1635-69:_ quem non possunt quin
  • tangant vestimentis suis _Tr_]
  • [320 not; _O'F_, _N_, _TCD:_ not, _1633-69_]
  • [322 dwell there; _Ed:_ dwell; there. _1633:_ dwell there.
  • _1635-39:_ dwell there _1650-54:_ dwell there: _1669_]
  • [325 their ... the _1633-39:_ the ... their _1650-69_]
  • [333-4 day. 19 Eagles _Ed: The old editions place a comma
  • after_ day, _and_ 19 _at the beginning of_ 335,
  • _wrongly._]
  • [335 mountaine tops _1633-39:_ mountaines tops _1650-69_, _B_]
  • [340 fell.] fell _1633_]
  • [342 which _1633:_ that _1635-69_
  • Huz _B:_ Hus _N_, _TCD:_ her, _1633:_ _Uz_, _1635-69:_ in
  • terra Hutzi _Tr_]
  • [345 And then] And _om. Chambers_]
  • [CHAP.] CAP. _1633_]
  • [349 us;] us, _1633-35_]
  • [354 father _B_, _O'F:_ fathers _1633-69:_ Pupilli sumus ac
  • nullo patre _Tr:_ absque patre _Vulg_]
  • [355 drunke, _1633_, _N_, _TCD:_ drinke _1635-69_, _B_, _O'F_]
  • [356 lay. _1650-69:_ lay, _1633-39_]
  • [368 Oven _1635-69:_ Ocean _1633:_ Pelles nostrae ut furnus
  • atratae sunt _Tr_]
  • [374 fell ... bare. _1633-69:_ fall ... beare. _B_, _O'F_]
  • [376 15 Gone _&c._] _Old edd. transfer_ 15 _to next line,
  • wrongly. In consequence, the remaining verses are all a number
  • short, but the complete number of 22 is made up by breaking
  • the last verse_, 'For oughtest thou _&c._,' _into two. I
  • have corrected throughout._]
  • [389 thus,] thus _1633_]
  • _Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse._
  • Since I am comming to that Holy roome,
  • Where, with thy Quire of Saints for evermore,
  • I shall be made thy Musique; As I come
  • I tune the Instrument here at the dore,
  • And what I must doe then, thinke here before. 5
  • Whilst my Physitians by their love are growne
  • Cosmographers, and I their Mapp, who lie
  • Flat on this bed, that by them may be showne
  • That this is my South-west discoverie
  • _Per fretum febris_, by these streights to die, 10
  • I joy, that in these straits, I see my West;
  • For, though theire currants yeeld returne to none,
  • What shall my West hurt me? As West and East
  • In all flatt Maps (and I am one) are one,
  • So death doth touch the Resurrection. 15
  • Is the Pacifique Sea my home? Or are
  • The Easterne riches? Is _Ierusalem_?
  • _Anyan_, and _Magellan_, and _Gibraltare_,
  • All streights, and none but streights, are wayes to them,
  • Whether where _Iaphet_ dwelt, or _Cham_, or _Sem_. 20
  • We thinke that _Paradise_ and _Calvarie_,
  • _Christs_ Crosse, and _Adams_ tree, stood in one place;
  • Looke Lord, and finde both _Adams_ met in me;
  • As the first _Adams_ sweat surrounds my face,
  • May the last _Adams_ blood my soule embrace. 25
  • So, in his purple wrapp'd receive mee Lord,
  • By these his thornes give me his other Crowne;
  • And as to others soules I preach'd thy word,
  • Be this my Text, my Sermon to mine owne,
  • Therfore that he may raise the Lord throws down. 30
  • [Hymn to God _&c._ _1635-69_, _S96_, _and in part
  • Walton_ (Life of D^{r} John Donne. 1670), _who adds_ March
  • 23, 1630]
  • [2 thy _1635 and Walton_ (_1670_): the _1639-69_]
  • [4 the Instrument _1635-69:_ my instrument _Walton_]
  • [6 Whilst ... love] Since ... loves _Walton_]
  • [10 to die, _1635:_ to die. _1639-54:_ to dy^{.} _1669_]
  • [12 theire _S96:_ those _1635-69_]
  • [18 _Gibraltare_, _1635-54:_ Gabraltare, _1669:_ Gibraltar?
  • _1719_, _Chambers:_ Gibraltar are _Grosart_. _See note_]
  • [19 but streights, _Ed:_ but streights _1635-69_]
  • [24 first] sist _1669_]
  • [28 others souls] other souls _Walton and S96_]
  • [30 That, he may raise; therefore, _Walton_]
  • * * * * *
  • [Illustration: JOHN DONNE
  • EFFIGIES REUERENDISS: UIRI IOHANNIS DONNE NUPER ECCLES: PAULINÆ DECANI
  • _Corporis hæc Animæ sit Syndon Syndon Jesu_
  • Amen
  • _Martin [DR monogram] scup_ _And are to be sould by RR and Ben: ffisher_
  • ("Portrait of the very reverend John Donne, lately Dean of St Paul's."
  • The meaning of the second line is highly obscure; possibly "May this be
  • the shroud of my body, Jesus the shroud of my soul"; or possibly: "May
  • this be the shroud of my body, Jesus's shroud that of my soul". The
  • monogram is that of Martin Droeshout)]
  • From the frontispiece to _Death's Duel_, 1632]
  • * * * * *
  • _A Hymne to God the Father:_
  • I.
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinne where I begunne,
  • Which was my sin, though it were done before?
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinne; through which I runne,
  • And do run still: though still I do deplore?
  • When thou hast done, thou hast not done, 5
  • For, I have more.
  • II.
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinne which I have wonne
  • Others to sinne? and, made my sinne their doore?
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinne which I did shunne
  • A yeare, or two: but wallowed in, a score? 10
  • When thou hast done, thou hast not done,
  • For I have more.
  • III.
  • I have a sinne of feare, that when I have spunne
  • My last thred, I shall perish on the shore;
  • But sweare by thy selfe, that at my death thy sonne 15
  • Shall shine as he shines now, and heretofore;
  • And, having done that, Thou haste done,
  • I feare no more.
  • [A Hymne _&c._ _1633-69:_ To Christ. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_
  • Christo Salvatori. _O'F_, _S96:_ _for the text of the MSS. see
  • next page_]
  • [2 Which] which _1633_]
  • [8 my sin] my sins _1639-69_]
  • [10 two: _1633:_ two, _1635-69_]
  • _To Christ._
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinn, where I begunn,
  • W^{ch} is my sinn, though it were done before?
  • Wilt thou forgive those sinns through w^{ch} I runn
  • And doe them still, though still I doe deplore?
  • When thou hast done, thou hast not done, 5
  • for I have more.
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinn, by w^{ch} I'have wonne
  • Others to sinn, & made my sinn their dore?
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinn w^{ch} I did shunne
  • A yeare or twoe, but wallowed in a score? 10
  • When thou hast done, thou hast not done,
  • for I have more.
  • I have a sinn of feare y^t when I have spunn
  • My last thred, I shall perish on the shore;
  • Sweare by thy self that at my Death, thy Sunn 15
  • Shall shine as it shines nowe, & heretofore;
  • And having done that, thou hast done,
  • I have noe more.
  • [Christ. _A18_, _N_, _TCC_, _TCD:_ Christo Salvatori. _O'F_,
  • _S96:_ _text from TCD_]
  • [1 begunn, _Ed:_ begunn _TCD_]
  • [2 were _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ was _O'F_, _S_ before? _Ed:_ before
  • _TCD_]
  • [4 them _A18_, _N_, _TC:_ runne _O'F_, _S96_]
  • [5 done, _Ed:_ done _TCD:_ _and so_ 11 _and_ 17]
  • [14 shore; _Ed:_ shore _TCD_]
  • [15 thy Sunne _O'F_, _S:_ this Sunn _A18_, _N_, _TC_]
  • [16 heretofore; _Ed:_ heretofore _TCD_]
  • * * * * *
  • ELEGIES UPON THE AUTHOR
  • TO THE MEMORIE OF MY EVER DESIRED FRIEND
  • D^r. DONNE.
  • To have liv'd eminent, in a degree
  • Beyond our lofty'st flights, that is, like Thee,
  • Or t'have had too much merit, is not safe;
  • For, such excesses finde no Epitaph.
  • At common graves we have Poetique eyes 5
  • Can melt themselves in easie Elegies,
  • Each quill can drop his tributary verse,
  • And pin it, like the Hatchments, to the Hearse:
  • But at Thine, Poeme, or Inscription
  • (Rich soule of wit, and language) we have none. 10
  • Indeed a silence does that tombe befit,
  • Where is no Herald left to blazon it.
  • Widow'd invention justly doth forbeare
  • To come abroad, knowing Thou art not here,
  • Late her great Patron; Whose Prerogative 15
  • Maintain'd, and cloth'd her so, as none alive
  • Must now presume, to keepe her at thy rate,
  • Though he the Indies for her dowre estate.
  • Or else that awfull fire, which once did burne
  • In thy cleare Braine, now falne into thy Urne 20
  • Lives there, to fright rude Empiricks from thence,
  • Which might prophane thee by their Ignorance.
  • Who ever writes of Thee, and in a stile
  • Unworthy such a Theme, does but revile
  • Thy precious Dust, and wake a learned Spirit 25
  • Which may revenge his Rapes upon thy Merit.
  • For, all a low pitch't phansie can devise,
  • Will prove, at best, but Hallow'd Injuries.
  • Thou, like the dying Swanne, didst lately sing
  • Thy Mournfull Dirge, in audience of the King; 30
  • When pale lookes, and faint accents of thy breath,
  • Presented so, to life, that peece of death,
  • That it was fear'd, and prophesi'd by all,
  • Thou thither cam'st to preach thy Funerall.
  • O! had'st Thou in an Elegiacke Knell 35
  • Rung out unto the world thine owne farewell,
  • And in thy High Victorious Numbers beate
  • The solemne measure of thy griev'd Retreat;
  • Thou might'st the Poets service now have mist
  • As well, as then thou did'st prevent the Priest; 40
  • And never to the world beholding bee
  • So much, as for an Epitaph for thee.
  • I doe not like the office. Nor is't fit
  • Thou, who did'st lend our Age such summes of wit,
  • Should'st now re-borrow from her bankrupt Mine, 45
  • That Ore to Bury Thee, which once was Thine,
  • Rather still leave us in thy debt; And know
  • (Exalted Soule) more glory 'tis to owe
  • Unto thy Hearse, what we can never pay,
  • Then, with embased Coine those Rites defray. 50
  • Commit we then Thee to Thy selfe: Nor blame
  • Our drooping loves, which thus to thy owne Fame
  • Leave Thee Executour. Since, but thine owne,
  • No pen could doe Thee Justice, nor Bayes Crowne
  • Thy vast desert; Save that, wee nothing can 55
  • Depute, to be thy Ashes Guardian.
  • So Jewellers no Art, or Metall trust
  • To forme the Diamond, but the Diamonds dust.
  • _H. K._
  • [To the _&c._ _Also in_ Deaths Duell. _1632_, _Walton's_ Lives
  • _1670_, _King's_ Poems. _1657_, _1664_, _1700_]
  • [14 here] there _1632_]
  • [31 faint] weak _1632_]
  • [57 or] nor _1632_]
  • To the deceased Author,
  • Upon the _Promiscuous_ printing of his Poems, the _Looser sort_, with
  • the _Religious_.
  • When thy _Loose_ raptures, _Donne_, shall meet with Those
  • That doe confine
  • Tuning, unto the Duller line,
  • And sing not, but in _Sanctified Prose_;
  • How will they, with sharper eyes, 5
  • The _Fore-skinne_ of thy phansie circumcise?
  • And feare, thy _wantonnesse_ should now, begin
  • _Example_, that hath ceased to be _Sin_?
  • And that _Feare_ fannes their _Heat_; whilst knowing eyes
  • Will not admire 10
  • At this _Strange Fire_,
  • That here is _mingled with thy Sacrifice_:
  • But dare reade even thy _Wanton Story_,
  • As thy _Confession_, not thy _Glory_.
  • And will so envie _Both_ to future times, 15
  • That they would buy thy _Goodnesse_, with thy _Crimes_.
  • _Tho: Browne._
  • _On the death of D^r DONNE._
  • I Cannot blame those men, that knew thee well,
  • Yet dare not helpe the world, to ring thy knell
  • In tunefull _Elegies_; there's not language knowne
  • Fit for thy mention, but 'twas first thy owne;
  • The _Epitaphs_ thou writst, have so bereft 5
  • Our tongue of wit, there is not phansie left
  • Enough to weepe thee; what henceforth we see
  • Of Art or Nature, must result from thee.
  • There may perchance some busie gathering friend
  • Steale from thy owne workes, and that, varied, lend, 10
  • Which thou bestow'st on others, to thy Hearse,
  • And so thou shalt live still in thine owne verse;
  • Hee that shall venture farther, may commit
  • A pitied errour, shew his zeale, not wit.
  • Fate hath done mankinde wrong; vertue may aime 15
  • Reward of conscience, never can, of fame,
  • Since her great trumpet's broke, could onely give
  • Faith to the world, command it to beleeve;
  • Hee then must write, that would define thy parts:
  • _Here lyes the best Divinitie, All the Arts._ 20
  • _Edw. Hyde_.
  • [On the _&c._ _Also in =Deaths Duell.= 1632_]
  • [4 thy] thine _1632_]
  • [6 tongue] pens _1632_]
  • _On Doctor =Donne=,
  • By D' =C. B.= of =O.=_
  • Hee that would write an Epitaph for thee,
  • And do it well, must first beginne to be
  • Such as thou wert; for, none can truly know
  • Thy worth, thy life, but he that hath liv'd so;
  • He must have wit to spare and to hurle downe: 5
  • Enough, to keepe the gallants of the towne.
  • He must have learning plenty; both the Lawes,
  • Civill, and Common, to judge any cause;
  • Divinity great store, above the rest;
  • Not of the last Edition, but the best. 10
  • Hee must have language, travaile, all the Arts;
  • Judgement to use; or else he wants thy parts.
  • He must have friends the highest, able to do;
  • Such as _Mecœnas_, and _Augustus_ too.
  • He must have such a sicknesse, such a death; 15
  • Or else his vaine descriptions come beneath;
  • Who then shall write an Epitaph for thee,
  • He must be dead first, let'it alone for mee.
  • [On _&c._ _Also in Corbet's Poems 1647_]
  • _An Elegie upon the incomparable D^{r} DONNE._
  • All is not well when such a one as I
  • Dare peepe abroad, and write an _Elegie_;
  • When smaller _Starres_ appeare, and give their light,
  • _Phœbus_ is gone to bed: Were it not night,
  • And the world witlesse now that DONNE is dead, 5
  • You sooner should have broke, then seene my head.
  • Dead did I say? Forgive this _Injury_
  • I doe him, and his worthes _Infinity_,
  • To say he is but dead; I dare averre
  • It better may be term'd a _Massacre_, 10
  • Then _Sleepe_ or _Death_; See how the _Muses_ mourne
  • Upon their oaten _Reeds_, and from his _Vrne_
  • Threaten the World with this _Calamity_,
  • They shall have _Ballads_, but no _Poetry_.
  • _Language_ lyes speechlesse; and _Divinity_, 15
  • Lost such a _Trump_ as even to _Extasie_
  • Could charme the Soule, and had an _Influence_
  • To teach best _judgements_, and please dullest _Sense_.
  • The _Court_, the _Church_, the _Vniversitie_,
  • Lost _Chaplaine_, _Deane_, and _Doctor_, All these, Three. 20
  • It was his _Merit_, that his _Funerall_
  • Could cause a losse so _great_ and _generall_.
  • If there be any Spirit can answer give
  • Of such as hence depart, to such as live:
  • Speake, Doth his body there vermiculate, 25
  • Crumble to dust, and feele the lawes of Fate?
  • Me thinkes, _Corruption_, _Wormes_, what else is foule
  • Should spare the _Temple_ of so faire a _Soule_.
  • I could beleeve they doe; but that I know
  • What inconvenience might hereafter grow: 30
  • Succeeding ages would _Idolatrize_,
  • And as his _Numbers_, so his _Reliques_ prize.
  • If that Philosopher, which did avow
  • The world to be but Motes, was living now:
  • He would affirme that th' _Atomes_ of his mould 35
  • Were they in severall bodies blended, would
  • Produce new worlds of _Travellers_, _Divines_,
  • Of _Linguists_, _Poets_: sith these severall _lines_
  • In him concentred were, and flowing thence
  • Might fill againe the worlds _Circumference_. 40
  • I could beleeve this too; and yet my faith
  • Not want a _President_: The _Phœnix_ hath
  • (And such was He) a power to animate
  • Her ashes, and herselfe perpetuate.
  • But, busie Soule, thou dost not well to pry 45
  • Into these Secrets; _Griefe_, and _Iealousie_,
  • The more they know, the further still advance,
  • And finde no way so safe as _Ignorance_.
  • Let this suffice thee, that his _Soule_ which flew
  • A pitch of all admir'd, known but of few, 50
  • (Save those of purer mould) is now translated
  • From Earth to Heaven, and there _Constellated_.
  • For, if each _Priest_ of God shine as a _Starre_,
  • His _Glory_ is as his _Gifts_, 'bove others farre.
  • HEN. VALENTINE.
  • _An Elegie upon D^{r}_ Donne.
  • Is _Donne_, great _Donne_ deceas'd? then England say
  • Thou 'hast lost a man where language chose to stay
  • And shew it's gracefull power. I would not praise
  • That and his vast wit (which in these vaine dayes
  • Make many proud) but as they serv'd to unlock 5
  • That Cabinet, his minde: where such a stock
  • Of knowledge was repos'd, as all lament
  • (Or should) this generall cause of discontent.
  • And I rejoyce I am not so severe,
  • But (as I write a line) to weepe a teare 10
  • For his decease; Such sad extremities
  • May make such men as I write _Elegies_.
  • And wonder not; for, when a generall losse
  • Falls on a nation, and they slight the crosse,
  • God hath rais'd _Prophets_ to awaken them 15
  • From stupifaction; witnesse my milde pen,
  • Not us'd to upbraid the world, though now it must
  • Freely and boldly, for, the cause is just.
  • Dull age, Oh I would spare thee, but th'art worse,
  • Thou art not onely dull, but hast a curse 20
  • Of black ingratitude; if not, couldst thou
  • Part with _miraculous Donne_, and make no vow
  • For thee and thine, successively to pay
  • A sad remembrance to his dying day?
  • Did his youth scatter _Poetrie_, wherein 25
  • Was all Philosophie? Was every sinne,
  • Character'd in his _Satyres_? made so foule
  • That some have fear'd their shapes, and kept their soule
  • Freer by reading verse? Did he give _dayes_
  • Past marble monuments, to those, whose praise 30
  • He would perpetuate? Did hee (I feare
  • The dull will doubt:) these at his twentieth yeare?
  • But, more matur'd: Did his full soule conceive,
  • And in harmonious-holy-numbers weave
  • [Sidenote: _La Corona._]
  • A _Crowne of sacred sonets_, fit to adorne 35
  • A dying Martyrs brow: or, to be worne
  • On that blest head of _Mary Magdalen_:
  • After she wip'd Christs feet, but not till then?
  • Did hee (fit for such penitents as shee
  • And hee to use) leave us a _Litany_? 40
  • Which all devout men love, and sure, it shall,
  • As times grow better, grow more classicall.
  • Did he write _Hymnes_, for piety and wit
  • Equall to those great grave _Prudentius_ writ?
  • Spake he all _Languages_? knew he all _Lawes_? 45
  • The grounds and use of _Physicke_; but because
  • 'Twas mercenary wav'd it? Went to see
  • That blessed place of _Christs nativity_?
  • Did he returne and preach him? preach him so
  • As none but hee did, or could do? They know 50
  • (Such as were blest to heare him know) 'tis truth.
  • Did he confirme thy age? convert thy youth?
  • Did he these wonders? And is this deare losse
  • Mourn'd by so few? (few for so great a crosse.)
  • But sure the silent are ambitious all 55
  • To be _Close Mourners_ at his Funerall;
  • If not; In common pitty they forbare
  • By repetitions to renew our care;
  • Or, knowing, griefe conceiv'd, conceal'd, consumes
  • Man irreparably, (as poyson'd fumes 60
  • Do waste the braine) make silence a safe way
  • To'inlarge the Soule from these walls, mud and clay,
  • (Materialls of this body) to remaine
  • With _Donne_ in heaven, where no promiscuous paine
  • Lessens the joy wee have, for, with _him_, all 65
  • Are satisfyed with _joyes essentiall_.
  • My thoughts, Dwell on this _Ioy_, and do not call
  • Griefe backe, by thinking of his Funerall;
  • Forget he lov'd mee; Waste not my sad yeares;
  • (Which haste to _Davids_ seventy, fill'd with feares 70
  • And sorrow for his death;) Forget his parts,
  • Which finde a living grave in good mens hearts;
  • And, (for, my first is daily paid for sinne)
  • Forget to pay my second sigh for him:
  • Forget his powerfull preaching; and forget 75
  • I am his _Convert_. Oh my frailtie! let
  • My flesh be no more heard, it will obtrude
  • This lethargie: so should my gratitude,
  • My vowes of gratitude should so be broke;
  • Which can no more be, then _Donnes_ vertues spoke 80
  • By any but himselfe; for which cause, I
  • Write no _Encomium_, but an _Elegie_.
  • IZ. WA.
  • [An Elegie _&c._ _See note_]
  • [1-3
  • Our Donne is dead; England should mourne, may say
  • We had a man where language chose to stay
  • And shew her gracefull power _1635-69_
  • ]
  • [35 _Crowne_] Crowme _1633_]
  • An Elegie upon the death of the Deane of Pauls, D^r. Iohn Donne:
  • By _M^r. Tho: Carie_.
  • Can we not force from widdowed Poetry,
  • Now thou art dead (Great DONNE) one Elegie
  • To crowne thy Hearse? Why yet dare we not trust
  • Though with unkneaded dowe-bak't prose thy dust,
  • Such as the uncisor'd Churchman from the flower 5
  • Of fading Rhetorique, short liv'd as his houre,
  • Dry as the sand that measures it, should lay
  • Upon thy Ashes, on the funerall day?
  • Have we no voice, no tune? Did'st thou dispense
  • Through all our language, both the words and sense? 10
  • 'Tis a sad truth: The Pulpit may her plaine,
  • And sober Christian precepts still retaine,
  • Doctrines it may, and wholesome Uses frame,
  • Grave Homilies, and Lectures, But the flame
  • Of thy brave Soule, that shot such heat and light, 15
  • As burnt our earth, and made our darknesse bright,
  • Committed holy Rapes upon our Will,
  • Did through the eye the melting heart distill;
  • And the deepe knowledge of darke truths so teach,
  • As sense might judge, what phansie could not reach; 20
  • Must be desir'd for ever. So the fire,
  • That fills with spirit and heat the Delphique quire,
  • Which kindled first by thy Promethean breath,
  • Glow'd here a while, lies quench't now in thy death;
  • The Muses garden with Pedantique weedes 25
  • O'rspred, was purg'd by thee; The lazie seeds
  • Of servile imitation throwne away;
  • And fresh invention planted, Thou didst pay
  • The debts of our penurious bankrupt age;
  • Licentious thefts, that make poëtique rage 30
  • A Mimique fury, when our soules must bee
  • Possest, or with Anacreons Extasie,
  • Or Pindars, not their owne; The subtle cheat
  • Of slie Exchanges, and the jugling feat
  • Of two-edg'd words, or whatsoever wrong 35
  • By ours was done the Greeke, or Latine tongue,
  • Thou hast redeem'd, and open'd Us a Mine
  • Of rich and pregnant phansie, drawne a line
  • Of masculine expression, which had good
  • Old Orpheus seene, Or all the ancient Brood 40
  • Our superstitious fooles admire, and hold
  • Their lead more precious, then thy burnish't Gold,
  • Thou hadst beene their Exchequer, and no more
  • They each in others dust, had rak'd for Ore.
  • Thou shalt yield no precedence, but of time, 45
  • And the blinde fate of language, whose tun'd chime
  • More charmes the outward sense; Yet thou maist claime
  • From so great disadvantage greater fame,
  • Since to the awe of thy imperious wit
  • Our stubborne language bends, made only fit 50
  • With her tough-thick-rib'd hoopes to gird about
  • Thy Giant phansie, which had prov'd too stout
  • For their soft melting Phrases. As in time
  • They had the start, so did they cull the prime
  • Buds of invention many a hundred yeare, 55
  • And left the rifled fields, besides the feare
  • To touch their Harvest, yet from those bare lands
  • Of what is purely thine, thy only hands
  • (And that thy smallest worke) have gleaned more
  • Then all those times, and tongues could reape before; 60
  • But thou art gone, and thy strict lawes will be
  • Too hard for Libertines in Poetrie.
  • They will repeale the goodly exil'd traine
  • Of gods and goddesses, which in thy just raigne
  • Were banish'd nobler Poems, now, with these 65
  • The silenc'd tales o'th'Metamorphoses
  • Shall stuffe their lines, and swell the windy Page,
  • Till Verse refin'd by thee, in this last Age,
  • Turne ballad rime, Or those old Idolls bee
  • Ador'd againe, with new apostasie; 70
  • Oh, pardon mee, that breake with untun'd verse
  • The reverend silence that attends thy herse,
  • Whose awfull solemne murmures were to thee
  • More then these faint lines, A loud Elegie,
  • That did proclaime in a dumbe eloquence 75
  • The death of all the Arts, whose influence
  • Growne feeble, in these panting numbers lies
  • Gasping short winded Accents, and so dies:
  • So doth the swiftly turning wheele not stand
  • In th'instant we withdraw the moving hand, 80
  • But some small time maintaine a faint weake course
  • By vertue of the first impulsive force:
  • And so whil'st I cast on thy funerall pile
  • Thy crowne of Bayes, Oh, let it crack a while,
  • And spit disdaine, till the devouring flashes 85
  • Suck all the moysture up, then turne to ashes.
  • I will not draw the envy to engrosse
  • All thy perfections, or weepe all our losse;
  • Those are too numerous for an Elegie,
  • And this too great, to be express'd by mee. 90
  • Though every pen should share a distinct part,
  • Yet art thou Theme enough to tyre all Art;
  • Let others carve the rest, it shall suffice
  • I on thy Tombe this Epitaph incise.
  • _Here lies a King, that rul'd as hee thought fit 95
  • The universall Monarchy of wit;
  • Here lie two Flamens, and both those, the best,
  • Apollo's first, at last, the true Gods Priest_.
  • [An Elegie _&c._ _Also in Carew's _Poems_ 1640._ _See note_]
  • _An Elegie on D^r. DONNE: By Sir Lucius Carie._
  • Poets attend, the Elegie I sing
  • Both of a doubly-named Priest, and King:
  • In stead of Coates, and Pennons, bring your Verse,
  • For you must bee chiefe mourners at his Hearse,
  • A Tombe your Muse must to his Fame supply, 5
  • No other Monuments can never die;
  • And as he was a two-fold Priest; in youth,
  • Apollo's; afterwards, the voice of Truth,
  • Gods Conduit-pipe for grace, who chose him for
  • His extraordinary Embassador, 10
  • So let his Liegiers with the Poets joyne,
  • Both having shares, both must in griefe combine:
  • Whil'st Johnson forceth with his Elegie
  • Teares from a griefe-unknowing Scythians eye,
  • (Like Moses at whose stroke the waters gusht 15
  • From forth the Rock, and like a Torrent rusht.)
  • Let Lawd his funerall Sermon preach, and shew
  • Those vertues, dull eyes were not apt to know,
  • Nor leave that Piercing Theme, till it appeares
  • To be goodfriday, by the Churches Teares; 20
  • Yet make not griefe too long oppresse our Powers,
  • Least that his funerall Sermon should prove ours.
  • Nor yet forget that heavenly Eloquence,
  • With which he did the bread of life dispense,
  • Preacher and Orator discharg'd both parts 25
  • With pleasure for our sense, health for our hearts,
  • And the first such (Though a long studied Art
  • Tell us our soule is all in every part,)
  • None was so marble, but whil'st him he heares,
  • His Soule so long dwelt only in his eares. 30
  • And from thence (with the fiercenesse of a flood
  • Bearing downe vice) victual'd with that blest food
  • Their hearts; His seed in none could faile to grow,
  • Fertile he found them all, or made them so:
  • No Druggist of the Soule bestow'd on all 35
  • So Catholiquely a curing Cordiall.
  • Nor only in the Pulpit dwelt his store,
  • His words work'd much, but his example more,
  • That preach't on worky dayes, His Poetrie
  • It selfe was oftentimes divinity, 40
  • Those Anthemes (almost second Psalmes) he writ
  • To make us know the Crosse, and value it,
  • (Although we owe that reverence to that name
  • Wee should not need warmth from an under flame.)
  • Creates a fire in us, so neare extreme 45
  • That we would die, for, and upon this theme.
  • Next, his so pious Litany, which none can
  • But count Divine, except a Puritan,
  • And that but for the name, nor this, nor those
  • Want any thing of Sermons, but the prose. 50
  • Experience makes us see, that many a one
  • Owes to his Countrey his Religion;
  • And in another, would as strongly grow,
  • Had but his Nurse and Mother taught him so,
  • Not hee the ballast on his Judgement hung; 55
  • Nor did his preconceit doe either wrong;
  • He labour'd to exclude what ever sinne
  • By time or carelessenesse had entred in;
  • Winnow'd the chaffe from wheat, but yet was loath
  • A too hot zeale should force him, burne them both; 60
  • Nor would allow of that so ignorant gall,
  • Which to save blotting often would blot all;
  • Nor did those barbarous opinions owne,
  • To thinke the Organs sinne, and faction, none;
  • Nor was there expectation to gaine grace 65
  • From forth his Sermons only, but his face;
  • So Primitive a looke, such gravitie
  • With humblenesse, and both with Pietie;
  • So milde was Moses countenance, when he prai'd
  • For them whose Satanisme his power gainsaid; 70
  • And such his gravitie, when all Gods band
  • Receiv'd his word (through him) at second hand,
  • Which joyn'd, did flames of more devotion move
  • Then ever Argive Hellens could of love.
  • Now to conclude, I must my reason bring, 75
  • Wherefore I call'd him in his title King,
  • That Kingdome the Philosophers beleev'd
  • To excell Alexanders, nor were griev'd
  • By feare of losse (that being such a Prey
  • No stronger then ones selfe can force away) 80
  • The Kingdome of ones selfe, this he enjoy'd,
  • And his authoritie so well employ'd,
  • That never any could before become
  • So Great a Monarch, in so small a roome;
  • He conquer'd rebell passions, rul'd them so, 85
  • As under-spheares by the first Mover goe,
  • Banish't so farre their working, that we can
  • But know he had some, for we knew him man.
  • Then let his last excuse his first extremes,
  • His age saw visions, though his youth dream'd dreams. 90
  • [72 Receiv'd] Receiv' _1633_]
  • _On D^{r}._ DONNES _death_:
  • _By M^{r}._ Mayne _of Christ-Church in Oxford._
  • Who shall presume to mourn thee, _Donne_, unlesse
  • He could his teares in thy expressions dresse,
  • And teach his griefe that reverence of thy Hearse,
  • To weepe lines, learned, as thy Anniverse,
  • A Poëme of that worth, whose every teare 5
  • Deserves the title of a severall yeare.
  • Indeed so farre above its Reader, good,
  • That wee are thought wits, when 'tis understood,
  • There that blest maid to die, who now should grieve?
  • After thy sorrow, 'twere her losse to live; 10
  • And her faire vertues in anothers line,
  • Would faintly dawn, which are made Saints in thine.
  • Hadst thou beene shallower, and not writ so high,
  • Or left some new way for our pennes, or eye,
  • To shed a funerall teare, perchance thy Tombe 15
  • Had not beene speechlesse, or our Muses dumbe;
  • But now wee dare not write, but must conceale
  • Thy Epitaph, lest we be thought to steale,
  • For, who hath read thee, and discernes thy worth,
  • That will not say, thy carelesse houres brought forth 20
  • Fancies beyond our studies, and thy play
  • Was happier, then our serious time of day?
  • So learned was thy chance; thy haste had wit,
  • And matter from thy pen flow'd rashly fit,
  • What was thy recreation turnes our braine, 25
  • Our rack and palenesse, is thy weakest straine.
  • And when we most come neere thee, 'tis our blisse
  • To imitate thee, where thou dost amisse.
  • Here light your muse, you that do onely thinke,
  • And write, and are just Poëts, as you drinke, 30
  • In whose weake fancies wit doth ebbe and flow,
  • Just as your recknings rise, that wee may know
  • In your whole carriage of your worke, that here
  • This flash you wrote in Wine, and this in Beere,
  • This is to tap your Muse, which running long 35
  • Writes flat, and takes our eare not halfe so strong;
  • Poore Suburbe wits, who, if you want your cup,
  • Or if a Lord recover, are blowne up.
  • Could you but reach this height, you should not need
  • To make, each meale, a project ere you feed, 40
  • Nor walke in reliques, clothes so old and bare,
  • As if left off to you from _Ennius_ were,
  • Nor should your love, in verse, call Mistresse, those,
  • Who are mine hostesse, or your whores in prose;
  • From this Muse learne to Court, whose power could move 45
  • A Cloystred coldnesse, or a Vestall love,
  • And would convey such errands to their eare,
  • That Ladies knew no oddes to grant and heare;
  • But I do wrong thee, _Donne_, and this low praise
  • Is written onely for thy yonger dayes. 50
  • I am not growne up, for thy riper parts,
  • Then should I praise thee, through the Tongues, and Arts,
  • And have that deepe Divinity, to know,
  • What mysteries did from thy preaching flow,
  • Who with thy words could charme thy audience, 55
  • That at thy sermons, eare was all our sense;
  • Yet have I seene thee in the pulpit stand,
  • Where wee might take notes, from thy looke, and hand;
  • And from thy speaking action beare away
  • More Sermon, then some teachers use to say. 60
  • Such was thy carriage, and thy gesture such,
  • As could divide the heart, and conscience touch.
  • Thy motion did confute, and wee might see
  • An errour vanquish'd by delivery.
  • Not like our Sonnes of Zeale, who to reforme 65
  • Their hearers, fiercely at the Pulpit storme,
  • And beate the cushion into worse estate,
  • Then if they did conclude it reprobate,
  • Who can out pray the glasse, then lay about
  • Till all Predestination be runne out. 70
  • And from the point such tedious uses draw,
  • Their repetitions would make Gospell, Law.
  • No, In such temper would thy Sermons flow,
  • So well did Doctrine, and thy language show,
  • And had that holy feare, as, hearing thee, 75
  • The Court would mend, and a good Christian bee.
  • And Ladies though unhansome, out of grace,
  • Would heare thee, in their unbought lookes, and face.
  • More I could write, but let this crowne thine Urne,
  • Wee cannot hope the like, till thou returne. 80
  • _Upon M^r J. Donne, and his Poems._
  • Who dares say thou art dead, when he doth see
  • (Unburied yet) this living part of thee?
  • This part that to thy beeing gives fresh flame,
  • And though th'art _Donne_, yet will preserve thy name.
  • Thy flesh (whose channels left their crimsen hew, 5
  • And whey-like ranne at last in a pale blew)
  • May shew thee mortall, a dead palsie may
  • Seise on't, and quickly turne it into clay;
  • Which like the Indian earth, shall rise refin'd:
  • But this great Spirit thou hast left behinde, 10
  • This Soule of Verse (in it's first pure estate)
  • Shall live, for all the World to imitate,
  • But not come neer, for in thy Fancies flight
  • Thou dost not stoope unto the vulgar fight,
  • But, hovering highly in the aire of Wit, 15
  • Hold'st such a pitch, that few can follow it;
  • Admire they may. Each object that the Spring
  • (Or a more piercing influence) doth bring
  • T'adorne Earths face, thou sweetly did'st contrive
  • To beauties elements, and thence derive 20
  • Unspotted Lillies white; which thou did'st set
  • Hand in hand, with the veine-like Violet,
  • Making them soft, and warme, and by thy power,
  • Could'st give both life, and sense, unto a flower.
  • The Cheries thou hast made to speake, will bee 25
  • Sweeter unto the taste, then from the tree.
  • And (spight of winter stormes) amidst the snow
  • Thou oft hast made the blushing Rose to grow.
  • The Sea-nimphs, that the watry cavernes keepe,
  • Have sent their Pearles and Rubies from the deepe 30
  • To deck thy love, and plac'd by thee, they drew
  • More lustre to them, then where first they grew.
  • All minerals (that Earths full wombe doth hold
  • Promiscuously) thou couldst convert to gold,
  • And with thy flaming raptures so refine, 35
  • That it was much more pure then in the Mine.
  • The lights that guild the night, if thou did'st say,
  • They looke like eyes, those did out-shine the day;
  • For there would be more vertue in such spells,
  • Then in Meridians, or crosse Parallels: 40
  • What ever was of worth in this great Frame,
  • That Art could comprehend, or Wit could name,
  • It was thy theme for Beauty; thou didst see,
  • Woman, was this faire Worlds Epitomie.
  • Thy nimble _Satyres_ too, and every straine 45
  • (With nervy strength) that issued from thy brain,
  • Will lose the glory of their owne cleare bayes,
  • If they admit of any others praise.
  • But thy diviner Poëms (whose cleare fire
  • Purges all drosse away) shall by a Quire 50
  • Of Cherubims, with heavenly Notes be set
  • (Where flesh and blood could ne'r attaine to yet)
  • There purest Spirits sing such sacred Layes,
  • In Panegyrique Alleluiaes.
  • _Arth. Wilson._
  • _In memory of Doctor Donne: By M^{r} R. B._
  • _Donne_ dead? 'Tis here reported true, though I
  • Ne'r yet so much desir'd to heare a lye,
  • 'Tis too too true, for so wee finde it still,
  • Good newes are often false, but seldome, ill:
  • But must poore fame tell us his fatall day, 5
  • And shall we know his death, the common way,
  • Mee thinkes some Comet bright should have foretold
  • The death of such a man, for though of old
  • 'Tis held, that Comets Princes death foretell,
  • Why should not his, have needed one as well? 10
  • Who was the Prince of wits, 'mongst whom he reign'd,
  • High as a Prince, and as great State maintain'd?
  • Yet wants he not his signe, for wee have seene
  • A dearth, the like to which hath never beene,
  • Treading on harvests heeles, which doth presage 15
  • The death of wit and learning, which this age
  • Shall finde, now he is gone; for though there bee
  • Much graine in shew, none brought it forth as he,
  • Or men are misers; or if true want raises
  • The dearth, then more that dearth _Donnes_ plenty praises. 20
  • Of learning, languages, of eloquence,
  • And Poësie, (past rauishing of sense,)
  • He had a magazine, wherein such store
  • Was laid up, as might hundreds serve of poore.
  • But he is gone, O how will his desire 25
  • Torture all those that warm'd them by his fire?
  • Mee thinkes I see him in the pulpit standing,
  • Not eares, or eyes, but all mens hearts commanding,
  • Where wee that heard him, to our selves did faine
  • Golden Chrysostome was alive againe; 30
  • And never were we weari'd, till we saw
  • His houre (and but an houre) to end did draw.
  • How did he shame the doctrine-men, and use,
  • With helps to boot, for men to beare th'abuse
  • Of their tir'd patience, and endure th'expence 35
  • Of time, O spent in hearkning to non-sense,
  • With markes also, enough whereby to know,
  • The speaker is a zealous dunce, or so.
  • 'Tis true, they quitted him, to their poore power,
  • They humm'd against him; And with face most sowre 40
  • Call'd him a strong lin'd man, a Macaroon,
  • And no way fit to speake to clouted shoone,
  • As fine words [truly] as you would desire,
  • But [verily,] but a bad edifier.
  • Thus did these beetles slight in him that good, 45
  • They could not see, and much lesse understood.
  • But we may say, when we compare the stuffe
  • Both brought; He was a candle, they the snuffe.
  • Well, Wisedome's of her children justifi'd,
  • Let therefore these poore fellowes stand aside; 50
  • Nor, though of learning he deserv'd so highly,
  • Would I his booke should save him; Rather slily
  • I should advise his Clergie not to pray,
  • Though of the learn'dst sort; Me thinkes that they
  • Of the same trade, are Judges not so fit, 55
  • There's no such emulation as of wit.
  • Of such, the Envy might as much perchance
  • Wrong him, and more, then th'others ignorance.
  • It was his Fate (I know't) to be envy'd
  • As much by Clerkes, as lay men magnifi'd; 60
  • And why? but 'cause he came late in the day,
  • And yet his Penny earn'd, and had as they.
  • No more of this, least some should say, that I
  • Am strai'd to Satyre, meaning Elegie.
  • No, no, had DONNE need to be judg'd or try'd, 65
  • A Jury I would summon on his side,
  • That had no sides, nor factions, past the touch
  • Of all exceptions, freed from Passion, such
  • As nor to feare nor flatter, e'r were bred,
  • These would I bring, though called from the dead: 70
  • Southampton, Hambleton, Pembrooke, Dorsets Earles,
  • Huntingdon, Bedfords Countesses (the Pearles
  • Once of each sexe.) If these suffice not, I
  • Ten _decem tales_ have of Standers by:
  • All which, for DONNE, would such a verdict give, 75
  • As can belong to none, that now doth live.
  • But what doe I? A diminution 'tis
  • To speake of him in verse, so short of his,
  • Whereof he was the master; All indeed
  • Compar'd with him, pip'd on an Oaten reed. 80
  • O that you had but one 'mongst all your brothers
  • Could write for him, as he hath done for others:
  • (Poets I speake to) When I see't, I'll say,
  • My eye-sight betters, as my yeares decay,
  • Meane time a quarrell I shall ever have 85
  • Against these doughty keepers from the grave,
  • Who use, it seemes their old Authoritie,
  • When (Verses men immortall make) they cry:
  • Which had it been a Recipe true tri'd,
  • _Probatum esset_, DONNE had never dy'd. 90
  • For mee, if e'r I had least sparke at all
  • Of that which they Poetique fire doe call,
  • Here I confesse it fetched from his hearth,
  • Which is gone out, now he is gone to earth.
  • This only a poore flash, a lightning is 95
  • Before my Muses death, as after his.
  • Farewell (faire soule) and deigne receive from mee
  • This Type of that devotion I owe thee,
  • From whom (while living) as by voice and penne
  • I learned more, then from a thousand men: 100
  • So by thy death, am of one doubt releas'd,
  • And now beleeve that miracles are ceas'd.
  • _Epitaph._
  • _Heere lies Deane Donne_; Enough; Those words alone
  • Shew him as fully, as if all the stone
  • His Church of Pauls contains, were through inscrib'd
  • Or all the walkers there, to speake him, brib'd.
  • None can mistake him, for one such as Hee 5
  • DONNE, Deane, or Man, more none shall ever see.
  • Not man? No, though unto a Sunne each eye
  • Were turn'd, the whole earth so to overspie.
  • A bold brave word; Yet such brave Spirits as knew
  • His Spirit, will say, it is lesse bold then true. 10
  • _Epitaph upon D^r. Donne_,
  • By _Endy: Porter_.
  • This decent Urne a sad inscription weares,
  • Of _Donnes_ departure from us, to the spheares;
  • And the dumbe stone with silence seemes to tell
  • The changes of this life, wherein is well
  • Exprest, A cause to make all joy to cease, 5
  • And never let our sorrowes more take ease;
  • For now it is impossible to finde
  • One fraught with vertues, to inrich a minde;
  • But why should death, with a promiscuous hand
  • At one rude stroke impoverish a land? 10
  • Thou strict Attorney, unto stricter Fate,
  • Didst thou confiscate his life out of hate
  • To his rare Parts? Or didst thou throw thy dart,
  • With envious hand, at some Plebeyan heart;
  • And he with pious vertue stept betweene 15
  • To save that stroke, and so was kill'd unseene
  • By thee? O 'twas his goodnesse so to doe,
  • Which humane kindnesse never reacht unto.
  • Thus the hard lawes of death were satisfi'd,
  • And he left us like Orphan friends, and di'de. 20
  • Now from the Pulpit to the peoples eares,
  • Whose speech shall send repentant sighes, and teares?
  • Or tell mee, if a purer Virgin die,
  • Who shall hereafter write her Elegie?
  • Poets be silent, let your numbers sleepe, 25
  • For he is gone that did all phansie keepe;
  • Time hath no Soule, but his exalted verse;
  • Which with amazements, we may now reherse.
  • In obitum venerabilis viri _Iohannis Donne_, sacræ
  • Theologiæ Doctoris, Ecclesiæ Cathedralis Divi _Pauli_,
  • nuper Decani; Illi honoris, tibi (multum mihi colende
  • Vir) observantiæ ergo Hæc ego.
  • _Conquerar? ignavoque sequar tua funera planctu?
  • Sed lachrimæ clausistis iter: nec muta querelas
  • Lingua potest proferre pias: ignoscite manes
  • Defuncti, & tacito finite indulgere dolori.
  • Sed scelus est tacuisse: cadant in mœsta lituræ 5
  • Verba. Tuis (docta umbra) tuis hæc accipe jussis
  • Cæpta, nec officii contemnens pignora nostri
  • Aversare tuâ non dignum laude Poëtam.
  • O si Pythagoræ non vanum dogma fuisset:
  • Inque meum â vestro migraret pectore pectus 10
  • Musa, repentinos tua nosceret urna furores.
  • Sed frustra, heu frustra hæc votis puerilibus opto:
  • Tecum abiit, summoque sedens jam monte Thalia
  • Ridet anhelantes, Parnassi & culmina vates
  • Desperare jubet. Verum hâc nolente coactos 15
  • Scribimus audaces numeros, & flebile carmen
  • Scribimus (ô soli qui te dilexit) habendum.
  • Siccine perpetuus liventia lumina somnus
  • Clausit? & immerito merguntur funere virtus?
  • Et pietas? & quæ poterant fecisse beatum, 20
  • Cætera, sed nec te poterant servare beatum.
  • Quo mihi doctrinam? quorsum impallescere chartis
  • Nocturnis juvat? & totidem olfecisse lucernas?
  • Decolor & longos studiis deperdere Soles
  • Vt prius aggredior, longamque arcessere famam. 25
  • Omnia sed frustra: mihi dum cunctisque minatur
  • Exitium crudele & inexorabile fatum.
  • Nam post te sperare nihil decet: hoc mihi restat
  • Vt moriar, tenues fugiatque obscurus in auras
  • Spiritus: ô doctis saltem si cognitus umbris. 30
  • Illic te (venerande) iterum, (venerande) videbo.
  • Et dulces audire sonós, & verba diserti
  • Oris, & æternas dabitur mihi carpere voces.
  • Quêis ferus infernæ tacuisset Ianitor aulæ
  • Auditis: Nilusque minus strepuisset: Arion 35
  • Cederet, & sylvas qui post se traxerat Orpheus.
  • Eloquio sic ille viros, sic ille movere
  • Voce feros potuit: quis enim tam barbarus? aut tam
  • Facundis nimis infestus non motus ut illo
  • Hortante, & blando victus sermone sileret? 40
  • Sic oculos, sic ille manus, sic ora ferebat,
  • Singula sic decuere senem, sic omnia. Vidi,
  • Audivi & stupui quoties orator in Æde
  • Paulina stetit, & mira gravitate levantes
  • Corda, oculosque viros tenuit: dum Nestoris ille 45
  • Fudit verba (omni quanta mage dulcia melle?)
  • Nunc habet attonitos, pandit mysteria plebi
  • Non concessa prius nondum intellecta: revolvunt
  • Mirantes, tacitique arrectis auribus astant.
  • Mutatis mox ille modo, formaque loquendi 50
  • Tristia pertractat: fatumque & flebile mortis
  • Tempus, & in cineres redeunt quod corpora primos.
  • Tunc gemitum cunctos dare, tunc lugere videres,
  • Forsitan à lachrymis aliquis non temperat, atque
  • Ex oculis largum stillat rorem; ætheris illo 55
  • Sic pater audito voluit succumbere turbam,
  • Affectusque ciere suos, & ponere notæ
  • Vocis ad arbitrium, divinæ oracula mentis
  • Dum narrat, rostrisque potens dominatur in altis.
  • Quo feror? audaci & forsan pietate nocenti 60
  • In nimia ignoscas vati, qui vatibus olim
  • Egregium decus, et tanto excellentior unus
  • Omnibus; inferior quanto est, et pessimus, impar
  • Laudibus hisce, tibi qui nunc facit ista Poëta.
  • Et quo nos canimus? cur hæc tibi sacra? Poëtæ 65
  • Desinite: en fati certus, sibi voce canorâ
  • Inferias præmisit olor, cum Carolus Albâ
  • (Vltima volventem et Cycnæâ voce loquentem)
  • Nuper eum, turba & magnatum audiret in Aulâ.
  • Tunc Rex, tunc Proceres, Clerus, tunc astitit illi 70
  • Aula frequens. Solâ nunc in tellure recumbit,
  • Vermibus esca, pio malint nisi parcere: quidni
  • Incipiant & amare famem? Metuere Leones
  • Sic olim, sacrosque artus violare Prophetæ
  • Bellua non ausa est qùamquam jejuna, sitimque 75
  • Optaret nimis humano satiare cruore.
  • At non hæc de te sperabimus; omnia carpit
  • Prædator vermis: nec talis contigit illi
  • Præda diu; forsan metrico pede serpet ab inde:
  • Vescere, & exhausto satia te sanguine. Iam nos 80
  • Adsumus; et post te cupiet quis vivere? Post te
  • Quis volet, aut poterit? nam post te vivere mors est.
  • Et tamen ingratas ignavi ducimus auras:
  • Sustinet & tibi lingua vale, vale dicere: parce
  • Non festinanti æternum requiescere turbæ. 85
  • Ipsa satis properat quæ nescit Parca morari,
  • Nunc urgere colum, trahere atque occare videmus.
  • Quin rursus (Venerande) Vale, vale: ordine nos te
  • Quo Deus, & quo dura volet natura sequemur.
  • Depositum interea lapides servate fideles. 90
  • Fœlices illâ quêis Ædis parte locari
  • Quâ jacet iste datur. Forsan lapis inde loquetur,
  • Parturietque viro plenus testantia luctus
  • Verba: & carminibus quæ Donni suggeret illi
  • Spiritus, insolitos testari voce calores 95
  • Incipiet: (non sic Pyrrhâ jactante calebat.)
  • Mole sub hâc tegitur quicquid mortale relictum est
  • De tanto mortale viro. Qui præfuit Ædi huic,
  • Formosi pecoris pastor, formosior ipse.
  • Ite igitur, dignisque illum celebrate loquelis, 100
  • Et quæ demuntur vitæ date tempora famæ._
  • Indignus tantorum meritorum Præco, virtutum
  • tuarum cultor religiosissimus,
  • DANIEL DARNELLY.
  • [In obitum _&c._ _1635-69_, _taking the place of the lines by
  • Tho: Browne_.]
  • [10 pectore] pectore, _1635_]
  • [21 beatum.] beatum _1635_]
  • [23 olfecisse] olfecissë _1635_]
  • [25 prius aggredior, _1635-69_: prius, aggredior, _1719_
  • arcessere _Ed_: accessere _1635-69_]
  • [26-7 mihi dum ... Exitium _1719_: mihi, dum ... Exitium,
  • _1635-39_: mihi dum, ... Exitium, _1650-69_]
  • [38 Voce feros] Voceferos _1635_, _1669_]
  • [79 inde:] inde _1635-39_]
  • [86 Parca] parca _1635-69_
  • morari,] morari _1635_]
  • [88 rursus _1719_: rusus _1635_: nusus _1639-69_]
  • [96 Incipiet: ... calebat. _1719_: _no stops_, _1635-69_]
  • _Elegie on D. D._
  • Now, by one yeare, time and our frailtie have
  • Lessened our first confusion, since the Grave
  • Clos'd thy deare Ashes, and the teares which flow
  • In these, have no springs, but of solid woe:
  • Or they are drops, which cold amazement froze 5
  • At thy decease, and will not thaw in Prose:
  • All streames of Verse which shall lament that day,
  • Doe truly to the Ocean tribute pay;
  • But they have lost their saltnesse, which the eye
  • In recompence of wit, strives to supply: 10
  • Passions excesse for thee wee need not feare,
  • Since first by thee our passions hallowed were;
  • Thou mad'st our sorrowes, which before had bin
  • Onely for the Successe, sorrowes for sinne,
  • We owe thee all those teares, now thou art dead, 15
  • Which we shed not, which for our selves we shed.
  • Nor didst thou onely consecrate our teares,
  • Give a religious tincture to our feares;
  • But even our joyes had learn'd an innocence,
  • Thou didst from gladnesse separate offence: 20
  • All mindes at once suckt grace from thee, as where
  • (The curse revok'd) the Nations had one eare.
  • Pious dissector: thy one houre did treate
  • The thousand mazes of the hearts deceipt;
  • Thou didst pursue our lov'd and subtill sinne, 25
  • Through all the foldings wee had wrapt it in,
  • And in thine owne large minde finding the way
  • By which our selves we from our selves convey,
  • Didst in us, narrow models, know the same
  • Angles, though darker, in our meaner frame. 30
  • How short of praise is this? My Muse, alas,
  • Climbes weakly to that truth which none can passe,
  • Hee that writes best, may onely hope to leave
  • A Character of all he could conceive
  • But none of thee, and with mee must confesse, 35
  • That fansie findes some checke, from an excesse
  • Of merit most, of nothing, it hath spun,
  • And truth, as reasons task and theame, doth shunne.
  • She makes a fairer flight in emptinesse,
  • Than when a bodied truth doth her oppresse. 40
  • Reason againe denies her scales, because
  • Hers are but scales, shee judges by the lawes
  • Of weake comparison, thy vertue sleights
  • Her feeble Beame, and her unequall Weights.
  • What prodigie of wit and pietie 45
  • Hath she else knowne, by which to measure thee?
  • Great soule: we can no more the worthinesse
  • Of what you were, then what you are, expresse.
  • _Sidney Godolphin._
  • [Footnote: Elegie on D. D. _1635-69_: _it follows Walton's
  • elegy._]
  • _On D^{r}_ John Donne, _late Deane of S._ Paules, _London_.
  • Long since this taske of teares from you was due,
  • Long since, ô Poëts, he did die to you,
  • Or left you dead, when wit and he tooke flight
  • On divine wings, and soard out of your sight.
  • Preachers, 'tis you must weep; The wit he taught 5
  • You doe enjoy; the Rebels which he brought
  • From ancient discord, Giants faculties,
  • And now no more religions enemies;
  • Honest to knowing, unto vertuous sweet,
  • Witty to good, and learned to discreet, 10
  • He reconcil'd, and bid the Vsurper goe;
  • Dulnesse to vice, religion ought to flow;
  • He kept his loves, but not his objects; wit
  • Hee did not banish, but transplanted it,
  • Taught it his place and use, and brought it home 15
  • To Pietie, which it doth best become;
  • He shew'd us how for sinnes we ought to sigh,
  • And how to sing Christs Epithalamy:
  • The Altars had his fires, and there hee spoke
  • Incense of loves, and fansies holy smoake: 20
  • Religion thus enrich'd, the people train'd,
  • And God from dull vice had the fashion gain'd.
  • The first effects sprung in the giddy minde
  • Of flashy youth, and thirst of woman-kinde,
  • By colours lead, and drawne to a pursuit, 25
  • Now once againe by beautie of the fruit,
  • As if their longings too must set us free,
  • And tempt us now to the commanded tree.
  • Tell me, had ever pleasure such a dresse,
  • Have you knowne crimes so shap'd? or lovelinesse 30
  • Such as his lips did cloth religion in?
  • Had not reproofe a beauty passing sinne?
  • Corrupted nature sorrow'd when she stood
  • So neare the danger of becomming good,
  • And wish'd our so inconstant eares exempt 35
  • From piety that had such power to tempt:
  • Did not his sacred flattery beguile
  • Man to amendment? The law, taught to smile,
  • Pension'd our vanitie, and man grew well
  • Through the same frailtie by which he fell. 40
  • O the sick state of man, health does not please
  • Our tasts, but in the shape of the disease.
  • Thriftlesse is charitie, coward patience,
  • Iustice is cruell, mercy want of sense.
  • What meanes our Nature to barre vertue place, 45
  • If shee doe come in her owne cloathes and face?
  • Is good a pill, we dare not chaw to know?
  • Sense the soules servant, doth it keep us so
  • As we might starve for good, unlesse it first
  • Doe leave a pawne of relish in the gust? 50
  • Or have we to salvation no tie
  • At all, but that of our infirmitie?
  • Who treats with us must our affections move
  • To th' good we flie by those sweets which we love,
  • Must seeke our palats, and with their delight 55
  • To gaine our deeds, must bribe our appetite.
  • These traines he knew, and laying nets to save,
  • Temptingly sugred all the health hee gave.
  • But, where is now that chime? that harmony
  • Hath left the world, now the loud organ may 60
  • Appeare, the better voyce is fled to have
  • A thousand times the sweetnesse which it gave.
  • I cannot say how many thousand spirits
  • The single happinesse this soule inherits,
  • Damnes in the other world, soules whom no crosse 65
  • O'th sense afflicts, but onely of the losse,
  • Whom ignorance would halfe save, all whose paine
  • Is not in what they feele, but others gaine,
  • Selfe executing wretched spirits, who
  • Carrying their guilt, transport their envy too: 70
  • But those high joyes which his wits youngest flame
  • Would hurt to chuse, shall not we hurt to name?
  • Verse statues are all robbers, all we make
  • Of monument, thus doth not give but take
  • As Sailes which Seamen to a forewinde fit, 75
  • By a resistance, goe along with it,
  • So pens grow while they lessen fame so left;
  • A weake assistance is a kinde of theft.
  • Who hath not love to ground his teares upon,
  • Must weep here if he have ambition.
  • _I. Chudleigh._
  • [On D^{r} John Donne _&c._ _1635-69_, _where it follows
  • Godolphin's_ Elegie]
  • FINIS.
  • APPENDIX A.
  • LATIN POEMS AND TRANSLATIONS
  • DE LIBRO CVM MVTV-
  • aretur Impresso; Domi à pueris
  • frustatim lacerato; et post reddito
  • Manuscripto.
  • Doctissimo Amicissimoque v.
  • D. D. Andrews.
  • _Parturiunt madido quae nixu praela, recepta,
  • Sed quae scripta manu, sunt veneranda magis.
  • Qui liber in pluteos, blattis cinerique relictos,
  • Si modo sit praeli sanguine tinctus, abit;
  • Accedat calamo scriptus, reverenter habetur, 5
  • Involat et veterum scrinia summa Patrum.
  • Dicat Apollo modum; Pueros infundere libro
  • Nempe vetustatem canitiemque novo.
  • Nil mirum, medico pueros de semine natos,
  • Haec nova fata libra posse dedisse novo. 10
  • Si veterem faciunt pueri, qui nuperus, Annon
  • Ipse Pater Iuvenem me dabit arte senem?
  • Hei miseris senibus! nos vertit dura senectus
  • Omnes in pueros, neminem at in Iuvenem.
  • Hoc tibi servasti praestandum, Antique Dierum, 15
  • Quo viso, et vivit, et juvenescit Adam.
  • Interea, infirmae fallamus taedia vitae,
  • Libris, et Coelorum aemulâ amicitiâ.
  • Hos inter, qui a te mihi redditus iste libellus,
  • Non mihi tam charus, tam meus, ante fuit._ 20
  • _Transiit in Sequanam Moenus; Victoris in aedes;
  • Et Francofurtum, te revehente, meat._
  • [DE LIBRO &c. _1635-69_ _among certain prose letters in Latin
  • and English_
  • _Title_:--mutuaretur Impresso;] mutuaretur, Impresso,
  • _1635-69_
  • frustatim] frustratim _1635-69_
  • lacerato;] lacerato, _1635-69_]
  • [2 _manu, sunt_] _manu sunt, 1635-69_]
  • [4 _abit;_] _abit, 1635-69_]
  • [ _Ed_: _in old edd. these lines are 3 and 4 of
  • above poem_. _See note_]
  • [1 _aedes_;] _aedes, 1635-69_]
  • Amicissimo, & meritissimo BEN. JONSON.
  • In Vulponem.
  • _Qvod arte ausus es hic tuâ, Poeta,
  • Si auderent hominum Deique juris
  • Consulti, veteres sequi aemularierque,
  • O omnes saperemus ad salutem.
  • His sed sunt veteres araneosi; 5
  • Tam nemo veterum est sequutor, ut tu
  • Illos quod sequeris novator audis.
  • Fac tamen quod agis; tuique primâ
  • Libri canitie induantur horâ:
  • Nam chartis pueritia est neganda, 10
  • Nascanturque senes, oportet, illi
  • Libri, queis dare vis perennitatem.
  • Priscis, ingenium facit, laborque
  • Te parem; hos superes, ut et futuros,
  • Ex nostrâ vitiositate sumas, 15
  • Quâ priscos superamus, et futuros._
  • [Amicissimo _&c._ _in sheets added 1650: prefixed originally
  • to Quarto edition of Jonson's Volpone. 1607, later to Folio
  • edition of The Workes of Beniamin Jonson. 1616., when In
  • Vulponem was added: in both signed I.D._]
  • [11 Nascanturque _1607_: Nascunturque _1616_, _1650-69_]
  • To M^r _George Herbert_, with one of my
  • Seal(s), of the Anchor and Christ.
  • _Qvi prius assuetus Serpentum fasce Tabellas
  • Signare, (haec nostrae symbola parva Domus)
  • Adscitus domui Domini, patrioque relicto
  • Stemmate, nanciscor stemmata jure nova.
  • Hinc mihi Crux primo quae fronti impressa lavacro, 5
  • Finibus extensis, anchora facta patet.
  • Anchorae in effigiem Crux tandem desinit ipsam,
  • Anchora fit tandem Crux tolerata diu.
  • Hoc tamen ut fiat, Christo vegetatur ab ipso
  • Crux, et ab Affixo, est Anchora facta, Iesu. 10
  • Nec Natalitiis penitus serpentibus orbor,
  • Non ita dat Deus, ut auferat ante data.
  • Quâ sapiens, Dos est; Quâ terram lambit et ambit,
  • Pestis; At in nostra fit Medicina Cruce,
  • Serpens; fixa Cruci si sit Natura; Crucique 15
  • A fixo, nobis, Gratia tota fluat.
  • Omnia cum Crux sint, Crux Anchora facta, sigillum
  • Non tam dicendum hoc quam Catechismus erit.
  • Mitto nec exigua, exiguâ sub imagine, dona,
  • Pignora amicitiae, et munera; Vota, preces. 20
  • Plura tibi accumulet, sanctus cognominis, Ille
  • Regia qui flavo Dona sigillat Equo._
  • [To M^r George Herbert _&c._ _1650-69_, _in sheets added 1650:
  • two and a half lines in Walton's Life of Donne (1658): for
  • Herbert's reply see note Title:_--sent him with one _Walton_
  • (1670) Seal, _1650-69:_ Seales _Walton_]
  • [1 fasce] falce _Walton_]
  • [5 _fronti_] _fronte 1650-69_]
  • [17 _facta,_] _fixa,_ _1650-69_]
  • [19 Mitto] Mitto, _1650-69_]
  • A Sheafe of Snakes used heretofore to be
  • My Seal, The Crest of our poore Family.
  • Adopted in Gods Family, and so
  • Our old Coat lost, unto new armes I go.
  • The Crosse (my seal at Baptism) spred below, 5
  • Does, by that form, into an Anchor grow.
  • Crosses grow Anchors; Bear, as thou shouldst do
  • Thy Crosse, and that Crosse grows an Anchor too.
  • But he that makes our Crosses Anchors thus,
  • Is Christ, who there is crucifi'd for us. 10
  • Yet may I, with this, my first Serpents hold,
  • God gives new blessings, and yet leaves the old;
  • The Serpent, may, as wise, my pattern be;
  • My poison, as he feeds on dust, that's me.
  • And as he rounds the Earth to murder sure, 15
  • My death he is, but on the Crosse, my cure.
  • Crucifie nature then, and then implore
  • All Grace from him, crucified there before;
  • When all is Crosse, and that Crosse Anchor grown,
  • This Seal's a Catechism, not a Seal alone. 20
  • Under that little Seal great gifts I send,
  • and prayers, pawns, and fruits of a friend.
  • And may that Saint which rides in our great Seal,
  • To you, who bear his name, great bounties deal.
  • [A sheafe _&c._] _1650-69 and in Walton's_ Life of Donne
  • (1658), _in all of which and in all subsequent editions except
  • Grolier the first two lines are printed as a title, Walton
  • bracketing them_:--
  • A sheafe of Snakes used heretofore to be
  • _my Seal, The Crest of our poore Family_.
  • ]
  • [4 Our ... unto] My ... into _Walton_]
  • [5 at] in _Walton_]
  • [11 with this I may _Walton_]
  • [15 to murder sure,] to murder, sure _Walton_]
  • [16 He is my death; _Walton_]
  • [22 Wishes, _Ed_: Works, _1650-69_: Both works _Walton_: Lat.
  • _vota_]
  • [23-4
  • Oh may that Saint that rides on our great Seal,
  • To you that bear his name large bounty deal.
  • _Walton_.
  • ]
  • Translated out of _Gazæus_, _Vota Amico facta_. _fol._ 160.
  • God grant thee thine own wish, and grant thee mine,
  • Thou, who dost, best friend, in best things outshine;
  • May thy soul, ever chearfull, nere know cares,
  • Nor thy life, ever lively, know gray haires.
  • Nor thy hand, ever open, know base holds, 5
  • Nor thy purse, ever plump, know pleits, or folds.
  • Nor thy tongue, ever true, know a false thing,
  • Nor thy word, ever mild, know quarrelling.
  • Nor thy works, ever equall, know disguise,
  • Nor thy fame, ever pure, know contumelies. 10
  • Nor thy prayers, know low objects, still Divine;
  • God grant thee thine own wish, and grant thee mine.
  • Translated _&c._] _1650-69_, _in sheets added 1650_: _for
  • original see note_]
  • APPENDIX B.
  • POEMS WHICH HAVE BEEN ATTRIBUTED
  • TO JOHN DONNE IN THE OLD EDITIONS
  • AND THE PRINCIPAL MS. COLLEC-
  • TIONS, ARRANGED ACCORDING
  • TO THEIR PROBABLE
  • AUTHORS.
  • I.
  • POEMS
  • PROBABLY BY SIR JOHN ROE, KNT.
  • _To S^{r} Nicholas Smyth._
  • Sleep, next Society and true friendship,
  • Mans best contentment, doth securely slip
  • His passions and the worlds troubles. Rock me
  • O sleep, wean'd from my dear friends company,
  • In a cradle free from dreams or thoughts, there 5
  • Where poor men ly, for Kings asleep do fear.
  • Here sleeps House by famous Ariosto,
  • By silver-tongu'd Ovid, and many moe,
  • Perhaps by golden-mouth'd Spencer too pardie,
  • (Which builded was some dozen Stories high) 10
  • I had repair'd, but that it was so rotten,
  • As sleep awak'd by Ratts from thence was gotten:
  • And I will build no new, for by my Will,
  • Thy fathers house shall be the fairest still
  • In Excester. Yet, methinks, for all their Wit, 15
  • Those wits that say nothing, best describe it.
  • Without it there is no Sense, only in this
  • Sleep is unlike a long Parenthesis.
  • Not to save charges, but would I had slept
  • The time I spent in London, when I kept 20
  • Fighting and untrust gallants Company,
  • In which Natta, the new Knight, seized on me,
  • And offered me the experience he had bought
  • With great Expence. I found him throughly taught
  • In curing Burnes. His thing hath had more scars 25
  • Then Things himselfe; like Epps it often wars,
  • And still is hurt. For his Body and State
  • The Physick and Counsel which came too late,
  • 'Gainst Whores and Dice, hee nowe on mee bestowes
  • Most superficially: hee speaks of those 30
  • (I found by him) least soundly who most knows:
  • He swears well, speakes ill, but best of Clothes,
  • What fits Summer, what Winter, what the Spring.
  • He had Living, but now these waies come in
  • His whole Revenues. Where each Whore now dwells, 35
  • And hath dwelt, since his fathers death, he tells.
  • Yea he tells most cunningly each hid cause
  • Why Whores forsake their Bawds. To these some Laws
  • He knows of the Duello, and touch his Skill
  • The least lot in that or those he quarrell will, 40
  • Though sober; but so never fought. I know
  • What made his Valour, undubb'd, Windmill go,
  • Within a Pint at most: yet for all this
  • (Which is most strange) Natta thinks no man is
  • More honest than himself. Thus men may want 45
  • Conscience, whilst being brought up ignorant,
  • They use themselves to vice. And besides those
  • Illiberal Arts forenam'd, no Vicar knows,
  • Nor other Captain less then he; His Schools
  • Are Ordinaries, where civil men seem fools, 50
  • Or are for being there; His best bookes, Plaies,
  • Where, meeting godly Scenes, perhaps he praies.
  • His first set prayer was for his father, ill
  • And sick, that he might dye: That had, until
  • The Lands were gone, he troubled God no more: 55
  • And then ask'd him but his Right, That the whore
  • Whom he had kept, might now keep him: She spent,
  • They left each other on even terms; she went
  • To Bridewel, he unto the Wars, where want
  • Hath made him valiant, and a Lieutenant 60
  • He is become: Where, as they pass apace,
  • He steps aside, and for his Captains place
  • He praies again: Tells God, he will confess
  • His sins, swear, drink, dice and whore thenceforth less,
  • On this Condition, that his Captain dye 65
  • And he succeed; But his Prayer did not; They
  • Both cashir'd came home, and he is braver now
  • Than'his captain: all men wonder, few know how.
  • Can he rob? No. Cheat? No. Or doth he spend
  • His own? No. Fidus, he is thy dear friend, 70
  • That keeps him up. I would thou wert thine own,
  • Or thou'hadst as good a friend as thou art one.
  • No present Want nor future hope made me,
  • Desire (as once I did) thy friend to be:
  • But he had cruelly possest thee then, 75
  • And as our Neighbours the Low-Country men,
  • Being (whilst they were Loyal, with Tyranny
  • Opprest) broke loose, have since refus'd to be
  • Subject to good Kings, I found even so,
  • Wer't thou well rid of him, thou't have no moe. 80
  • Could'st thou but chuse as well as love, to none
  • Thou should'st be second: Turtle and Damon
  • Should give thee place in songs, and Lovers sick
  • Should make thee only Loves Hieroglyphick:
  • Thy Impress should be the loving Elm and Vine, 85
  • Where now an ancient Oak, with Ivy twine
  • Destroy'd, thy Symbol is. O dire Mischance!
  • And, O vile verse! And yet your Abraham France
  • Writes thus, and jests not. Good Fidus for this
  • Must pardon me, Satyres bite when they kiss. 90
  • But as for Natta, we have since faln out:
  • Here on his knees he pray'd, else we had fought.
  • And because God would not he should be winner,
  • Nor yet would have the Death of such a sinner,
  • At his seeking, our Quarrel is deferr'd, 95
  • I'll leave him at his Prayers, and (as I heard)
  • His last; Fidus, and you, and I do know,
  • I was his friend, and durst have been his foe,
  • And would be either yet; But he dares be
  • Neither; Sleep blots him out and takes in thee. 100
  • "The mind, you know is like a Table-book,
  • Which, th'old unwipt, new writing never took.
  • Hear how the Huishers Checques, Cupbord and Fire
  • I pass'd; by which Degrees young men aspire
  • In Court; And how that idle and she-state, 105
  • Whenas my judgment cleer'd, my soul did hate;
  • How I found there (if that my trifling Pen
  • Durst take so hard a Task) Kings were but men,
  • And by their Place more noted, if they erre;
  • How they and their Lords unworthy men prefer; 110
  • And, as unthrifts had rather give away
  • Great Summs to flatterers, than small debts pay,
  • So they their weakness hide, and greatness show,
  • By giving them that which to worth they owe:
  • What Treason is, and what did Essex kill, 115
  • Not true Treason, but Treason handled ill;
  • And which of them stood for their Countries good,
  • Or what might be the Cause of so much Blood.
  • He said she stunck, and men might not have said
  • That she was old before that she was dead. 120
  • His Case was hard, to do or suffer; loth
  • To do, he made it harder, and did both.
  • Too much preparing lost them all their Lives,
  • Like some in Plagues kill'd with preservatives.
  • Friends, like land-souldiers in a storm at Sea, 125
  • Not knowing what to do, for him did pray.
  • They told it all the world; where was their wit?
  • Cuffs putting on a sword, might have told it.
  • And Princes must fear Favorites more then Foes,
  • For still beyond Revenge Ambition goes. 130
  • How since Her death, with Sumpter-horse that Scot
  • Hath rid, who, at his coming up, had not
  • A Sumpter-dog. But till that I can write
  • Things worth thy Tenth reading (dear Nick) goodnight.
  • [To S^{r} Nicholas Smyth. _Ed_: Satyra Sexta. To S^{r} _&c._
  • _S_: Satires to S^{r} Nic: Smith. 1602 _B_: A Satire: to S^{r}
  • Nicholas Smith. 1602, _L74_: A Satyricall Letter to S^{r}
  • Nich: Smith. Quere, if Donnes or S^{r} Th: Rowes. _O'F_: _no
  • title_ _N_, _TCD_ (_JR in margin_): Satyre VI. _1669_ (_on
  • which the present text is based_)]
  • [1 Sleep, next] Sleep next, _1669_]
  • [2 slip _1669_, _S_: skipp _B_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _TCD_. _In
  • 1669 full stops after slip and rock me and no stop after
  • troubles_]
  • [3 Rock] rock _1669_]
  • [4 my _MSS._: thy _1669_]
  • [6 asleep] all sleap _B_]
  • [9 golden-mouth'd] gold-mouth'd _B_, _S_]
  • [14 still] still. _1669_]
  • [25 hath had _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_: had had _1669_:
  • had _B_]
  • [26 Things _B_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_: T _1669_]
  • [28-31 _text from B_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_, _which
  • bracket which ... late_: _see note_:
  • The Physick and Councel (which came too late
  • 'Gainst Whores and Dice) he now on me bestows:
  • Most superficially he speaks of those.
  • I found, by him, least sound him who most knows.
  • _1669_
  • ]
  • [33 what Winter] what What Winter _1669_]
  • [35 each _B_, _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_: his _1669_]
  • [37 cunningly _1669_, _L74_, _N_, _TCD_: perfectly _B_, _O'F_,
  • _S_]
  • [39 Duello, _B_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_: Duel, _1669_
  • touch _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S_: on _1669_: only _N_, _TCD_]
  • [40 those _B_, _L74_, _O'F_: these _1669_]
  • [41 but so never fought. _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S_ (soe as),
  • _TCD_ (nere): but nere fought. _1669_]
  • [42 Valour, undubb'd, Windmill go, _Ed_: Valour undubd
  • Windmill go. _1669_: valours undubb'd Wine-mill go. _L74_,
  • _N_, _TCD_: his undouted valour windmill goe. _B_: his
  • undaunted valour windmill goe. _O'F_, _S_]
  • [45 want] vaunt _S_]
  • [47 besides] except _B_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [49 he; _Ed_: he, _1669_]
  • [53 father, ill] fathers ill, _1669_]
  • [65 his] if his _1669_]
  • [66 succeed; _Ed_: succeed, _1669_
  • They _Ed_: they _1669_]
  • [68 Than'his _Ed_: Than his _1669_: Then's _N_, _TCD_
  • how. _Ed_: how, _1669_]
  • [69 Or _Ed_: or _1669_]
  • [72 thou'hadst _L74_, _N_, _TCD_: thou hadst _1669_]
  • [81 love, _Ed_: love _1669_]
  • [82 Damon] damon _1669_]
  • [83 thee] the _1669_]
  • [86-7 Oak, with Ivy twine Destroy'd, thy Symbol is. _L74_,
  • _N_, _TCD_: Oak with Ivy twine, Destroy'd thy Symbole
  • is. _1669_: Oak with ivy twine. Destroy'd thy symbol is!
  • _Chambers_]
  • [87 Mischance!] Mischance? _1669_]
  • [88 your _B_, _L74_, _N_, _S_, _TCD_: our _1669_]
  • [92 knees] knees, _1669_]
  • [97 Fidus, and you, and I _N_, _TCD_: and Fidus, you and I
  • _1669_: Fidus, and you, and he _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [100 Neither; _L74_, _N_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_: Neither yet.
  • _1669_
  • Sleep] sleep _1669_]
  • [102 Which, th'old unwipt, _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _TCD_: "The old
  • unwipt _1669_]
  • [104-6 _1669 has colon after pass'd, brackets by which
  • ... Court and Whenas ... cleer'd, and places comma after
  • hate_]
  • [107 there (if that _1669_: then that (if _B_, _O'F_, _S_]
  • [111 And, as unthrifts _Ed_: And, as unthrifts, _1669_,
  • _Chambers_]
  • [112 pay, _Ed_: pay; _1669_: pay. _Chambers_]
  • [113 weakness _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S_: greatness _1669_, _N_,
  • _TCD_]
  • [116 ill; _Ed_: ill: _1669_]
  • [118 Blood. _Ed_: Blood; _1669_]
  • [121 hard, _Ed_: hard _1669_]
  • [122 both. _Ed_: both _1669_]
  • [127 world; _Ed_: world, _1669_]
  • [132 Hath rid,] Doth ryde, _B_]
  • [133 till that _1669_: till _N_, _TCD_: untill _B_, _O'F_,
  • _S_]
  • _Satyre._
  • Men write that love and reason disagree,
  • But I ne'r saw't exprest as 'tis in thee.
  • Well, I may lead thee, God must make thee see,
  • But, thine eyes blinde too, there's no hope for thee.
  • Thou say'st shee's wise and witty, faire and free, 5
  • All these are reasons why she should scorne thee.
  • Thou dost protest thy love, and wouldst it shew
  • By matching her as she would match her foe:
  • And wouldst perswade her to a worse offence,
  • Then that whereof thou didst accuse her wench. 10
  • Reason there's none for thee, but thou may'st vexe
  • Her with example. Say, for feare her sexe
  • Shunne her, she needs must change; I doe not see
  • How reason e'r can bring that _must_ to thee.
  • Thou art a match a Iustice to rejoyce, 15
  • Fit to be his, and not his daughters choyce.
  • Urg'd with his threats shee'd scarcely stay with thee,
  • And wouldst th'have this to chuse thee, being free?
  • Goe then and punish some soone-gotten stuffe,
  • For her dead husband this hath mourn'd enough, 20
  • In hating thee. Thou maist one like this meet;
  • For spight take her, prove kinde, make thy breath sweet,
  • Let her see she hath cause, and to bring to thee
  • Honest children, let her dishonest bee.
  • If shee be a widow, I'll warrant her 25
  • Shee'll thee before her first husband preferre,
  • And will wish thou hadst had her maidenhead;
  • Shee'll love thee so, for then thou hadst bin dead.
  • But thou such strong love, and weake reasons hast,
  • Thou must thrive there, or ever live disgrac'd. 30
  • Yet pause a while; and thou maist live to see
  • A time to come, wherein she may beg thee;
  • If thou'lt not pause nor change, she'll beg thee now.
  • Doe what she can, love for nothing shee'll allow.
  • Besides, her were too much gaine and merchandise, 35
  • And when thou art rewarded, desert dies.
  • Now thou hast odds of him she loves, he may doubt
  • Her constancy, but none can put thee out.
  • Againe, be thy love true, shee'll prove divine,
  • And in the end the good on't will be thine: 40
  • For thou must never think on other love,
  • And so wilt advance her as high above
  • Vertue as cause above effect can bee:
  • 'Tis vertue to be chast, which shee'll make thee.
  • [Satyre. _B_, _O'F_: A Satire: upon one who was his Rivall
  • in a widdowes Love. _A10_: Satyre VI. _1635-54_: Satyre. VII.
  • _1669_ (_where Satyre VI. is Sleep, next Society &c._)]
  • [4 thine eyes _1635-69_: thy eye's _A10_]
  • [11 thee,] the, _1669_]
  • [13 she needs must change; I _1635-69_: she must change, yet I
  • _A10_]
  • [16 and _1635-69_: but _B_]
  • [17 Urg'd _A10_, _B_, _O'F_: Dry'd _1635-69_]
  • [19 some] _1635 duplicates_]
  • [22 sweet, _1639-69_: sweet. _1635_]
  • [27 maidenhead; _Ed_: maidenhead, _1635-69_]
  • [28 (Shee'll love thee so) for, _1635-69_]
  • [29 strong] firm _A10_]
  • [32 thee; _Grosart_: thee. _1635-69_]
  • [33 now. _Grosart_: now, _1635-69_]
  • [34 love for nothing shee'll _1635-69_: she'le love for nought
  • _A10_]
  • [35 Besides, hers _Ed_: Besides, here _1635-69_: But hers
  • _A10_: Besides her _O'F_]
  • [38-9 out. Againe, _1635-69_: out Againe; _A10_]
  • [40 And in _1635-69_: And yet in _A10_
  • thine: _Ed_: thine. _1635-69_]
  • [41 For thou must never think on _H-K_ (_Grosart_): And thou
  • must never think on, _A10_: For though thou must ne'r thinke
  • of _1635-69_]
  • [42 And so wilt advance her _1635-69_: For that will her
  • advance _A10_]
  • [43 bee: _Ed_: bee, _1635-69_]
  • AN ELEGIE.
  • _Reflecting on his passion for his mistrisse._
  • Come, Fates; I feare you not. All whom I owe
  • Are paid, but you. Then rest me ere I goe.
  • But, Chance from you all soveraignty hath got,
  • Love woundeth none but those whom death dares not;
  • Else, if you were, and just, in equitie 5
  • I should have vanquish'd her, as you did me.
  • Else Lovers should not brave death's pains, and live,
  • But 'tis a rule, _Death comes not to relieve_.
  • Or, pale and wan deaths terrours, are they lay'd
  • So deepe in Lovers, they make death afraid? 10
  • Or (the least comfort) have I company?
  • Orecame she Fates, Love, Death, as well as mee?
  • Yes, Fates doe silke unto her distaffe pay,
  • For their ransome, which taxe on us they laye.
  • Love gives her youth, which is the reason why 15
  • Youths, for her sake, some wither and some die.
  • Poore Death can nothing give; yet, for her sake,
  • Still in her turne, he doth a Lover take:
  • And if Death should prove false, she feares him not;
  • Our Muses, to redeeme her she hath got. 20
  • That fatall night wee last kiss'd, I thus pray'd,
  • Or rather, thus despair'd; I should have said:
  • Kisses, and yet despaire? The forbid tree
  • Did promise (and deceive) no more then shee.
  • Like Lambs that see their teats, and must eat Hay, 25
  • A food, whose tast hath made me pine away.
  • _Dives_, when thou saw'st blisse, and crav'dst to touch
  • A drop of water, thy great paines were such.
  • Here griefe wants a fresh wit, for mine being spent,
  • And my sighes weary, groanes are all my rent; 30
  • Vnable longer to indure the paine,
  • They breake like thunder, and doe bring down rain.
  • Thus, till dry teares soulder mine eyes, I weepe;
  • And then, I dreame, how you securely sleepe,
  • And in your dreames doe laugh at me. I hate, 35
  • And pray Love, All may: He pitties my state,
  • But sayes, I therein no revenge should finde;
  • The Sunne would shine, though all the world were blind.
  • Yet, to trie my hate, Love shew'd me your teare;
  • And I had dy'd, had not your smile beene there. 40
  • Your frowne undoes me; your smile is my wealth;
  • And as you please to looke, I have my health.
  • Me thought, Love pittying me, when he saw this,
  • Gave me your hands, the backs and palmes to kisse.
  • That cur'd me not, but to beare paine gave strength, 45
  • And what it lost in force, it tooke in length.
  • I call'd on Love againe, who fear'd you so,
  • That his compassion still prov'd greater woe;
  • For, then I dream'd I was in bed with you,
  • But durst not feele, for feare't should not prove true. 50
  • This merits not your anger, had it beene,
  • The Queene of Chastitie was naked seene;
  • And in bed, not to feele, the paine I tooke,
  • Was more then for _Actæon_ not to looke.
  • And that brest which lay ope, I did not know, 55
  • But for the clearnesse, from a lump of snowe,
  • Nor that sweet teat which on the top it bore
  • From the rose-bud, which for my sake you wore.
  • These griefs to issue forth, by verse, I prove,
  • Or turne their course, by travaile, or new love: 60
  • All would not doe. The best at last I tryde:
  • Unable longer to hould out I dyed.
  • And then I found I lost life, death by flying:
  • Who hundreds live are but soe long a dying.
  • Charon did let me passe: I'le him requite. 65
  • To marke the groves or shades wrongs my delight.
  • I'le speake but of those ghosts I found alone,
  • Those thousand ghosts, whereof myself made one,
  • All images of thee. I ask'd them, why?
  • The Judge told me, all they for thee did dye, 70
  • And therefore had for their Elisian blisse,
  • In one another their owne Loves to kisse.
  • O here I miss'd not blisse, but being dead;
  • For loe, I dream'd, I dream'd; and waking said,
  • Heaven, if who are in thee there must dwell, 75
  • How is't, I now was there, and now I fell.
  • [An Elegie. Reflecting on _&c._ _A10_: An Elegie. _H39_,
  • _H40_, _L74_, _RP31_: Eleg. XIII. _1635-69_: _no title_, _Cy_:
  • Elegie. _P_]
  • [5 Else, if you were, and just, in equitie _H39_: Else, if you
  • were, and just in equitie, _1635-54_, _Grosart_: True, if you
  • were, and just in equitie, _1669_, _Chambers_ (True)]
  • [12 Orecame she Fates, Love, Death, _MSS._: Or can the Fates
  • love death, _1635-69_]
  • [13 distaffe _1635-69_, _H39_, _L74_: distaves _A10_, _H40_,
  • _RP31_]
  • [14 For their ... on us they laye. _Cy_, _H39_, _H40_, _L74_,
  • _P_: For ransome, which taxe they on us doe lay. _1635-69_:
  • For Ransome, but a taxe on us they lay: _A10_]
  • [17-19 Death] death _1635-69_]
  • [18 take: _H40_, _L74_: take. _1635-69_]
  • [21 That fatall night we last kiss'd _1635-69_: That last
  • fatall night wee kiss'd _A10_, _H39_, _H40_, _L74_, _P_,
  • _RP31_]
  • [22 _in brackets_ _1635-69_
  • said: _Ed_: said, _1635-69_]
  • [23 despaire? _Ed_: despaire. _1635-69_]
  • [24 shee.] yee. _A10_, _H40_]
  • [28 A drop of water, thy greate _1635-69_: A small little
  • drop, thy _Cy_, _H39_ (then thy), _H40_, _L74_, _P_: The
  • poorest little drop, thy _A10_]
  • [63 life] lif's _Grosart_: _spelt lief_ _H40_]
  • [64 Who] Where _Grosart_]
  • [66 marke] walke _Grosart_
  • or] and _A10_]
  • [67 but] out _Grosart_, _from H39_]
  • [68 Those thousand] Thousand _A10_]
  • [72 In one] _omit_. _Grosart_]
  • [74 (For loe I dreampt) _H39 and Grosart_]
  • [75 Heaven] O Heaven _A10_]
  • _An Elegie to M^{ris} Boulstred_: 1602.
  • Shall I goe force an Elegie? abuse
  • My witt? and breake the Hymen of my muse
  • For one poore houres love? Deserves it such
  • Which serves not me, to doe on her as much?
  • Or if it could, I would that fortune shunn: 5
  • Who would be rich, to be foe foone undone?
  • The beggars best is, wealth he doth not know;
  • And but to shew it him, encreases woe.
  • But we two may enjoye an hour? when never
  • It returnes, who would have a losse for ever? 10
  • Nor can so short a love, if true, but bring
  • A halfe howres feare, with the thought of losing:
  • Before it, all howres were hope; and all are
  • (That shall come after it,) yeares of dispaire.
  • This joye brings this doubt, whether it were more 15
  • To have enjoy'd it, or have died before?
  • T'is a lost paradise, a fall from grace,
  • Which I thinke, Adam felt more then his race.
  • Nor need those angells any other Hell;
  • It is enough for them, from Heaven they fell. 20
  • Besides, Conquest in love is all in all;
  • That when I liste, shee under me may fall:
  • And for this turne, both for delight and view,
  • I'le have a Succuba, as good as you.
  • But when these toyes are past, and hott blood ends, 25
  • The best enjoying is, we still are frends.
  • Love can but be frendshipps outside; their two
  • Beauties differ, as myndes and bodies do.
  • Thus, I this great Good still would be to take,
  • Vnless one houre, another happy make: 30
  • Or, that I might forgett it instantlie;
  • Or in that blest estate, that I might die.
  • But why doe I thus travaile in the skill
  • Of despis'd poetrie, and perchance spill
  • My fortune? or undoe myself in sport 35
  • By having but that dangerous name in Court?
  • I'le leave, and since I doe your poet prove,
  • Keep you my lines as secret as my Love.
  • [An Elegie _&c._ _A10_, _L74_ (J. R. _in margin_), _RP31_:
  • Elegie _N_, _TCD_ (J. R.): Elegie to his M. promissing to love
  • him an hour. _HN_ (_signed J. R._): An Elegy 1602. To M^{rs}
  • Boulstrede. _Le Prince d'Amour. &c._ _1660
  • [7 text from HN_: The beggers best is, that wealth he doth
  • know, _A10_: The beggar's best, his _&c._ _L74_, _RP31_,
  • _N_, _TCD_, _Sim_: The beggar's best that _Grosart_]
  • [9 two _Sim_: _om. HN_, _L74_, _N_, _RP31_, _TCD_: But we an
  • hour may now enjoy when never _A10_
  • hour?] hour; _L74_]
  • [10 It returnes] Again't returnes _A10_]
  • [16 or have] or else _A10_]
  • [21 Besides, _A10_: Beside, _L74_]
  • [23 delight] despite _A10_]
  • [27 but be] be but _Sim_
  • their _Ed_: there _A10_, _L74_]
  • [30 one] on _L74_]
  • [32 _Poem closes_, _A10_]
  • [34 despis'd poetrie,] deeper mysteries, _Sim_]
  • _An Elegie._
  • True Love findes witt, but he whose witt doth move
  • Him to love, confesses he doth not love:
  • And from his witt, passions and true desire
  • Are forc'd as hard, as from the flint is fire.
  • My love's all fire whose flames my soule do nurse, 5
  • Whose smokes are sighes; whose every sparke's a verse.
  • Doth measure women win? Then I know why
  • Most of our Ladies with the Scotts doe lie.
  • A Scott is measur'd in each syllable, terse
  • And smooth as a verse: and like that smooth verse 10
  • Is shallow, and wants matter, but in his handes,
  • And they are rugged; Her state better standes
  • Whom dauncing measures tempted, not the Scott:
  • In brief she's out of measure, lost, soe gott.
  • Greene-sickness wenches, (not needes must but) may 15
  • Looke pale, breathe short; at Court none so long stay.
  • Good witt ne're despair'd there, or _Ay me_ said:
  • For never Wench at Court was ravished.
  • And shee but cheates on Heaven, whom you so winne
  • Thinking to share the sport, but not the sinne. 20
  • [An Elegie. _A10_: _similarly_, _B_, _H40_, _L74_, _O'F_,
  • _RP31_: Elegia Undecima. _S_: _no title_, _Cy_, _P_ (J. D _in
  • margin_): _first printed by Grosart_]
  • [1 findes] kindles _RP31_]
  • [5 do _A10_, _L74_: doth _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [7 women win? _A10_: win women? _L74_]
  • [11 but in his handes, _A10_, _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _P_: but's
  • in's bands _S_: cut in bands _Grosart and Chambers_: writt in
  • his hands _H-K_ (_teste Grosart_)]
  • [14 she's _A10_, _L74_, _P_, _H-K_ (_Grosart_): theyre _S_,
  • _Chambers_
  • soe] if _A10_]
  • [17 ne're _A10_: neare _L74_]
  • _Song._
  • Deare Love, continue nice and chaste,
  • For, if you yeeld you doe me wrong,
  • Let duller wits to loves end haste,
  • I have enough to wooe thee long.
  • All paine and joy is in their way; 5
  • The things we feare bring lesse annoy
  • Then feare; and hope brings greater joy;
  • But in themselves they cannot stay.
  • Small favours will my prayers increase;
  • Granting my suit you give me all, 10
  • And then my prayers must needs surcease,
  • For, I have made your Godhead fall.
  • Beasts cannot witt nor beauty see,
  • They mans affections onely move;
  • Beasts other sports of love doe prove, 15
  • With better feeling farre than we.
  • Then Love prolong my suite, for thus
  • By losing sport, I sport doe win;
  • And that may vertue prove in us,
  • Which ever yet hath beene a sinne. 20
  • My comming neare may spie some ill,
  • And now the world is given to scoffe;
  • To keepe my Love, (then) keepe me off,
  • And so I shall admire thee still.
  • Say I have made a perfect choyce, 25
  • Satietie our Love may kill;
  • Then give me but thy face and voyce,
  • Mine eye and eare thou canst not fill.
  • To make me rich (oh) be not poore,
  • Give me not all, yet something lend, 30
  • So I shall still my suite commend,
  • And you at will doe lesse or more.
  • But, if to all you condescend,
  • My love, our sport, your Godhead end.
  • [Song. _1635-69_: _no title_, _A10_, _B_, _HN_ (_signed_ J.
  • R.), _L74_ (Finis. JR monogram), _O'F_, _P_, _S96_]
  • [1 Love,] Love _1635-69_]
  • [13 witt] will, _1635-54_]
  • [14 They, _1635-69_: Those _L74_]
  • [18 I sport] I sports _1635-54_]
  • [19 that may _A10_, _HN_, _L74_: that doth _1635-69_: let that
  • _B_]
  • [26 Satietie] Sacietie _1635-39_, _L74_
  • Love _A10_, _B_, _HN_, _L74_, _S96_: selves _1635-69_]
  • [28 Mine _MSS._: My _1635-39_]
  • [32 you at will] at your will _S96_]
  • _To Ben. Iohnson_, 6 _Ian._ 1603.
  • The State and mens affaires are the best playes
  • Next yours; 'Tis nor more nor lesse than due praise.
  • Write, but touch not the much descending race
  • Of Lords houses, so settled in worths place,
  • As but themselves none thinke them usurpers. 5
  • It is no fault in thee to suffer theirs.
  • If the Queene Masque, or King a hunting goe,
  • Though all the Court follow, Let them. We know
  • Like them in goodnesse that Court ne'r will be,
  • For that were vertue, and not flatterie. 10
  • Forget we were thrust out; It is but thus,
  • God threatens Kings, Kings Lords, as Lords doe us.
  • Iudge of strangers, Trust and believe your friend,
  • And so me; And when I true friendship end,
  • With guilty conscience let me be worse stonge, 15
  • Then with _Pophams_ sentence theeves, or _Cookes_ tongue
  • Traitors are. Friends are our selves. This I thee tell
  • As to my friend, and to my selfe as Counsell;
  • Let for a while the times unthrifty rout
  • Contemne learning, and all your studies flout. 20
  • Let them scorne Hell, they will a Sergeant feare,
  • More then wee _that_; ere long God may forbeare,
  • But Creditors will not. Let them increase
  • In riot and excesse as their meanes cease;
  • Let them scorne him that made them, and still shun 25
  • His Grace, but love the whore who hath undone
  • Them and their soules. But; that they that allow
  • But one God, should have religions enow
  • For the Queens Masque, and their husbands, far more
  • Then all the Gentiles knew, or _Atlas_ bore! 30
  • Well, let all passe, and trust him who nor cracks
  • The bruised Reed, nor quencheth smoaking flaxe.
  • [To Ben. Iohnson, 6 Ian. 1603. _1635-69_, _O'F_: To Ben
  • Johnson 6 Jan: 1603 T.R. _B_: An Epistle to Ben Johnson.
  • S^{r} J: R: _H40_: An Epistle to Beniamin Johnson. _RP31_: An
  • Epistle: To M^{r} Ben. Johnson. Ja: 6: 1603 _L74_: To M^{r}
  • Ben Johnson. _S_]
  • [2 yours; _Ed_: yours, _1635-69_
  • nor more] noe more _L74_]
  • [5 none thinke] none can thinke _1669_]
  • [11 out; _Ed_: out. _1635-69_]
  • [15 stonge, _L74_: _spelt_ stũg, _1635_]
  • [18 as Counsell;] is Counsell: _1635-54_]
  • [22 More then wee _that_; _Ed_: More then wee that _H40_,
  • _L74_: More then wee them; that, _1635-69_ (them _in ital._
  • _1635-54_)]
  • [24 cease; _Ed_: cease, _1635-69_]
  • [28 enow _H40_, _L74_: enough _1635-69_]
  • [29 far _L74_: for _1635-69_, _H40_]
  • [30 bore! _Ed_: bore? _H40_: bore. _1635-69_, _L74_]
  • _To Ben. Iohnson_, 9. _Novembris_, 1603.
  • If great men wrong me, I will spare my selfe;
  • If meane, I will spare them. I know that pelf
  • Which is ill got the Owner doth upbraid.
  • It may corrupt a Iudge, make me afraid
  • And a Iury; But 'twill revenge in this, 5
  • That, though himselfe be judge, hee guilty is.
  • What care I though of weaknesse men taxe me,
  • I had rather sufferer than doer be.
  • That I did trust, it was my Natures praise,
  • For breach of word I knew but as a phrase. 10
  • That judgement is, that surely can comprise
  • The world in precepts, most happy and most wise.
  • What though? Though lesse, yet some of both have we,
  • Who have learn'd it by use and misery.
  • Poore I, whom every pety crosse doth trouble, 15
  • Who apprehend each hurt thats done me, double,
  • Am of this (though it should sinke me) carelesse,
  • It would but force me to a stricter goodnesse.
  • They have great odds of me, who gaine doe winne,
  • (If such gaine be not losse) from every sinne. 20
  • The standing of great mens lives would afford
  • A pretty summe, if God would sell his Word.
  • He cannot; they can theirs, and breake them too.
  • How unlike they are that they are likened to?
  • Yet I conclude, they are amidst my evils, 25
  • If good, like Gods, the naught are so like devils.
  • [To Ben Johnson, 9 Novembris, 1603: _1635-69_, _B_
  • (_subscribed_ doubtfull author), _O'F_, _S_: Another Epistle
  • to M^{r} Ben: Johnson. No: 9. 1603. _L74_: Another to Ben
  • Johnson. _H40_]
  • [2 them.] them, _1635-69_ that _B_, _H40_, _L74_, _S_: the
  • _1635-69_]
  • [3 upbraide. _Ed_: upbraide; _1635-69_]
  • [5 Iury; _Ed_: Iury. _1635-69_]
  • [18 goodnesse.] goodnesse _1635-39_]
  • [19 odds _B_, _H40_, _L74_, _S_: gaine _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • _To S^{r} Tho. Roe_ 1603.
  • _Deare Thom_:
  • Tell her if she to hired servants shew
  • Dislike, before they take their leave they goe;
  • When nobler spirits start at no disgrace,
  • For who hath but one minde, hath but one face:
  • If then why I tooke not my leave she aske, 5
  • Aske her againe why she did not unmaske?
  • Was she or proud or cruell, or knew shee
  • 'Twould make my losse more felt, and pittyed me?
  • Or did she feare one kisse might stay for moe?
  • Or else was she unwilling I should goe? 10
  • I thinke the best, and love so faithfully
  • I cannot chuse but thinke that she loves mee.
  • If this prove not my faith, then let her trie
  • How in her service I would fructifie.
  • Ladies have boldly lov'd; bid her renew 15
  • That decay'd worth, and prove the times past true.
  • Then he whose wit and verse goes now so lame,
  • With songs to her will the wild Irish tame.
  • Howe'r, I'll weare the black and white ribband,
  • White for her fortunes, blacke for mine shall stand. 20
  • I doe esteeme her favours, not their stuffe;
  • If what I have was given, I have enough:
  • And all's well; for had she lov'd, I had had
  • All my friends hate; for now, departing sad
  • I feele not that; Yet as the Rack the Gout 25
  • Cures, so hath _this_ worse griefe _that_ quite put out:
  • My first disease nought but that worse cureth,
  • Which (which I dare foresee) nought cures but death.
  • Tell her all this before I am forgot,
  • That not too late shee grieve shee lov'd me not. 30
  • Burden'd with this, I was to depart lesse
  • Willing, then those which die, and not confesse.
  • [Footnote: To Sir Tho. Rowe, 1603. _1635-69_, _O'F_: An
  • Elegie. To S^{r} Tho. Roe. _B_ (_subscribed J. R._), _L74_:
  • An Elegie, complayning a want of complement in his mistrisse,
  • at his leave-taking. _A10_: Elegia Vicesima Septima. To S^{r}
  • Thomas Roe. 1603. _S_
  • _Thom_: _B_, _L74_, _O'F_,_S_: _Tom_: _1635-69_]
  • [5 tooke _A10_, _B_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S_: take _1635-69_]
  • [14 I would _1635-69_: it will _A10_, _L74_, _S_]
  • [17 goes now so _Ed_: goe now so _B_: growes now so _1635-69_,
  • _O'F_: now goes thus _A10_, _L74_, _S_]
  • [21 favours, not their _B_, _L74_, _S_: favour, not the
  • _1635-69_]
  • [22 enough: _Ed_: enough, _1635-69_]
  • [23 had had] had not had _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • [24 hate;] hate _1635_: hate, _1639-69_
  • now, _Ed_: now _1635-69_: not _A10_, _B_, _L74_, _S_]
  • [26 out:] out. _1635_]
  • [28 Which (which I dare foresee) nought _A10_, _B_, _L74_,
  • _S_: Which (I dare foresay) nothing _1635-69_]
  • [Willing, _Ed_: Willing _1635-69_: Willing; _A10_]
  • II.
  • _To the Countesse of Huntington._
  • That unripe side of earth, that heavy clime
  • That gives us man up now, like _Adams_ time
  • Before he ate; mans shape, that would yet bee
  • (Knew they not it, and fear'd beasts companie)
  • So naked at this day, as though man there 5
  • From Paradise so great a distance were,
  • As yet the newes could not arrived bee
  • Of _Adams_ tasting the forbidden tree;
  • Depriv'd of that free state which they were in,
  • And wanting the reward, yet beare the sinne. 10
  • But, as from extreme hights who downward looks,
  • Sees men at childrens shapes, Rivers at brookes,
  • And loseth younger formes; so, to your eye,
  • These (Madame) that without your distance lie,
  • Must either mist, or nothing seeme to be, 15
  • Who are at home but wits mere _Atomi_.
  • But, I who can behold them move, and stay,
  • Have found my selfe to you, just their midway;
  • And now must pitty them; for, as they doe
  • Seeme sick to me, just so must I to you. 20
  • Yet neither will I vexe your eyes to see
  • A sighing Ode, nor crosse-arm'd Elegie.
  • I come not to call pitty from your heart,
  • Like some white-liver'd dotard that would part
  • Else from his slipperie soule with a faint groane, 25
  • And faithfully, (without you smil'd) were gone.
  • I cannot feele the tempest of a frowne,
  • I may be rais'd by love, but not throwne down.
  • Though I can pittie those sigh twice a day,
  • I hate that thing whispers it selfe away. 30
  • Yet since all love is fever, who to trees
  • Doth talke, doth yet in loves cold ague freeze.
  • 'Tis love, but, with such fatall weaknesse made,
  • That it deftroyes it selfe with its owne shade.
  • Who first look'd sad, griev'd, pin'd, and shew'd his paine, 35
  • Was he that first taught women, to disdaine.
  • As all things were one nothing, dull and weake,
  • Vntill this raw disordered heape did breake,
  • And severall desires led parts away,
  • Water declin'd with earth, the ayre did stay, 40
  • Fire rose, and each from other but unty'd,
  • Themselves unprison'd were and purify'd:
  • So was love, first in vast confusion hid,
  • An unripe willingnesse which nothing did,
  • A thirst, an Appetite which had no ease, 45
  • That found a want, but knew not what would please.
  • What pretty innocence in those dayes mov'd?
  • Man ignorantly walk'd by her he lov'd;
  • Both sigh'd and enterchang'd a speaking eye,
  • Both trembled and were sick, both knew not why. 50
  • That naturall fearefulnesse that struck man dumbe,
  • Might well (those times consider'd) man become.
  • As all discoverers whose first assay
  • Findes but the place, after, the nearest way:
  • So passion is to womans love, about, 55
  • Nay, farther off, than when we first set out.
  • It is not love that sueth, or doth contend;
  • Love either conquers, or but meets a friend.
  • Man's better part consists of purer fire,
  • And findes it selfe allow'd, ere it desire. 60
  • Love is wise here, keepes home, gives reason sway,
  • And journeys not till it finde summer-way.
  • A weather-beaten Lover but once knowne,
  • Is sport for every girle to practise on.
  • Who strives through womans scornes, women to know, 65
  • Is lost, and seekes his shadow to outgoe;
  • It must bee sicknesse, after one disdaine,
  • Though he be call'd aloud, to looke againe.
  • Let others sigh, and grieve; one cunning sleight
  • Shall freeze my Love to Christall in a night. 70
  • I can love first, and (if I winne) love still;
  • And cannot be remov'd, unlesse she will.
  • It is her fault if I unsure remaine,
  • Shee onely can untie, and binde againe.
  • The honesties of love with ease I doe, 75
  • But am no porter for a tedious woo.
  • But (madame) I now thinke on you; and here
  • Where we are at our hights, you but appeare,
  • We are but clouds you rise from, our noone-ray
  • But a foule shadow, not your breake of day. 80
  • You are at first hand all that's faire and right,
  • And others good reflects but backe your light.
  • You are a perfectnesse, so curious hit,
  • That youngest flatteries doe scandall it.
  • For, what is more doth what you are restraine, 85
  • And though beyond, is downe the hill againe.
  • We'have no next way to you, we crosse to it:
  • You are the straight line, thing prais'd, attribute;
  • Each good in you's a light; so many a shade
  • You make, and in them are your motions made. 90
  • These are your pictures to the life. From farre
  • We see you move, and here your _Zani's_ are:
  • So that no fountaine good there is, doth grow
  • In you, but our dimme actions faintly shew.
  • Then finde I, if mans noblest part be love, 95
  • Your purest luster must that shadow move.
  • The soule with body, is a heaven combin'd
  • With earth, and for mans ease, but nearer joyn'd.
  • Where thoughts the starres of soule we understand,
  • We guesse not their large natures, but command. 100
  • And love in you, that bountie is of light,
  • That gives to all, and yet hath infinite.
  • Whose heat doth force us thither to intend,
  • But soule we finde too earthly to ascend,
  • 'Till slow accesse hath made it wholy pure, 105
  • Able immortall clearnesse to endure.
  • Who dare aspire this journey with a staine,
  • Hath waight will force him headlong backe againe.
  • No more can impure man retaine and move
  • In that pure region of a worthy love: 110
  • Then earthly substance can unforc'd aspire,
  • And leave his nature to converse with fire:
  • Such may have eye, and hand; may sigh, may speak;
  • But like swoln bubles, when they are high'st they break.
  • Though far removed Northerne fleets scarce finde 115
  • The Sunnes comfort; others thinke him too kinde.
  • There is an equall distance from her eye,
  • Men perish too farre off, and burne too nigh.
  • But as ayre takes the Sunne-beames equall bright
  • From the first Rayes, to his last opposite: 120
  • So able men, blest with a vertuous Love,
  • Remote or neare, or howsoe'r they move;
  • Their vertue breakes all clouds that might annoy,
  • There is no Emptinesse, but all is Ioy.
  • He much profanes whom violent heats do move 125
  • To stile his wandring rage of passion, _Love_:
  • Love that imparts in every thing delight,
  • Is fain'd, which only tempts mans appetite.
  • Why love among the vertues is not knowne
  • Is, that love is them all contract in one. 130
  • [To the Countesse of Huntington. _1635-69_: S^{r} Wal: Ashton
  • to y^{e} Countesse of Huntingtowne _P_, _TCD_ (_II_)]
  • [2 man] men _P_]
  • [3 ate; _1635-39_: eat; _1650-69_]
  • [11 downward] inward _TCD_]
  • [14 without] _om. TCD_]
  • [17 who] that _P_, _TCD_]
  • [20 you.] you, _1635-69_]
  • [26 faithfully, _1635-69_: finally _P_, _TCD_
  • you smil'd _1635-54_ your smile _1669_, _P_, _TCD_]
  • [28 down. _1635-54_: down, _1669_]
  • [30 whispers] whispered _P_: vapours _TCD_]
  • [31 fever] _feverish_ _1669_]
  • [32 doth yet] yet doth _1669_
  • ague] feaver _P_]
  • [35 paine,] paine. _1635-39_]
  • [36 women] woman _TCD_]
  • [37 were one] were but one _1669_]
  • [47 those dayes] that day _1669_]
  • [50 both knew _1635-54_: but knew _P_, _TCD_: yet, knew
  • _1669_]
  • [52 consider'd _Ed_: considered _1635-69_]
  • [57 sueth, or] sues and _P_]
  • [65 womans] womens _P_
  • women] woman _TCD_
  • know, _1650-69_: know. _1635-39_]
  • [67 It must be] It is meer _1669_
  • sicknesse,] sicknesse _1635-69_]
  • [69 sigh _P_, _TCD_: sinne, _1635-69_]
  • [74 and _P_: I _1635-69_, _TCD_]
  • [76 woo. _TCD_: wooe. _P_: woe. _1635-69_, _Chambers and
  • Grolier_]
  • [77 I now] now I _TCD_]
  • [78 hights] height _TCD_]
  • [79 clouds you rise from, our noone-ray _Grolier_: clouds, you
  • rise from our noone-ray, _1635-69_, _TCD_, _and Chambers_]
  • [81 right] bright _P_]
  • [83 a perfectnesse] all perfections _P_]
  • [84 youngest] quaintest _TCD_
  • flatteries] flatterers _P_, _TCD_]
  • [86 though] what's _P_]
  • [87 We'have _Ed_: We have _1635-69_]
  • [88 straight line,] streight-lace _P_
  • attribute; _Ed_: attribute. _1635_: attribute, _1639-69_]
  • [91 These] Those _TCD_]
  • [98 With earth] _om. TCD_
  • but] _om. 1650-69_]
  • [99 thoughts] through _P_]
  • [105 wholy] holy _TCD_]
  • [106 endure.] endure _1635_]
  • [108 waight] weights _P_, _TCD_]
  • [109 impure] vapore _P_]
  • [114 when they're highest break. _P_, _TCD_
  • break.] break _1635-39_: brak _1650-54_: brake. _1669_]
  • [115 _In edd. new par. begins wrongly at_ 113, _and so
  • Chambers and Grolier_
  • fleets] Isles _1669_]
  • [116 comfort; _1635-54_: sweet comfort, _1669_
  • others] yet some _1669_]
  • [119 But as the aire takes all sunbeams equall bright _P_]
  • [120 the first Rayes, _1635-54_: the Raies first, _1669_,
  • _TCD_: the rise first _P_]
  • [121 able men _P_: able man, _1635-54_: happy man, _1669_:
  • happy['s] man _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [123 Their _1669_, _P_, _TCD_: There _1635-54_, _Chambers and
  • Grolier_]
  • [125 violent _P_, _TCD_: valiant _1635-69_]
  • [126 _Love_: _Ed_: _Love_. _1635-54_: _Love_, _1669_]
  • [127 imparts] imports _1669_, _TCD_]
  • [128 Is fain'd, which ... appetite. _P_: Is thought the
  • mansion of sweet appetite. _TCD_: Is fancied _1635-39_ (_rest
  • of line left blank_): Is fancied in the Soul, not in the
  • sight. _1650-54_: Is fancied by the Soul, not appetite.
  • _1669_]
  • [130 Is, that] Is, 'cause _TCD_
  • contract in _1650-69_, _P_: contracted _1635-39_, _TCD_]
  • III.
  • _Elegie._
  • Death be not proud, thy hand gave not this blow,
  • Sinne was her captive, whence thy power doth flow;
  • The executioner of wrath thou art,
  • But to destroy the just is not thy part.
  • Thy comming, terrour, anguish, griefe denounce; 5
  • Her happy state, courage, ease, joy pronounce.
  • From out the Christall palace of her breast,
  • The clearer soule was call'd to endlesse rest,
  • (Not by the thundering voyce, wherewith God threats,
  • But, as with crowned Saints in heaven he treats,) 10
  • And, waited on by Angels, home was brought,
  • To joy that it through many dangers sought;
  • The key of mercy gently did unlocke
  • The doores 'twixt heaven and it, when life did knock.
  • Nor boast, the fairest frame was made thy prey, 15
  • Because to mortall eyes it did decay;
  • A better witnesse than thou art, assures,
  • That though dissolv'd, it yet a space endures;
  • No dramme thereof shall want or losse sustaine,
  • When her best soule inhabits it again. 20
  • Goe then to people curst before they were,
  • Their spoyles in Triumph of thy conquest weare.
  • Glory not thou thy selfe in these hot teares
  • Which our face, not for hers, but our harme weares,
  • The mourning livery given by Grace, not thee, 25
  • Which wils our soules in these streams washt should be,
  • And on our hearts, her memories best tombe,
  • In this her Epitaph doth write thy doome.
  • Blinde were those eyes, saw not how bright did shine
  • Through fleshes misty vaile the beames divine. 30
  • Deafe were the eares, not charm'd with that sweet sound
  • Which did i'th spirit-instructed voice abound.
  • Of flint the conscience, did not yeeld and melt,
  • At what in her last Act: it saw, heard, felt.
  • Weep not, nor grudge then, to have lost her sight, 35
  • Taught thus, our after stay's but a short night:
  • But by all soules not by corruption choaked
  • Let in high rais'd notes that power be invoked.
  • Calme the rough seas, by which she sayles to rest,
  • From sorrowes here, to a kingdome ever blest; 40
  • And teach this hymne of her with joy, and sing,
  • _The grave no conquest gets, Death hath no sting._
  • [Elegie. _Ed_: Elegye on the Lady Markham. By L. C. of
  • B. _RP31_: _do._ By C. L. of B. _H40_: Elegie on Mistris
  • Boulstred. _1635-69_: _given as continuation of Death I
  • recant &c._ _O'F_, _P_: _no title_, _B_ (_at foot of page F.
  • B._). _See Text and Canon &c._]
  • [2 flow; _Ed_: flow, _1635-69_: growe, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_,
  • _O'F_, _P_]
  • [5-6 comming, _1650-69_: comming _1635-39_
  • state, _1650-69_: state _1635-39_
  • denounce; ... pronounce. _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _P_: denounces; ...
  • pronounces. _1635-69_]
  • [12 To joy that _1635-69_: To joy what _H40_: To joye, that
  • _B_
  • sought; _Ed_: sought, _1635-69_]
  • [22 spoyles .. of .. weare. _B_, _Cy_, _H40_ (beare), _P_:
  • soules .. to .. beare, _1635-69_. _See note_]
  • [24 hers, _H40_, _P_: her, _1635-69_
  • weares, _Ed_: weares. _1635-54_: weares: _1669_]
  • [30 the _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _P_: those _1635-69_]
  • [31 not _1635-69_: that _B_, _Cy_, _P_]
  • [32 Which did _1635-69_: Did _H40_: Did not _B_, _Cy_, _P_
  • spirit-instructed _MSS._: spirits instructed _1635-69_]
  • [saw, heard, felt. _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _P_: saw and felt.
  • _1635-69_]
  • [38 rais'd _1635-69_: raisèd _Chambers_]
  • [39 she sayles _1635-69_: shee's sayl'd _B_, _H40_: shee's
  • fled _Cy_, _P_
  • rest, _1650-69_: rest _1635-39_]
  • [40 here, _1650-69_: here _1635-39_
  • blest; _Ed_: blest _1635_: blest, _1639-54_: blest. _1669_]
  • [41 And preach this Hymn which hers (she _Cy_, _P_) with joy
  • did sing, _B_, _Cy_, _H40_, _P_
  • sing, _1650-69_: sing _1635-69_]
  • IV.
  • _Psalme 137._
  • Probably by Francis Davison.
  • I.
  • By Euphrates flowry side
  • We did bide,
  • From deare Juda farre absented,
  • Tearing the aire with our cryes,
  • And our eyes, 5
  • With their streames his streame augmented.
  • II.
  • When, poore Syons dolefull state,
  • Desolate;
  • Sacked, burned, and inthrall'd,
  • And the Temple spoil'd, which wee 10
  • Ne'r should see,
  • To our mirthlesse mindes wee call'd:
  • III.
  • Our mute harpes, untun'd, unstrung,
  • Up wee hung
  • On greene willowes neere beside us, 15
  • Where, we sitting all forlorne;
  • Thus, in scorne,
  • Our proud spoylers 'gan deride us.
  • IV.
  • Come, sad Captives, leave your moanes,
  • And your groanes 20
  • Under Syons ruines bury;
  • Tune your harps, and sing us layes
  • In the praise
  • Of your God, and let's be merry.
  • V.
  • Can, ah, can we leave our moanes? 25
  • And our groanes
  • Under Syons ruines bury?
  • Can we in this Land sing Layes
  • In the praise
  • Of our God, and here be merry? 30
  • VI.
  • No; deare Syon, if I yet
  • Do forget
  • Thine affliction miserable,
  • Let my nimble joynts become
  • Stiffe and numme, 35
  • To touch warbling harpe unable.
  • VII.
  • Let my tongue lose singing skill,
  • Let it still
  • To my parched roofe be glewed,
  • If in either harpe or voice 40
  • I rejoyce,
  • Till thy joyes shall be renewed.
  • VIII.
  • Lord, curse Edom's traiterous kinde,
  • Beare in minde
  • In our ruines how they revell'd. 45
  • _Sack_, _kill_, _burne_, they cry'd out still,
  • _Sack_, _burne_, _kill_,
  • Downe with all, let all be levell'd.
  • IX.
  • And, thou Babel, when the tide
  • Of thy pride 50
  • Now a flowing, growes to turning;
  • Victor now, shall then be thrall,
  • And shall fall
  • To as low an ebbe of mourning.
  • X.
  • Happy he who shall thee waste, 55
  • As thou hast
  • Us, without all mercy, wasted,
  • And shall make thee taste and see
  • What poore wee
  • By thy meanes have seene and tasted. 60
  • XI.
  • Happy, who, thy tender barnes
  • From the armes
  • Of their wailing mothers tearing,
  • 'Gainst the walls shall dash their bones,
  • Ruthlesse stones 65
  • With their braines and blood besmearing.
  • [Psalme 137. _1633-69_, _A25_, _C_, _RP61_ in Certaine
  • selected Psalmes of David (in Verse) differint from Those
  • usually sung in the Church Composed by Francis Davison esq^r.
  • deceased and other Gentlemen. Manuscribd by R. Crane. Addl._
  • _MS. 27407_, _Harl. MSS. 3357 and 6930_]
  • [4 with our cryes] with mournful cries _Crane_]
  • [6 his] the _Crane_]
  • [16 all forlorne] soe forlorne _Crane_]
  • [22-3
  • To your Harpes sing us some layes
  • To the praise _Crane_
  • ]
  • [24 merry.] merry, _1633-39_]
  • [25-6 moanes ... groanes] _interchanged_ _Crane_]
  • [31-2
  • if I faile
  • To bewayle _Crane_
  • ]
  • [42 renewed.] renewed _1633_]
  • [43 curse] plague _Crane_]
  • [45 ruines] Ruine _Crane_
  • revell'd. _Ed_: revell'd, _1633-39_]
  • [52-3 shall ... shall] shalt ... shalt _Crane_]
  • [59-60
  • What by thee
  • Wee (poore wee) have _&c._ _Crane_
  • ]
  • V.
  • _On the blessed Virgin Mary._
  • Probably by Henry Constable.
  • In that, ô Queene of Queenes, thy birth was free
  • From that which others doth of grace bereave,
  • When in their mothers wombe they life receive,
  • God, as his sole-borne daughter loved thee.
  • To match thee like thy births nobilitie, 5
  • He thee his Spirit for thy spouse did leave,
  • By whom thou didst his onely sonne conceive,
  • And so wast link'd to all the Trinitie.
  • Cease then, ô Queenes, that earthly Crownes doe weare,
  • To glory in the Pompe of earthly things; 10
  • If men such high respects unto you beare,
  • Which daughters, wives, and mothers are to Kings,
  • What honour can unto that Queene be done
  • Who had your God for Father, Spouse and Sonne?
  • [On the _&c._ _1635-69_, _A10_, _B_, _O'F_, _S_, _S96_: _also
  • among Spiritual Sonnets by H. C. in Harl. MS. 7553_]
  • [6 thy spouse _A10_, _B_: his spouse _1635-69_]
  • [12 to _B_: of _1635-69_
  • Kings,] kings, _1635_]
  • VI.
  • _On the Sacrament._
  • He was the Word that spake it,
  • Hee tooke the bread and brake it;
  • And what that Word did make it,
  • I doe beleeve and take it.
  • [On the _&c._ _1635-69_]
  • VII.
  • _Absence._
  • That time and absence proves
  • Rather helps than hurts to loves.
  • Probably by John Hoskins.
  • Absence heare my protestation
  • Against thy strengthe
  • Distance and lengthe,
  • Doe what thou canst for alteration:
  • For harts of truest mettall 5
  • Absence doth joyne, and time doth settle.
  • Who loves a Mistris of right quality,
  • His mind hath founde
  • Affections grounde
  • Beyond time, place, and all mortality: 10
  • To harts that cannot vary
  • Absence is present, time doth tary:
  • My Sences want their outward motion
  • Which now within
  • Reason doth win, 15
  • Redoubled by her secret notion:
  • Like rich men that take pleasure
  • In hidinge more then handling treasure.
  • By absence this good means I gaine
  • That I can catch her 20
  • Where none can watch her
  • In some close corner of my braine:
  • There I embrace and there kiss her,
  • And so enjoye her, and so misse her.
  • [Absence. _The Grove_ (_1721_): _do. or no title_, _B_, _Cy_,
  • _HN_ (_signed_ J. H.), _L74_, _O'F_, _P_, _S_, _S96_ (_the
  • text here printed_): _also in_ Davison's Poetical Rhapsody
  • (_PR_) _1602_ _and_ (_a maimed and altered version_) _in Wit
  • Restored_ (_WR_) _1658_]
  • [1 heare _B_, _S96_, _Grove_: heare thou _Cy_, _HN_, _L74_,
  • _PR_, _S_, _WR_]
  • [3 Distance] Disdayne _HN_]
  • [4 you can _PR_: yee dare _HN_]
  • [5 For hearts where love's refined _WR_]
  • [6 Are absent joyned, by tyme combined. _WR_]
  • [7 right _S96_: such _Grove_, _HN_, _L74_, _PR_]
  • [8 He soon hath found _PR_]
  • [10 all] _om._ _WR_]
  • [11 To] That _WR_]
  • [12 present] presence _B_
  • tary] carry _WR_]
  • [13 motion] motions _PR_]
  • [16 by ... notion:] in ... notions: _PR_: in ... notion _HN_]
  • [18 hidinge] finding _Grove_]
  • [19 means] mean _WR_]
  • [23 There I embrace and there kiss her, _S96_: There I embrace
  • her, and _&c._ _L74_: There I embrace and there I kiss her,
  • _B_, _O'F_, _WR_: There I embrace and kiss her, _Grove_, _HN_,
  • _PR_]
  • [24 and so misse her _B_, _Cy_, _HN_, _L74_, _O'F_, _S96_,
  • _WR_: while none misse her. _Grove_: I both enjoy and miss
  • her. _PR_]
  • VIII.
  • _Song._
  • Probably by the Earl of Pembroke.
  • Soules joy, now I am gone,
  • And you alone,
  • (Which cannot be,
  • Since I must leave my selfe with thee,
  • And carry thee with me) 5
  • Yet when unto our eyes
  • Absence denyes
  • Each others sight,
  • And makes to us a constant night,
  • When others change to light; 10
  • _O give no way to griefe,
  • But let beliefe
  • Of mutuall love,
  • This wonder to the vulgar prove
  • Our Bodyes, not wee move._ 15
  • Let not thy wit beweepe
  • Wounds but sense-deepe,
  • For when we misse
  • By distance our lipp-joying blisse,
  • Even then our soules shall kisse, 20
  • Fooles have no meanes to meet,
  • But by their feet.
  • Why should our clay,
  • Over our spirits so much sway,
  • To tie us to that way? 25
  • _O give no way to griefe, &c._
  • [Song. _1635-69_, _O'F_: also in the Poems &c. (1660) of
  • the Earle of Pembroke and S^{r} Benjamin Ruddier, and the
  • Lansdowne MS. 777, here it is signed E. of Pembroke._]
  • [1 now] when _1660_, _L77_]
  • [17 Wounds _L77_: Words _1635-69_, _O'F_
  • sense-deepe,] _no hyphen_, _1635-69_]
  • [18 when] while _L77_]
  • [19 lipp-joyning _L77_ (_not_ lives joining _as Chambers
  • reports_): hopes joyning _1635-69_, _O'F_]
  • _A Dialogue._
  • EARLE OF PEMBROKE.
  • If her disdaine least change in you can move,
  • you doe not love,
  • For whilst your hopes give fuell to the fire,
  • you sell desire.
  • Love is not love, but given free, 5
  • And so is mine, so should yours bee.
  • Her heart that melts at others moane,
  • to mine is stone.
  • Her eyes that weepe a strangers hurt to see,
  • joy to wound mee: 10
  • Yet I so much affect each part,
  • As (caus'd by them) I love my smart.
  • Say her disdaynings justly must be grac't
  • with name of chaste.
  • And that shee frownes least longing should exceed, 15
  • and raging breed;
  • Soe can her rigor ne'er offend
  • Unlesse selfe-love seeke private end.
  • BEN: RUDDIER
  • 'Tis love breeds love in mee, and cold disdaine
  • kils that againe, 20
  • As water causeth fire to fret and fume,
  • till all consume.
  • Who can of love more free gift make,
  • Then to loves self, for loves own sake.
  • I'll never dig in Quarry of an heart 25
  • to have no part,
  • Nor roast in fiery eyes, which alwayes are
  • Canicular.
  • Who this way would a Lover prove,
  • May shew his patience, not his love. 30
  • A frowne may be sometimes for physick good,
  • But not for food;
  • And for that raging humour there is sure
  • A gentler Cure.
  • Why barre you love of private end, 35
  • Which never should to publique tend?
  • [A Dialogue. _Ed_: A Dialogue betweene S^{r} Henry Wotton and
  • M^{r} Donne. _1635-69 among_ Letters to Severall Personages:
  • _no heading but divided between_ Earle of Pembroke _and_ Ben:
  • Ruddier _H39_, _H40_, _P_: _and so between_ P _and_ R _in
  • the_ Poems _&c._ (1660) _of Pembroke and Ruddier_. _See note_:
  • _only 18 lines and no dialogue_, _Cy_: _in TCD_ (_II_) _the
  • first part is given to_ Earl of Pembroke _and_ S^{r} Henry
  • Wotton, _the second to_ S^{r} Ben. Ruddier _and_ D^{r} John
  • Donne]
  • [3 whilst your hopes give _H39_, (the), _H40_, _P_: when the
  • hope gives _1635-54_: when that hope gives _1669_]
  • [7 melts at _H39_, _H40_, _P_, _TCD_: melts to hear of
  • _1635-69_]
  • [9 a strangers] anothers _P_
  • hurt _H39_, _H40_, _P_, _TCD_: eyes _1635-69 and mod. edd._]
  • [11 much _Cy_, _H39_, _H40_, _P_, _TCD_: well _1635-69_]
  • [13 Say _1635-69_: I think _H39_: Think _H40_: But thinke _P_
  • her disdaynings _1635-69_: her unkindness _H40_: that her
  • disdaine _P_
  • must be] may well be _P_]
  • [17-18 _text_ _H40_, _P_, _P and R_:
  • So her disdaines can ne'er offend;
  • Vnlesse selfe-love take private end. _1635-69_
  • ]
  • [21 causeth] maketh _H40_, _P_]
  • [23-4
  • Who can of love more free gift make
  • Then to loves self, for loves owne sake
  • _H39_, _H40_, _P_ (_but H39 has to love in 23_)
  • Who can of love more gift make,
  • Then to love selfe for loves sake. _1635-39_
  • Who can of love more rich gift make,
  • Then to love selfe-love for loves sake? _1650-54_
  • Who can of love more rich gift make,
  • Then to Loves self for loves own sake. _1669_
  • ]
  • [25 Quarry] quarryes _P_]
  • [27 roast _1669_, _H40_: rest _1635-54_: waste _H39_, _P_]
  • [30 May] doth _H39_, _H40_, _P_]
  • IX.
  • _Break of Daye._
  • Stanza prefixed to Donne's Poem (p. 23) in Stowe MS. 961 and
  • in Edition of 1669.
  • Probably by John Dowlands.
  • Stay, O sweet, and do not rise,
  • The light that shines comes from thine eyes;
  • The day breaks not, it is my heart,
  • Because that you and I must part.
  • Stay, or else my joys will die, 5
  • And perish in their infancie.
  • [Stanza _&c._] _given as a separate poem in A25_ (_where it
  • is written in at the side_), _C_, _O'F_, _P_: _printed in John
  • Dowland's_ A Pilgrim's Solace (1612)]
  • [1 Stay, O sweet] Lie still my dear _A25_, _C_]
  • [3 The day breakes not] There breakes not day _S96_]
  • [4 Because that] To think that _S96_]
  • [5 Stay] Oh stay _S96_]
  • APPENDIX C.
  • A
  • SELECTION OF POEMS WHICH FREQUENTLY
  • ACCOMPANY POEMS BY JOHN DONNE
  • IN MANUSCRIPT COLLECTIONS OR
  • HAVE BEEN ASCRIBED TO
  • DONNE BY MODERN
  • EDITORS.
  • I.
  • POEMS FROM ADDITIONAL MS. 25707.
  • _A Letter written by S^{r} H: G: and J: D: alternis vicibus._
  • Since ev'ry Tree beginns to blossome now
  • Perfuminge and enamelinge each bow,
  • Hartes should as well as they, some fruits allow.
  • For since one old poore sunn serves all the rest,
  • You sev'rall sunns that warme, and light each brest 5
  • Doe by that influence all your thoughts digest.
  • And that you two may soe your vertues move,
  • On better matter then beames from above,
  • Thus our twin'd souls send forth these buds of love.
  • As in devotions men Joyne both there hands, 10
  • Wee make ours doe one Act to seale the bands,
  • By which we enthrall ourselves to your commands,
  • And each for others faith and zeale stand bound:
  • As safe as spirits are from any wound,
  • Soe free from impure thoughts they shal be found. 15
  • Admit our magique then by which wee doe
  • Make you appeere to us, and us to you,
  • Supplying all the Muses in you twoe.
  • Wee doe consider noe flower that is sweet,
  • But wee your breath in that exhaling meet, 20
  • And as true types of you, them humbly greet.
  • Heere in our Nightingales we heere you singe
  • Who soe doe make the whole yeare through a springe,
  • And save us from the feare of Autumns stinge.
  • In Anchors calme face wee your smoothnes see, 25
  • Your mindes unmingled, and as cleare as shee
  • That keepes untoucht her first virginitie.
  • Did all St. Edith nunns descend againe
  • To honor Polesworth with their cloystred traine,
  • Compar'd with you each would confesse some stayne. 30
  • Or should wee more bleed out our thoughts in inke,
  • Noe paper (though it woulde be glad to drinke
  • Those drops) could comprehend what wee doe thinke.
  • For t'were in us ambition to write
  • Soe, that because wee two, you two unite, 35
  • Our letter should as you, bee infinite.
  • [Letter written _&c._ _A25_: _published by Chambers, who
  • completes the names_]
  • [2 bow, _Ed_: bow _A25_]
  • [9 twin'd _A25_: twined _Chambers_]
  • [10 hands, _Ed_: hands _A25_]
  • [12-13 commands, ... bound: _Ed_: command. ... bound, _A25_]
  • [25 Anchors _Chambers_: Anchos _A25_]
  • [29 traine, _Ed_: traine _A25_]
  • [31 inke, _Ed_: inke _A25_]
  • _O Frutefull Garden._
  • O Frutefull garden, and yet never tilde,
  • Box full of Treasure yet by noe man filde.
  • O thou which haste, made him that first made thee;
  • O neare of kinne to all the Trinetie;
  • O Pallace where the kinge of all, and more; 5
  • Went in, and out, yet never opened doore;
  • Whose flesh is purer, than an others sperrit
  • Reache him our Prayers, and reach us down his merrit;
  • O bread of lyfe which sweld'ste up without Leaven;
  • O bridge which joynst togeather earth and heaven; 10
  • Whose eyes see me through these walles, and throughe glasse,
  • And through this fleshe as thorowe Cipres passe.
  • Behould a little harte made greate by thee
  • Swellinge, yet shrinkinge at thy majestie.
  • O dwell in it, for where soe ere thou go'ste 15
  • There is the Temple of the Holy Ghoste.
  • [O Frutefull Garden. _A25_: [TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.]
  • _Chambers_]
  • [6 out, _Ed_: out _A25_]
  • [8 merrit; _Ed_: merrit, _A25_]
  • [9 Leaven, _Ed_: Leaven _A25_]
  • _To my Lord of Pembroke._
  • Fye, Fye you sonnes of Pallas what madd rage
  • Makes you contend that Love's, or God, or page?
  • Hee that admires, his weaknes doth confess;
  • For as Love greater growes; soe hee growes less.
  • Hee that disdaines, what honor wynns thereby, 5
  • That he feeles not, or triumphes on a fly?
  • If love with queasie paine thy stomack move,
  • Soe will a slutt whome none dare touch; or love.
  • If it with sacred straines doe thee inspire
  • Of Poetrie; soe wee maye want admire. 10
  • If it thee valiant make, his ryvall hate
  • Can out doe that and make men desperate.
  • Yealdinge to us, all woemen conquer us,
  • By gentlenes we are betrayed thus.
  • We will not strive with Love that's a shee beaste; 15
  • But playinge wee are bounde, and yeald in Jest;
  • As in a Cobwebb toyle, a flye hath beene
  • Undone; so have I some fainte lover seene.
  • Love cannot take away our strength, but tame,
  • And wee less feele the thinge then feare the name; 20
  • Love is a temperate bath; hee that feeles more
  • Heate or could there, was hott, or could before.
  • But as Suñ beames which would but norishe, burne,
  • Drawne into hollow Christall, soe we turne
  • To fire her bewties Lustre willingly, 25
  • By gatheringe it in our false treacherous eye.
  • Love is nor you, nor you; but I a balme,
  • Sword to the stiff, unto the wounded balme.
  • Prayes noe thinge adds, if it be infinite,
  • If it be nothing, who can lessen it? 30
  • [To my Lord of Pembroke. _A25_, _Chambers_]
  • [3 confess; _Ed_: confess _A25_]
  • [5 disdaines, _Ed_: disdaines _A25_]
  • [6 fly? _Ed_: fly; _A25_]
  • [19 tame, _Ed_: tame _A25_]
  • [27 I a balme, _A25_: Aye a calm, _Chambers conjectures_]
  • _Of a Lady in the Black Masque._
  • Why chose shee black; was it that in whitenes
  • Shee did Leda equal? whose brightnes
  • Must suffer loss to put a bewtie on
  • Which hath no grace but from proportion.
  • It is but Coullor, which to loose is gayne, 5
  • For shee in black doth th'Æthiopian staine,
  • Beinge the forme that beautifies the creature
  • Her rareness not in Coullor is; but feature.
  • Black on her receaves soe strong a grace
  • It seemes the fittest beautie for the face. 10
  • Coullor is not, but in æstimation
  • Faire, or foule, as it is stild by fashion.
  • Kinges wearinge sackcloath it doth royall make;
  • Soe blacks from her face doth beautie take.
  • It not in Coullor but in her, inheres, 15
  • For what she is, is faire, not what she weares;
  • The Moore shalle envye her, as much, or more,
  • As did the Ladies of our Court before.
  • The Sunn shall mourne that hee had westwarde beene,
  • To seeke his Love; whilst shee i'th North was seene. 20
  • Her blacknes lends like lustre to her eyes,
  • As in the night pale Phoebe glorifyes.
  • Hell, synne, and vice their attributes shall loose
  • Of black, for it wan, and pale whitenes choose,
  • As like themselves, Common, and most in use: 25
  • Sad of that Coulor is the late abuse.
  • [Of a Lady _&c._ _A25_, _Chambers_]
  • [10 face. _Ed_: face _A25_]
  • [13 make; _Ed_: make _A25_]
  • [14 blacks _Chambers_: blacks _A25_]
  • [16 weares; _Ed_: weares, _A25_]
  • II.
  • POEMS FROM THE BURLEY MS.
  • <_Life._>
  • This lyfe it is not life, it is a sight
  • That wee have of y^e earth, y^e earth of vs;
  • It is a feild, where sence & reason fight,
  • The soules & bodies quarrells to discus;
  • It is a iorney where wee do not goe, 5
  • but fly w^{th} speedy wings t'our blisse or woe.
  • It is a chaine y^t hath but two smale links
  • Where o^r graue is to o^r bodie ioyned;
  • It is a poysned feast wherein who thinks
  • To tast ioyes cup, y^e cup of death doth find. 10
  • It is a play, presented in heauens eye
  • Wherein o^r parts are to do naught but dye.
  • [Life.> _Ed_: _no title_, _Bur_]
  • [2 vs; _Ed_: vs _Bur_]
  • [3 feild, _Ed_: feild _Bur_]
  • [4 discus; _Ed_: discus _Bur_]
  • [6 Woe. _Ed_: woe _Bur_]
  • [8 Where _Ed_: where _Bur_
  • ioyned; _Ed_: ioyned _Bur_]
  • <_My Love._>
  • My love doth fly w^{th} wings of feare
  • And doth a flame of fire resemble,
  • w^{ch} mounting high & burning cleere
  • yet ever more doth wane & tremble.
  • My loue doth see & still admire, 5
  • Admiring breedeth humblenes;
  • blind loue is bold, but my desire
  • the more it loues p^{re}sumes y^e lesse.
  • My loue seekes no reward or glory
  • but w^{th} it self it self contenteth, 10
  • is never sullaine, never sory,
  • never repyneth or repenteth.
  • O'who the sunne beames can behold
  • but hath some passion, feeles some heat,
  • for though the sunn himself be cold 15
  • his beames reflecting fire begett.
  • O y^t myne eyes, ô that myne hart
  • Were both enlarged to contayne
  • the beames & ioyes shee doth impart,
  • whilst shee this bowre doth not disdayne; 20
  • this bowre vnfit for such a gueste,
  • but since she makes it now her Inn,
  • Would god twere like her sacred breast
  • most fayre w^{th}out, most rich w^{th}in.
  • [ Love.> _Ed_: _no title and no punctuation_, _Bur_]
  • [4 wane _Ed_: weane _Bur_]
  • [12 never _Ed_: ne're _Bur_]
  • <_O Eyes!_>
  • O Eyes, what do you see?
  • O eares what do you heare?
  • that makes y^o wish to bee
  • All eyes or else all eare?
  • I see a face as fayre 5
  • As mans eye ever saw,
  • I here as sweet an ayre
  • as y^t w^{ch} rocks did draw,
  • I wish, when in such wise
  • I see or heare y^e same, 10
  • I had all Argus eyes
  • or else y^e eare of fame.
  • [ Eyes!> _Ed_: _no title and no punctuation_, _Bur_]
  • [12 eare _Ed_: eare _Bur_:
  • Cui, quot sunt corpore plumae,
  • Tot vigiles oculi subter, mirabile dictu,
  • Tot linguae, totidem ora sonant, _tot subrigit auris_.
  • Virgil: _Aen._ iv. 181-3.
  • ]
  • <_Silence Best Praise._>
  • Cõmend her? no. I dare not terme her fayre,
  • nor sugred sweet, nor tall, nor louely browne;
  • suffice it y^t she is w^{th}out compare;
  • but how, I dare not tell lest she should frowne.
  • but those parts w^{ch} others make theyre pryde, 5
  • and feed there fancies w^{th} devised lyes;
  • giue me but leaue to pull my saint asyde,
  • and tell her in her eare that she is wise.
  • to write of beauties rare ther is noe art,
  • for why tis common to there sex & kind, 10
  • but making choice of natures better part
  • my Muse doth most desire to prayse her mind.
  • But as her vertue clayme a crowne of bayes,
  • So manners makes me sylent in her prayse.
  • [ Best Praise.> _Ed_: _no title_, _Bur_]
  • [1 fayre, _Ed_: fayre _Bur_]
  • [2 sweet, ... tall, ... browne; _Ed_: _no stops_, _Bur_]
  • [3 compare; _Ed_: compare _Bur_]
  • [4 frowne. _Ed_: frowne _Bur_]
  • [5 _Ed_: lest _Bur_
  • pryde, _Ed_: pryde _Bur_]
  • [6 lyes; _Ed_: lyes _Bur_]
  • [7 asyde, _Ed_: asyde _Bur_]
  • [8 wise. _Ed_: wise _Bur_]
  • [9-10 art, ... kind. _Ed_: _no commas_, _Bur_]
  • [10 common] cõmõ _Bur_]
  • [12 mind. _Ed_: mind _Bur_]
  • [13 vertue _Ed_: vertue _Bur_
  • bayes, _Ed_: bayes _Bur_]
  • <_Beauty in Little Room._>
  • Those drossy heads & irrepurged braynes
  • w^{ch} sacred fyre of loue hath not refined
  • may grossly think my loue smale worth contaynes
  • because shee is of body smale combined.
  • Not diving to y^e depth of natures reach, 5
  • W^{ch} on smale things doth greatest guifts bestow:
  • small gems & pearls do witt more truly teach
  • W^ch little are yet great in vertue grow,
  • of flowers most part y^e least wee sweetest see,
  • of creatures having life & sence y^e annt 10
  • is smalst, yet great her guifts & vertues bee,
  • frugall & provident for feare of want.
  • Wherfore who sees not natures full intent?
  • she made her smale to make her excellent.
  • [ in Little Room.> _Ed_: _no title_, _Bur_]
  • [5 depth _Ed_: depht _Bur_
  • reach, _Ed_: reach _Bur_]
  • [6 bestow: _Ed_: bestow _Bur_]
  • [8 grow, _Ed_: grow _Bur_]
  • [11 bee, _Ed_: bee _Bur_]
  • [13 intent? _Ed_: intent _Bur_]
  • <_Loves Zodiake._>
  • I that y^e higher half of loues
  • Round Zodiake haue rune,
  • And in the signe of crabbed chaunce
  • My Tropick haue begun,
  • Am taught to teach y^e man is blest 5
  • Whose loues lott lights so badd,
  • as his solstitium soonest makes
  • And so growes Retrograde.
  • [ Zodiake> _Ed_: _no title_, _Bur_]
  • <_Fortune, Love, and Time._>
  • When fortune, loue, and Tyme bad me be happie,
  • Happy I was by fortune, loue, and tyme.
  • These powres at highest then began to vary,
  • and cast him downe whome they had caus'd to clyme;
  • They prun'd theire wings, and tooke theire flight in rage; 5
  • fortune to fooles, loue to gold, and tyme to age.
  • Fooles, gold, and age, (o foolish golden age!)
  • Witt, fayth, and loue must begg, must brybe, must dy;
  • These are the actors and the world's the stage,
  • Desert and hope are as but standers by: 10
  • True lovers sit and tune this restlesse song;
  • Fortune, loue, and tyme haue done me wrong.
  • [, Love, and Time.> _Ed_: _no title and no
  • punctuation_, _Bur_]
  • <_Life a Play._>
  • What is o^r life? a play of passion.
  • o^r mirth? the musick of diuision.
  • O^r mothers wombs the tyring houses bee
  • Where we are drest for liues short comedy.
  • The earth the stage, heauen y^e spectator is, 5
  • Who still doth note who ere do act amisse.
  • O^r graues that hyde vs, frõ the all-seeing suñ,
  • Are but drawne curtaynes whẽ the play is done.
  • [ a Play.> _Ed_: _no title, and no punctuation except the
  • two marks of interrogation_, _Bur_]
  • _A Kisse._
  • O what a blisse
  • is this?
  • heaven is effected
  • and loues eternity contracted
  • In one short kisse. 5
  • For not tymes measure
  • makes pleasure
  • more full,
  • tedious and dull
  • all ioyes are thought 10
  • y^t are not in an instant wrought.
  • Cupis blest and highest spheare
  • is heare.
  • heere on his throne
  • in his bright imperial crowne 15
  • hee sitts.
  • Those witts
  • That thinke to proue
  • that mortals know
  • in any place below 20
  • a blisse so great
  • so sweet
  • Are heretiques in loue.
  • These pleasures high
  • now dye, 25
  • but still beginning
  • new & greater glory wiñing
  • gett fresh supply.
  • No short breath'd panting
  • nor faynting 30
  • is heere,
  • fuller and freer
  • more pleasinge is
  • this pleasure still, & none but this.
  • Heer'es no blush nor labor great, 35
  • no sweat;
  • Heres no payne
  • nor repentance when againe
  • Loue cooles.
  • O fooles 40
  • That fondly glory
  • in base condition
  • of sensual fruition,
  • you do mistake
  • & make 45
  • y^r heaven purgatory.
  • [A Kisse. _Bur_]
  • [8 full. _Ed_: full _Bur_]
  • [12 Cupis _Ed_: Cupis _Bur_]
  • [27 new _Ed_: now _Bur_]
  • [28 supply. _Ed_: supply _Bur_]
  • [31 heere, _Ed_: heere _Bur_]
  • [35 great, _Ed_: great _Bur_]
  • [39 cooles. _Ed_: cooles _Bur_]
  • [43 fruition, _Ed_: fruition _Bur_]
  • _Epi: B: Jo:_
  • Tell me who can when a player dies
  • In w^{ch} of his shapes againe hee shall rise?
  • What need hee stand at the iudgment throne
  • Who hath a heaven and a hell of his owne.
  • Then feare not Burbage heavens angry rodd, 5
  • When thy fellows are angells & old Hemmĩgs is God.
  • [Epi: B: Jo: (i.e. Epitaph: Ben Ionson) _Bur_: _no
  • punctuation_]
  • _Epi: Hen: Princ: Hug^o Holland._
  • Loe now hee shineth yonder
  • A fixed starr in heaven,
  • Whose motion is vnder
  • None of the planetts seaven;
  • And if the soñ should tender 5
  • The moone his loue and marry,
  • They never could engender
  • So fayre a starr as Harry.
  • [Epi: Hen: Princ: Hug^o Holland. _Bur_: _no punctuation_]
  • III.
  • POEMS FROM VARIOUS MSS.
  • <_The Annuntiation._
  • _Additional Lines._>
  • Nature amaz'd sawe man without mans ayde
  • Borne of a mother nursed by her a mayd,
  • The child the Parent was, the worke the word,
  • No word till then did such a worke affoord.
  • Twas lesse from nothing the world's all to growe 5
  • Then all-Creato^{rs} height to stoope so lowe.
  • A virgin mother to a child bredd wonder,
  • T'was more a child should bee the God of thunder.
  • Th'omnipotent was strangely potent heere
  • To make the powerfull God pearelesse appeare. 10
  • Hee in our body cladd, for our soules love
  • Came downe to us, yet stay'd vnchanged above.
  • Yet God through man shind still in this cleere brooke,
  • Through meane shewes into maiesty wee looke.
  • Sinnes price seemd payd with brasse, fewe sawe the gold, 15
  • Yet true stones set in lead theyr lustre hold.
  • His birth though poore, Prophets foretold his story,
  • Hee breathd with beasts, but Angels sung his glory.
  • Hee, so farr of, so weake, yet Herod quakes,
  • The citty dreads, babes, murderd, feare mistakes. 20
  • His Circumcision bore sinne, payne, and shame,
  • Young bloud new budd, hence bloomd a sauiours name.
  • His paynes and passion bredd compassion, wonder;
  • Earth trembling, heavens darke, rocks rent asunder.
  • His birth, life, death, his words, his workes, his face 25
  • Shewd a rich Jewell shining through the case,
  • Cast thus, since man at gods high presence trembles.
  • Heere man mans troth loves whome his sheepe resembles.
  • The bright Sunne beame a sickly eye may di[~m]e,
  • A little babe in shallow heart may swi[~m]. 30
  • Hee heavens wealth to a poore stable brings,
  • Th'oxestall the Court unto the king of kings.
  • No Shadowes now nor lightning flames give terro^r.
  • This light tells with our tongue, and beares o^r erro^r.
  • Pure infant teares, moist pearle adornd his cheeke, 35
  • Assignd, ere borne, our erring soules to seeke.
  • Hee first wept teares, then bloud, a deare redemption;
  • This bought what Adam sould, that seemd preemption.
  • Cleare droppe, deare seede, the corne had bloudy eares,
  • Rich harvest reapd in bloud and sowne in teares. 40
  • Who this Corne in theyr hart nor thresh, nor lay,
  • Breake for sinnes debt, unthrifty never pay.
  • Use wealth, it wastes, a stayd hand heapes the store,
  • But this the more wee use wee have the more;
  • Use, not like usury whose growth is lending, 45
  • Rich thoughts this treasure keepe and thrive by spending;
  • Th'expense runnes circular, turning returning,
  • Such love no hart consumes, yet ever burning.
  • [ Annuntiation. Additional Lines.> _Ed_: _these lines run
  • straight on as part of_ The Annuntiation and Passion _in O'F_]
  • [2 a mayd] _Norton supplies_ a mayd, _Ed_: mayd _O'F_]
  • [3 was,... word, _Ed_: _no commas_, _O'F_]
  • [6 lowe. _Ed_: lowe _O'F_]
  • [7 wonder, _Ed_: wonder _O'F_]
  • [8 thunder. _Ed_: thunder _O'F_]
  • [13 brooke, _Ed_: brooke _O'F_]
  • [21 shame, _Ed_: shame _O'F_]
  • [23 wonder; _Ed_: wonder _O'F_]
  • [24 trembling, _Ed_: trembling _O'F_]
  • [26 case, _Ed_: case _O'F_]
  • [27 trembles. _Ed_: trembles _O'F_]
  • [28 resembles. _Ed_: resẽbles _O'F_]
  • [29 di[~m]e, _Ed_: di[~m]e _O'F_]
  • [31 brings, _Ed_: brings _O'F_]
  • [35 cheeke, _Ed_: cheeke _O'F_]
  • [37 redemption; _Ed_: redemption _O'F_]
  • [38 preemption. _Ed_: preemption _O'F_]
  • [39 eares, _Ed_: eares _O'F_]
  • [41 lay, _Ed_: lay _O'F_]
  • [43 store, _Ed_: store _O'F_]
  • [44 more; _Ed_: more _O'F_]
  • [45 Use, ... lending, _Ed_: _no commas_, _O'F_]
  • [46 spending; _Ed_: spending _O'F_]
  • [47 returning, _Ed_: returning _O'F_]
  • [48 consumes, _Ed_: consumes _O'F_]
  • _Elegy. To Chast Love._
  • Chast Love, let mee embrace thee in mine armes
  • Without the thought of lust. From thence no harmes
  • Ensue, no discontent attende those deeds
  • So innocently good w^{ch} thy love breeds.
  • Th'approche of day brings to thy sence no feares, 5
  • Nor is the black nights worke washd in thy teares;
  • Thou takst no care to keepe thy lover true,
  • Nor yet by flighte, nor fond inventions new
  • To hold him in, who with like flame of love
  • Must move his spirit too, as thine doth move; 10
  • w^{ch} ever mounts aloft with golden wings
  • And not declines to lowe despised things.
  • Thy soule is bodyd within thy quiet brest
  • In safety, free from trouble and unrest.
  • Thou fearst no ill because thou dost no ill, 15
  • Like mistress of thy selfe, thy thought, and will,
  • Obey thy mind, a mind for ever such
  • As all may prayse, but none admire too much.
  • Then come, Chast Love, choyse part of womankind
  • Infuse chast thoughts into my loving mind. 20
  • [Elegy. To Chast Love. _O'F_]
  • [5 feares, _Ed_: feares _O'F_]
  • [6 teares; _Ed_: teares _O'F_]
  • [7 true, _Ed_: true _O'F_]
  • [9 in, _Ed_: in _O'F_]
  • [10 move; _Ed_: move _O'F_]
  • [15 ill, _Ed_: ill _O'F_]
  • [16 will, _Ed_: will _O'F_]
  • _Upon his scornefull Mistresse. Elegy._
  • Cruell since that thou dost not feare the curse
  • W^{ch} thy disdayne, and my despayre procure,
  • My prayer for thee shall torment thee worse
  • Then all the payne thou coudst thereby endure.
  • May, then, that beauty w^{ch} I did conceave 5
  • In thee above the height of heavens course,
  • When first my Liberty thou didst bereave,
  • Bee doubled on thee and with doubled force.
  • Chayne thousand vassalls in like thrall with mee,
  • W^{ch} in thy glory mayst thou still despise, 10
  • As the poore Trophyes of that victory
  • Which thou hast onely purchasd by thine eyes;
  • And when thy Triumphs so extended are
  • That there is nought left to bee conquered,
  • Mayst thou with the great Monarchs mournfull care 15
  • Weepe that thine Hono^{rs} are so limited;
  • So thy disdayne may melt it selfe to love
  • By an unlookd for and a wondrous change,
  • W^{ch} to thy selfe above the rest must prove
  • In all th'effects of love paynefully strange, 20
  • While wee thy scorned subjects live to see
  • Thee love the whole world, none of it love thee.
  • [Upon his scornefull Mistresse. _O'F_: _no title_, _B_, _which
  • adds note_, This hath relation to 'When by thy scorne'. _See_
  • The Apparition, _p._ 191]
  • [2 despayre _B_: disdayne _O'F_
  • procure, _Ed_: procure _O'F_]
  • [6 course, _Ed_: course _O'F_]
  • [7 bereave, _Ed_: bereave _O'F_]
  • [8 force. _Ed_: force _O'F_]
  • [9 Chayne _B_: Stay _O'F_ mee, _Ed_: mee _O'F_]
  • [10 despise, _Ed_: despise _O'F_]
  • [12 eyes; _Ed_: eyes _O'F_]
  • [14 conquered, _Ed_: conquered _O'F_]
  • [16 limited; _Ed_: limited _O'F_]
  • [18 change, _Ed_: change _O'F_]
  • [20 strange, _Ed_: strange _O'F_]
  • <_Absence._>
  • Wonder of Beautie, Goddesse of my sense,
  • You that have taught my soule to love aright,
  • You in whose limbes are natures chief expense
  • Fitt instrument to serve your matchless spright,
  • If ever you have felt the miserie 5
  • Of being banish'd from your best desier,
  • By Absence, Time, or Fortunes tyranny,
  • Sterving for cold, and yet denied for fier:
  • Deare mistresse pittie then the like effects
  • The which in mee your absence makes to flowe, 10
  • And haste their ebb by your divine aspect
  • In which the pleasure of my life doth growe:
  • Stay not so long for though it seem a wonder
  • You keepe my bodie and my soule asunder.
  • FINIS.
  • <_Tongue-tied Love._>
  • Faire eies do not think scorne to read of Love
  • That to your eies durst never it presume,
  • Since absence those sweet wonders do remove
  • That nourish thoughts, yet sence and wordes consume;
  • This makes my pen more hardy then my tongue, 5
  • Free from my feare yet feeling my desire,
  • To utter that I have conceal'd so long
  • By doing what you did yourself require.
  • Believe not him whom Love hath left so wise
  • As to have power his owne tale for to tell, 10
  • For childrens greefes do yield the loudest cries,
  • And cold desires may be expressed well:
  • In well told Love most often falsehood lies,
  • But pittie him that only sighes and dies.
  • FINIS.
  • [ Love.> _Ed_: _whole sonnets without
  • titles in_ _L74_: _the last six lines of the second appear
  • among Donne's poems in_ _B_, _O'F_, _S96_ Love.>]
  • [12 cold desires] coldest Ayres _O'F_]
  • <_Love, if a God thou art._>
  • Love if a god thou art
  • then evermore thou must
  • Bee mercifull and just;
  • If thou bee just, ô wherefore doth thy dart
  • Wound mine alone and not my mistresse hart? 5
  • If mercifull, then why
  • Am I to payne reservd
  • Who have thee truely serv'd,
  • When shee that by thy powre sets not a fly
  • Laughs thee to scorne and lives at liberty? 10
  • Then if a God thou woulds accounted bee,
  • Heale mee like her, or else wound her like mee.
  • <_Great Lord of Love._>
  • Greate Lord of love, how busy still thou art
  • To give new wounds and fetters to my hart!
  • Is't not enough that thou didst twice before
  • It so mangle
  • And intangle 5
  • By sly arts
  • of false harts.
  • Forbeare mee, Ile make love no more.
  • Fy busy Lord, will it not thee suffice
  • To use the Rhetorique of her tongue and eyes 10
  • When I am waking, but that absent so
  • They invade mee
  • To perswade mee,
  • When that sleepe
  • Oft should keepe 15
  • And lock out every sence of woe.
  • If thou perswade mee thus to speake, I dye
  • And shee the murdresse, for me will deny;
  • And if for silence I bee prest, Her good
  • Yet I cherish 20
  • Though I perish,
  • For that shee
  • Shall bee free
  • From that foule guilt of spilling bloud.
  • [ if a God thou art.> Lord of Love.>
  • Exchange.> _all without titles in_ _O'F_: _punctuation mainly
  • the Editor's_]
  • <_Loves Exchange_>
  • 1. To sue for all thy Love, and thy whole hart
  • were madnesse.
  • I doe not sue, nor can admitt,
  • (Fayrest) from yo^u to have all yet;
  • Who giveth all, hath nothing to impart 5
  • But sadnesse.
  • 2. Hee who receaveth all can have no more,
  • Then seeing.
  • My love by length of every howre
  • Gathers new strength, new growth, new power: 10
  • You must have dayly new rewards in store
  • Still beeing.
  • 3. You cannot every day give mee yo^r hart
  • For merit;
  • Yet if you will, when yours doth goe 15
  • You shall have still one to bestow,
  • For you shall mine, when yours doth part,
  • Inherit.
  • 4. Yet if you please weele find a better way
  • Then change them, 20
  • For so alone (dearest) wee shall
  • Bee one and one another all;
  • Let us so joyne our harts, that nothing may
  • Estrange them.
  • _Song._
  • Now y'have killd mee with yo^{r} scorne
  • Who shall live to call yo^{u} fayre?
  • What new foole must now bee borne
  • To prepare
  • Dayly sacrifice of service new, 5
  • Teares too good for woemen true?
  • Who shall sorrow when yo^{u} crye
  • And to please yo^{u} dayly dye?
  • Men succeeding shall beware
  • And woemen cruell, no more fayre. 10
  • 2.
  • Now y'have killd mee, never looke
  • Any left to call yo^{u} trewe;
  • Who more madd must now bee tooke
  • To renewe
  • My oblations dayly, lost? 15
  • Vowes too good for woemen chast!
  • Who shall call yo^{u} sweete, and sweare
  • T'is yo^{r} face renews the yeare?
  • Men by my Death shall beleeve,
  • And woemen cruell yet shall greeve. 20
  • [Song. _O'F_: _punctuation mainly Editor's_]
  • _Love, bred of glances._
  • Love bred of Glances twixt amorous eyes
  • Like Childrens fancies, sone borne, sone dyes.
  • Guilte, Bitternes, and smilinge woe
  • Doth ofte deceaue poore lovers soe,
  • As the fonde Sence th'unwary soule deceives 5
  • With deadly poison wrapt in Lily leaves.
  • But harts so chain'd as Goodnes stands
  • With truthe unstain'd to couple hands,
  • Love beinge to all beauty blinde
  • Save the cleere beauties of the minde, 10
  • There heaven is pleasd, continuall blessings sheddinge,
  • Angells are guests and dance at this blest weddinge.
  • [Love _&c._ Love.> _Chambers_, _who prints from RP117_:
  • _no title_, _O'F_, _P_, _S96_ (_from which present text is
  • taken_)]
  • [2 borne _B_, _P_, _O'F_, _S96_: bred _Chambers_]
  • [4 Doth _S96_: does _B_, _O'F_: doe _P_]
  • [5 As] And _Chambers_]
  • [7 as Goodnes] 'tis goodnes _Chambers_]
  • [8 hands, _Ed_: hands _S96_]
  • [10 minde, _B_: minde _S96_]
  • [11 There heav'n is _O'F_, _P_, _S96_: Where Reason is
  • _Chambers_
  • sheddinge, _Ed_: sheddinge _S96_]
  • [12 this] his _Chambers_]
  • _To a Watch restored to its Mystres._
  • Goe and Count her better howers.
  • For they are happier than oures.
  • The day that gives her any bliss,
  • Make it as long againe as 'tis.
  • The hower shee smyles in, lett it bee 5
  • By thy acte multiplyde to three.
  • But if shee frowne on thee or mee,
  • Know night is made by her, not thee;
  • Be swifte in such an hower & soone,
  • See thou make night, ere it be noone. 10
  • Obey her tymes, whoe is the free
  • Faire Sunne that governes thee & mee.
  • [To a Watch _&c._ _B_, _where note below title says_ none of
  • J. D. _and poem is signed_ W. L.]
  • <_Ad Solem._>
  • Wherfore peepst thou, envious daye?
  • We can kisse without thee.
  • Lovers hate the golden raye,
  • Which thou bearst about thee.
  • Goe and give them light that sorowe 5
  • Or the saylor flyinge:
  • Our imbraces need noe morowe
  • Nor our blisses eying.
  • We shall curse thy curyous eye
  • For thy soone betrayinge, 10
  • And condemn thee for a spye
  • Yf thou catch us playinge.
  • Gett thee gone and lend thy flashes
  • Where there's need of lendinge,
  • Our affections are not ashes 15
  • Nor our pleasures endinge.
  • Weare we cold or withered heare
  • We would stay thee by us,
  • Or but one anothers feare
  • Then thou shouldst not flye us. 20
  • Wee are yongue, thou spoilst our pleasure;
  • Goe to sea and slumber,
  • Darknes only gives us leasure
  • Our stolne joyes to number.
  • [ Solem.> _Ed_: _no title_, _Add. MSS._ _22603_, _33998_,
  • _Egerton MS. 2013_, _Harleian MS. 791_, _S_, _TCD(II)_:
  • _printed J. Wilson_: Cheerful Ayres (1659), _Grosart and
  • Chambers_: _text from Eg. MS. 2013_: _punctuation partly
  • Editor's_]
  • [2 kisse] live _E20_]
  • [9 curyous _A22_, _A33_, _H79_, _S_, _TCD_: envious _E20_]
  • [19 one anothers feare _TCD_: one another fear _E20_: one
  • anothers sphere _A22_, _A33_, _S_]
  • [23 gives] lends _A22_, _A33_]
  • <_If She Deride._>
  • Greate and goode if she deryde mee
  • Let me walke Ile not despayre,
  • Ere to morrowe Ile provide mee
  • One as greate, lesse prowd, more faire.
  • They that seeke Love to constraine 5
  • Have theire labour for their paine.
  • They that strongly can importune
  • And will never yeild nor tyre,
  • Gaine the paye in spight of Fortune
  • But such game Ile not desyre. 10
  • Where the prize is shame or synn,
  • Wynners loose and loosers wynn.
  • Looke upon the faythfull lover,
  • Griefe stands paynted in his face,
  • Groanes, and Teares and sighs discover 15
  • That they are his onely grace:
  • Hee must weepe as children doe
  • That will in the fashion wooe.
  • I whoe flie these idle fancies
  • Which my dearest rest betraye, 20
  • Warnd by others harmfull chances,
  • Vse my freedome as I may.
  • When all the worlde says what it cann
  • 'Tis but--Fie, vnconstant mann!
  • [ She Deryde.> _Chambers_: _no title_, _S_: _also, Chambers
  • reports, in C.C.C. Oxon. MS. 327, f. 26: printed by Grosart
  • and Chambers_]
  • [11 Where the prize is _Chambers_: Where they prize this
  • (_'t' struck out_) _S_: Where they prize is _Grosart_]
  • [14 Teares and sighs] _Chambers reverses_]
  • <_Fortune Never Fails._>
  • What if I come to my mistris bedd
  • The candles all ecclipst from shyninge,
  • Shall I then attempt for her mayden-head
  • Or showe my selfe a coward by declyninge?
  • Oh noe 5
  • Fie doe not soe,
  • For thus much I knowe by devyninge,
  • Blynd is Love
  • The dark it doth approve,
  • To pray on pleasures pantinge; 10
  • What needeth light
  • For Cupid in the night,
  • If jealous eyes be wantinge.
  • Fortune never failes, if she badd take place,
  • To shroude all the faire proceedings: 15
  • Love and she though blynd, yet each other embrace,
  • To favor all their servants meetings:
  • Venture I say
  • To sport and to play,
  • If in place all be fitting; 20
  • Though she say fie
  • Yet doth she not denie:
  • For fie is but a word of tryall:
  • Jealosie doth sleepe,
  • Then doe not weepe 25
  • At force of a faynt denyall.
  • Glorious is my love, with tryumphs in her face,
  • Then to to bould were I to venter:
  • Who loves deserves to live in a princes grace,
  • Why stand you then affraid to enter? 30
  • Lights are all out
  • Then make noe doubt
  • A lover bouldly maye take chusinge.
  • Bewtie is a baite
  • For a princely mate. 35
  • Fy, why stand you then a musinge?
  • You'll repent too late
  • If she doe you hate,
  • For loves delight refusinge.
  • [ Never Fails.> _Grosart_: _no title_, _RP31_, _S_:
  • _also, Chambers reports, in C.C.C. Oxon. MS. 327, f. 21:
  • printed Grosart and Chambers, and, last two verses only,
  • Simeon_]
  • [10 pantinge;] hauntinge: _RP31_]
  • [14 she badd _S_: she bidd _Grosart_: she bids _Chambers_: the
  • bould _RP31_]
  • [19 and to play _RP31_, _S_: and play _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [26 faynt] fair _Chambers_]
  • [28 were] was _RP31_]
  • [29 princes] Princess _Chambers_]
  • [33 lover] woer _Chambers_
  • chusinge] a choosing _Chambers_]
  • _To His Mistress._
  • 1. Beleeve yo^r Glasse, and if it tell you (Deare)
  • Yo^r Eyes inshrine
  • A brighter shine
  • Then faire Apollo, looke if theere appeare
  • The milkie skye 5
  • The Crimson dye
  • Mixt in your cheeks, and then bid Phoebus sett,
  • More Glory then hee owes appears. But yet
  • 2. Be not deceived with fond Alteration
  • . . . . . 10
  • . . . . .
  • . . . . . . . .
  • As Cynthias Globe,
  • A snow white robe
  • Is soonest spotled, a Carnation dye 15
  • Fades, and discolours open'd but to Eie.
  • 3. Make use of youth, and bewty whilest they flourish:
  • Tyme never sleepes,
  • Though it but creeps
  • It still gets forward. Do not vainly nourish 20
  • Them to selfe-use,
  • It is Abuse;
  • The richest Grownds lying wast turne Boggs and rott,
  • And soe beinge useles, were as good were not.
  • 4. Walke in a meddowe by a Rivers side, 25
  • Upon whose Bancks
  • Grow milk-white Ranks
  • Of full blown Lyllies in their height of Pryde,
  • Which downward bend
  • And nothing tend 30
  • Save their owne Bewties in the Glassie streame:
  • Looke to yo^r selfe: Compare yo^{r}selfe to them.
  • 5. In show, in bewtie, marke what followes then:
  • Sommer must end,
  • The sunn must bend 35
  • His Longe Absented beames to others: then
  • Their spring being crost
  • By wynters frost
  • And sneap'd by bytter storms against w^{ch} nought boots,
  • They bend their prowd topps lower then their roots. 40
  • 6. Then none regard them; but w^{th} heedles feet
  • In durt each treads
  • Their declyned heads.
  • So when youthe wasted, Age, and yo^u shall meet,
  • Then I alone
  • Shall sadly moane 45
  • That Interviewe; others it will not move,
  • So light regard we, what we little Love.
  • FINIS.
  • [To His Mistress. _Le Prince D'Amour_ (_1660_): _no title_,
  • _S_ (_whence text_): _printed by Simeon_, _Grosart_,
  • _Chambers_: _punctuation partly Editor's_]
  • [1 if it tell] it will tell _Chambers_]
  • [9 deceived] deceiv'd _S_]
  • [16 open'd] opened _S_]
  • [24 were not] as not _LeP D' A_]
  • [31 the Glassie _S_: a Glassie _LePD'A_: their Glassie
  • _Chambers_]
  • [32 to them. _S_: with them. _Chambers_]
  • [36 then] when _Chambers_]
  • [39 sneap'd _Ed_: snep'd _S_: swept _LePD'A_: snipped
  • _Chambers_]
  • _A Paradoxe of a Painted Face._
  • Not kisse? By Jove I must, and make impression
  • As longe as Cupid dares to holde his Session
  • Vpon my flesh and blood: our kisses shall
  • Outminute Time and without number fall.
  • Doe I not know these Balls of blushinge Red 5
  • That on thy Cheekes thus amorouslie are spred?
  • Thy snowy necke, those veynes upon thy Browe
  • Which with their azure crincklinge sweetly bowe
  • Are artificiall? Borrowed? and no more thine owne
  • Then Chaines which on St. George's Day are showne, 10
  • Are proper to the wearers? Yet for this
  • I idole thee, and beg a luscious kisse.
  • The fucus, and Ceruse, which on thy face
  • Thy Cunninge hand layes on to add new Grace,
  • Detaine me with such pleasing fraude, that I 15
  • Finde in thy art, what can in nature Lie.
  • Much like a painter that upon some Wall
  • On which the radiant Sun-beames use to fall
  • Paints with such art a Gilded butterflye
  • That silly maides with slowe-moved fingers trye 20
  • To Catch it, and then blush at theire mistake,
  • Yet of this painted flye most reckonynge make:
  • Such is our state; since what we looke upon
  • Is nought but Coullor and Proportion.
  • Take me a face, as full of fraud and Lies 25
  • As Gypsies in your cunninge Lotteries,
  • That is more false, and more Sophisticate
  • Than are Saints reliques, or a man of state.
  • Yet such being Glazed by the sleight of arte,
  • Gaines admiration, winninge many a Harte. 30
  • Put case there be a difference in the molde,
  • Yet may thy Venus be more Chaste, and holde
  • A dearer treasure: oftentimes we see
  • Rich Candian wines in woodden Boules to bee.
  • The odoriferous Civet doth not lie 35
  • Within the muskat's nose, or eare, or eye,
  • But in a baser place; for prudent nature
  • In drawinge us of various formes and stature
  • Gives from the curious shop of hir rich treasure
  • To faire parts comeliness, to baser, pleasure. 40
  • The fairest flowers, which in the Springe doe growe
  • Are not so much for use, as for the showe,
  • As Lillies, Hyacinths, and the georgious birthe
  • Of all pide flowers that diaper the earthe,
  • Please more with their discoloured purple traine 45
  • Then wholesome pothearbs which for use remaine.
  • Shall I a Gaudy Speckled Serpent kiss
  • For that the colours which he weares are his?
  • A perfumed Cordevant who will not wear
  • Because the sente is borrowed elsewhere? 50
  • The roabes and vestiments, which grace us all
  • Are not our owne, but adventitiall.
  • Time rifles Natures beauty, but slye Arte
  • Repaires by cunninge this decayinge parte.
  • Fills here a wrinckle, and there purles a veyne, 55
  • And with a nimble hand runs o're againe
  • The breaches dented in by th'arme of time,
  • And makes Deformity to be no crime.
  • As when great men be grip't by sicknes hand,
  • Industrious Physicke pregnantly doth stand 60
  • To patch up foule diseases, and doth strive
  • To keepe theire totteringe Carcasses alive.
  • Beautie is a candlelight which every puffe
  • Blowes out, and leaves nought but a stinking snuffe
  • To fill our nostrills with; this boldelie thinke, 65
  • The cleerest Candle makes the greatest stincke,
  • As your pure fode and cleerest nutryment
  • Gets the most hott, and nose stronge excrement.
  • Why hange we then on thinges so apt to varie,
  • So fleetinge, brittle, and so temporarie? 70
  • That agues, Coughes, the toothache, or Catarr
  • (Slight hansells of diseases) spoile and marr.
  • But when olde age theire beauties hath in Chace,
  • And plowes up furrowes in theire once-smoothe face,
  • Then they become forsaken, and doe showe 75
  • Like stately abbeyes ruin'd longe agoe.
  • Nature but gives the modell, and first draught
  • Of faire perfection, which by art is taught
  • To speake itselfe, a compleat form and birthe,
  • Soe stands a Copie to these shapes on earthe. 80
  • Jove grante me then a reparable face
  • Which, whiles that Colours are, can want no grace.
  • Pigmalions painted statue I coulde love,
  • Soe it were warme and softe, and coulde but move.
  • [A Paradoxe of a Painted Face. _H39_, _S_, _S96_, _TCD_ (_II_)
  • _Pembroke and Ruddier_ (_1660_), _Le Prince D'Amour_ (_1660_),
  • _Simeon_ (_1856-7_), _Grosart_ (_from S_), _Chambers_ (_from
  • Simeon_, _and Pembroke and Ruddier_): _text from S96_:
  • _punctuation partly Editor's_]
  • [8 azure crincklinge _S96_: azure winckles _P and R_: azure
  • twinklinge _S_: azur'd wrinklings _TCD_: azure wrinkles
  • _Chambers_]
  • [15 Detaine] Deceive _H39_, _P and R_, _LeP D' A_, _TCD_,
  • _Chambers_
  • pleasing] cunning _TCD_]
  • [18 radiant _S96_: cadent _H39_, _TCD_, _LeP D' A_, _Grosart_,
  • _and Chambers_: splendent _P and R_]
  • [21 then] yet _S96_]
  • [32 Chaste] choise _P and R_, _LeP D' A_, _TCD_]
  • [39 shop] shape _S96_
  • rich] largest _S96_: large _P and R_, _Grosart_, _and
  • Chambers_]
  • [45 discoloured] discovered _H39_: _but_ discoloured _is here_
  • variegated]
  • [53 rifles] rifled _S96_]
  • [55 purles] fills _S_: purls _is_ embroiders as with gold or
  • silver thread]
  • [67 clearest] choicest _P and R_: cleanest _S_: finest
  • _Chambers_]
  • [68 most hott] most stronge _S96_]
  • [72 hansells _H39_: houses _S_, _S96_, _Chambers_: touches _P
  • and R_: causes _LeP D' A_]
  • [73 beauties] brav'ries _H39_]
  • [79 To speake itselfe _TCD_, _P and R_: Speake to itselfe _S_,
  • _S96_: Speake for itselfe _H39_: To make itselfe _Simeon_,
  • _Grosart_, _and Chambers_]
  • _Sonnett._
  • Madam that flea that Crept between your brests
  • I envied, that there he should make his rest:
  • The little Creatures fortune was soe good
  • That Angells feed not on so pretious foode.
  • How it did sucke how eager tickle you 5
  • (Madam shall fleas before me tickle you?)
  • Oh I can not holde; pardon if I kild it.
  • Sweet Blood, to you I aske this, that which fild it
  • Ran from my Ladies Brest. Come happie flea
  • That dide for suckinge of that milkie Sea. 10
  • Oh now againe I well could wishe thee there,
  • About hir Hart, about hir anywhere;
  • I would vowe (Dearest flea) thou shouldst not dye,
  • If thou couldst sucke from hir hir crueltye.
  • [Sonnett. _O'F_, _S96_: _no title_, _S_: On A Flea on His
  • Mistress's Bosom _Simeon_, _Grosart_, _Chambers_ (_from
  • Simeon_): _text from S96_]
  • [7 I can not holde] I not hold can _Chambers_
  • kild _Ed_: killed _Chambers_: kill _S96_]
  • [13 vowe ] now _Chambers_
  • Dearest _S96_: deare _S_, _O'F_, _Chambers_
  • thou] that thou _Chambers_]
  • _On Black Hayre and Eyes._
  • If shaddowes be the pictures excellence;
  • And make it seeme more lively to the sence;
  • If starres in the bright day are hid from sight
  • And shine most glorious in the masque of night;
  • Why should you thinke (rare creature) that you lack 5
  • Perfection cause your haire and eyes are blacke,
  • Or that your heavenly beauty which exceedes
  • The new sprung lillies in their mayden weeds,
  • The damaske coullour of your cheekes and lipps
  • Should suffer by their darknesse an eclipps? 10
  • Rich diamonds shine brightest, being sett
  • And compassed within a foyle of Jett.
  • Nor was it fitt that Nature should have mayde
  • So bright a sunne to shine without a shade.
  • It seemes that Nature when she first did fancie 15
  • Your rare composure studied Necromancie,
  • That when to you this guift she did impart
  • She used altogether the black art.
  • By which infused power from Magique tooke
  • You doe command all spiritts with a looke: 20
  • Shee drew those Magique circles in your eyes,
  • And mayde your hayre the chaines wherewith shee ties
  • Rebelling hearts: those blew veines which appeare,
  • Winding Meander about either spheare,
  • Misterious figures are, and when you list 25
  • Your voice commandeth like the Exorcist,
  • And every word which from your Pallett falleth
  • In a deep charme your hearer's heart inthralleth.
  • Oh! If in Magique you have skill so farre,
  • Vouchsafe me to be your familiar. 30
  • Nor hath kind Nature her black art reveal'd
  • To outward partes alone, some lie conceal'd,
  • And as by heads of springs men often knowe
  • The nature of the streames that run belowe,
  • So your black haire and eyes do give direction 35
  • To make me thinke the rest of like complexion:
  • That rest where all rest lies that blesseth Man,
  • That Indian mine, that straight of Magellan,
  • That worlde dividing gulfe where he that venters,
  • With swelling sayles and ravisht senses enters 40
  • To a new world of blisse. Pardon, I pray,
  • If my rude muse presumeth to display
  • Secretts unknowne, or hath her bounds orepast
  • In praysing sweetnesse which I ne're did tast;
  • Sterved men doe know there's meate, and blind men may 45
  • Though hid from light presume there is a day.
  • The rover in the marke his arrowe sticks
  • Sometimes as well as he that shootes att prickes,
  • And if I might direct my shaft aright,
  • The black mark would I hitt and not the white. 50
  • [On Black Hayre and Eyes _Add. MS. 11811, on which text is
  • based: in several MSS. including A25, TCD (II), L77: printed
  • in Parnassus Biceps (1656), Pembroke and Ruddier's Poems
  • (1660), Simeon (1856-7), Grosart, and Chambers_]
  • [2 it _A2I_, _H60_, _TCD_: them _A11_: things _L77_]
  • [4 shine _H39_, _TCD_: seem _A11_, _Grosart_, _and Chambers_]
  • [8 mayden weeds,] maidenheads, _H39_, _TCD_, _Grosart_, _and
  • Chambers_]
  • [9 The damasque coullor of] That cherry colour of _H39_,
  • _TCD_: Or that the cherries of _Some MSS._]
  • [12 compassed ] compos'd _A11_
  • foyle] field _Chambers_]
  • [19 tooke] book _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [20 all spiritts] like spirits _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [25 figures] fables _A11_]
  • [26 commandeth] commands _A11_]
  • [29 you have skill _L77_, _TCD_, _&c._: your power _A11_: you
  • have power _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [33 For (And) as by the springhead a man may (men often) know
  • _L77_, _TCD_, _and other MSS._]
  • [34 streame ... runs _L77_, _&c._]
  • [44 did] shall _TCD and other MSS._]
  • [47 sticks] strikes _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [49 direct _L77_, _TCD_, _&c._: ayme _A11_, _Grosart_, _and
  • Chambers_]
  • _Fragment of an Elegy._
  • And though thy glasse a burning one become
  • And turne us both to ashes on her urne,
  • Yet to our glory till the later day
  • Our dust shall daunce like attomes in her ray.
  • And when the world shall in confusion burne, 5
  • And Kinges and peasantes scramble at an urne,
  • Like tapers new blowne out wee happy then
  • Will at her beames catch fire and live againe.
  • But this is sence, and some one may-be glad
  • That I so good a cause of sorrow had, 10
  • Will with all those whome I affect may dye
  • So I might please him with an elegie.
  • O let there never line of witt be read
  • To please the living that doth speake thee dead;
  • Some tender-harted mother good and mild, 15
  • Who on the deare grave of her tender child
  • So many sad teares hath beene knowne to rayne
  • As out of dust would mould him up againe,
  • And with hir plaintes enforce the wormes to place
  • Themselves like veynes so neatly on his face, 20
  • And every lymne, as if that they wer striving
  • To flatter hir with hope of his reviving:
  • Shee should read this, and hir true teares alone
  • Should coppy forth these sad lines on the stone
  • Which hides thee dead, and every gentle hart 25
  • That passeth by should of his teares impart
  • So great a portion, that if after times
  • Ruine more churches for the Clergyes crimes,
  • When any shall remove thy marble hence,
  • Which is lesse stone then hee that takes it thence, 30
  • Thou shalt appeare within thy tearefull cell
  • Much like a faire nymph bathing in a well.
  • But when they find thee dead so lovely fair,
  • Pitty and sorrow then shall straight repaire
  • And weepe beside thy grave with cipresse cround, 35
  • To see the secound world of beauty dround,
  • And add sufficient teares as they condole
  • 'Twould make thy body swimme up to thy soule.
  • Such eyes should read the lines are writ of thee;
  • But such a losse should have no elegie 40
  • To palliate the wound wee tooke in hir,
  • Who rightly greeves admittes no comforter.
  • He that had tane to heart thy parting hence
  • Should have beene chain'd to Bedlam two houres thence,
  • And not a frind of his ere shed a teare 45
  • To see him for thy sake distracted there,
  • But hugge himselfe for loving such as hee
  • That could runne mad with greefe for loosing thee.
  • I, haplesse soule, that never knew a frend
  • But to bewayle his too untimely end, 50
  • Whose hopes (cropt in the bud) have never come
  • But to sitt weeping on a sencelesse tombe,
  • That hides not dust enough to count the teares
  • Which I have fruitlesse spent in so few yeares,
  • I that have trusted those that would have given 55
  • For our deare Saviour and the Sonne of heaven
  • Ten times the valew Judas had of yore,
  • Onely to sell him for three peeces more;
  • I that have lov'd and trusted thus in vaine
  • Yet weepe for thee, and till the clowdes shall daigne 60
  • To throw on Egipt more then Nile ere sweld,
  • These teares of mine shalbee unparellell'd.
  • He that hath lov'd, enjoy'd, and then beene crost,
  • Hath teares at will to mourne for what he lost;
  • He that hath trusted and his hope appeares 65
  • Wrong'd but by death may soone dissolve in teares;
  • But hee unhappy man whose love and trust
  • Nere met fruition nor a promise just,
  • For him (unlesse like thee hee deadly slepe)
  • 'Tis easier to runn mad then 'tis to weepe; 70
  • And yet I can. Fall then yee mournefull showers,
  • And as old time leades on the winged howers,
  • Bee you their minutes, and let men forgett
  • To count their ages from the plague of sweat,
  • From eighty eight, the Poulder-plot, or when 75
  • Men were affrayd to talke of it againe;
  • And in their numerations be it sayd
  • Thus old was I when such a teare was shed,
  • And when that other fell a comett rose
  • And all the world tooke notice of my woes. 80
  • Yet finding them past cure, as doctores fly
  • Their patientes past all hope of remedy,
  • No charitable soule will once impart
  • One word of comfort to so sicke a heart;
  • But as a hurt deare beaten from the heard, 85
  • Men of my shadow allmost now affeard
  • Fly from my woes, that whilome wont to greet mee,
  • And well nigh thinke it ominous to meete mee.
  • Sad lines go yee abroad; go saddest muse,
  • And as some nations formerly did use 90
  • To lay their sicke men in the street, that those,
  • Who of the same disease had scapt the throwes,
  • Might minister releefe as they went by
  • To such as felt the selfsame malady,
  • So haplesse lynes fly through the fairest land, 95
  • And if ye light into some blessed hand,
  • That hath a heart as merry as the shine
  • Of golden dayes, yet wrong'd as much as mine,
  • Pitty may lead that happy man to mee,
  • And his experience worke a remedy 100
  • To those sad fittes which (spight of nature's lawes)
  • Torture a poore hart that out-lives the cause.
  • But this must never bee, nor is it fitt
  • An ague or some sickenes lesse then itt
  • Should glory in the death of such as hee, 105
  • That had a heart of flesh and valued thee.
  • Brave Roman, I admire thee that would'st dy
  • At no lesse rate then for an empery.
  • Some massy diamond from the center drawne,
  • For which all Europ wer an equall pawne, 110
  • Should (beaten into dust) bee drunke by him
  • That wanted courage good enough to swimme
  • Through seas of woes for thee, and much despise
  • To meet with death at any lower prize,
  • Whilst greefe alone workes that effect in mee, 115
  • And yet no greefe but for the losse of thee.
  • Fortune now doe thy worst, for I have gott
  • By this her death so strong an antidote,
  • That all thy future crosses shall not have
  • More then an angry smile, nor shall the grave 120
  • Glory in my last day: these lines shall give
  • To us a second life, and we will live
  • To pull the distaffe from the hand of fate;
  • And spinn our own thrides for so long a date,
  • That death shall never seize uppon our fame 125
  • Till this shall perish in the whole world's frame.
  • [Fragment of an Elegy. _From_ _P_, _where it appears as
  • portion of an 'heroical epistle' from Lady Penelope Rich to
  • Sir Philip Sidney_: _punctuation Ed._]
  • <_Farewel, ye guilded follies._>
  • Farewel ye guilded follies, pleasing troubles,
  • Farewel ye honour'd rags, ye glorious bubbles;
  • Fame's but a hollow echo, gold pure clay,
  • Honour the darling but of one short day.
  • Beauty (th'eyes idol) but a damasked skin, 5
  • State but a golden prison, to keepe in
  • And torture free-born minds; imbroidered trains
  • Meerly but Pageants, proudly swelling vains,
  • And blood ally'd to greatness, is a loane
  • Inherited, not purchased, not our own. 10
  • Fame, honor, beauty, state, train, blood and birth,
  • Are but the fading blossomes of the earth.
  • I would be great, but that the Sun doth still
  • Level his rayes against the rising hill:
  • I would be high, but see the proudest Oak 15
  • Most subject to the rending Thunder-stroke;
  • I would be rich, but see men too unkind
  • Dig in the bowels of the richest mine;
  • I would be wise, but that I often see
  • The Fox suspected whilst the Ass goes free; 20
  • I would be fair, but see the fair and proud
  • Like the bright sun, oft setting in a cloud;
  • I would be poor, but know the humble grass
  • Still trampled on by each unworthy Asse:
  • Rich, hated; wise, suspected; scorn'd, if poor; 25
  • Great, fear'd; fair, tempted; high, stil envied more:
  • I have wish'd all, but now I wish for neither,
  • Great, high, rich, wise, nor fair, poor I'l be rather.
  • Would the world now adopt me for her heir,
  • Would beauties Queen entitle me the Fair, 30
  • Fame speak me fortune's Minion, could I vie
  • Angels with India, with a speaking eye
  • Command bare heads, bow'd knees, strike Justice dumb
  • As wel as blind and lame, or give a tongue
  • To stones, by Epitaphs, be called great Master 35
  • In the loose rhimes of every Poetaster;
  • Could I be more then any man that lives,
  • Great, fair, rich, wise in all Superlatives;
  • Yet I more freely would these gifts resign
  • Then ever fortune would have made them mine, 40
  • And hold one minute of this holy leasure,
  • Beyond the riches of this empty pleasure.
  • Welcom pure thoughts, welcom ye silent groves,
  • These guests, these Courts, my soul most dearly loves,
  • Now the wing'd people of the Skie shall sing 45
  • My cheerful Anthems to the gladsome Spring;
  • A Pray'r book now shall be my looking-glasse,
  • Wherein I will adore sweet vertues face.
  • Here dwell no hateful looks, no Pallace cares,
  • No broken vows dwell here, nor pale-faced fears, 50
  • Then here I'l sit and sigh my hot loves folly,
  • And learn t'affect an holy melancholy.
  • And if contentment be a stranger, then
  • I'l nere look for it, but in heaven again.
  • [, Ye Guilded Follies.> _Ed_: _variously titled, Add.
  • MS. 18220, C.C.C. Oxon. MS. 324, Egerton MS. 2603, Harleian
  • MS. 6057: printed in Walton's Compleat Angler (1653), Wits
  • Interpreter (1655) Hannah's Courtly Poets: Grosart prints
  • from MS. Dd. 643 in Cambridge University Library, and Chambers
  • follows--a very inferior version: text from Walton_]
  • [2 ye glorious] ye christal _A18_, _E26_, _H60_: the christall
  • _WI_]
  • [6 keepe _A18_, _E26_, _H60_: live _Walton_]
  • [8 proudly] proud _Walton_]
  • [9 a loane _Ed_: a lone _Walton_: but loane _MSS._]
  • [18 mine _E26_, _CCC_: mind _Walton_, _A182_, _H60_, _WI_:
  • minds _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [19-20
  • I would be wise but that the fox I see
  • Suspected guilty when the Ass goes free
  • _A182_, _E26_, _H60_, _Grosart_, _and Chambers_]
  • [21-2
  • I would be fair, but see that Champion proud
  • The bright sun often setting in a cloud
  • _WI and MSS._, _but with The worlds bright eye or fair
  • eye_]
  • [31-2
  • could I vie
  • Angels with India,
  • _Walton_, _A182_, _E26_, _H60_
  • could I joy
  • The blisse of angells, _CCC_
  • could I vie (vey _Grosart_)
  • The blisse of angells, _Grosart and Chambers_
  • ]
  • [43 ye silent groves, _Walton_: the silent Groves, _WI_: ye
  • careless groves, _H60_: the careless grove, _CCC_: ye careless
  • groans, _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [44 These are the courts my soul entire loves, _A182_: These
  • are my guests, this is the court I love, _CCC_: These are my
  • guests, this is that courtage tones, _Grosart and Chambers_:
  • the court age loves, _Ash 38_]
  • [46 My Anthem; be my Selah gentle Spring. _A182_: Mine
  • anthems; be my cellar, gentle spring. _Grosart and Chambers_]
  • [48 wherein] In which _Walton_]
  • [49-50
  • Here dwells no hartlesse Love, no palsey fears,
  • No short joys purchased with eternal tears.
  • _A182_, _H60_]
  • [51 hot loves _Walton_: hot youths _H60_: past years _A182_]
  • [53 be] prove _A182_]
  • * * * * *
  • INDEX OF FIRST LINES.
  • _The poems marked * are contained in Appendixes B and C of doubtful or
  • unauthentic poems. Those marked ± are poems to or on Donne._
  • PAGE
  • A Sheafe of Snakes used heretofore to be 399
  • *Absence heare my protestation 428
  • After those reverend papers, whose soule is 214
  • All haile sweet Poët, more full of more strong fire, 203
  • ±All is not well when such a one as I 374
  • All Kings, and all their favorites 24
  • Although thy hand and faith, and good workes too, 82
  • *And though thy glasse a burning one become 462
  • As due by many titles I resigne 322
  • As the sweet sweat of Roses in a Still 90
  • As virtuous men passe mildly away 49
  • At once, from hence, my lines and I depart, 206
  • At the round earths imagin'd corners, blow 325
  • Away thou fondling motley humorist, 145
  • Batter my heart, three person'd God; for, you 328
  • Before I sigh my last gaspe, let me breath, 56
  • *Beleeve yo^{r} Glasse, and if it tell you (Deare) 455
  • Beyond th'old Pillers many have travailed 76
  • Blasted with sighs, and surrounded with teares 28
  • Blest are your North parts, for all this long time 213
  • Both rob'd of aire, we both lye in one ground, 75
  • Busie old foole, unruly Sunne, 11
  • By childrens births, and death, I am become 75
  • *By Euphrates flowry side 424
  • By miracles exceeding power of man, 320
  • By our first strange and fatall interview, 111
  • ±Can we not force from widdowed Poetry, 378
  • *Chast Love, let mee embrace thee in mine armes 445
  • *Come, Fates; I feare you not. All whom I owe 407
  • Come live with mee, and bee my love, 46
  • Come, Madam, come, all rest my powers defie, 119
  • *Comend her? no. I dare not terme her fayre, 439
  • Compassion in the world againe is bred: 78
  • ±_Conquerar? ignavoque sequar tua funera planctu?_ 390
  • *Cruell since that thou dost not feare the curse 446
  • *Deare Love, continue nice and chaste, 412
  • Deare love, for nothing lesse then thee 37
  • Death be not proud, though some have called thee 326
  • *Death be not proud, thy hand gave not this blow, 422
  • Death I recant, and say, unsaid by mee 282
  • Deigne at my hands this crowne of prayer and praise, 318
  • ±_Donne_ dead? 'Tis here reported true, though I 386
  • ±Donne, _the delight of Phoebus, and each Muse_, 5
  • Eternall God, (for whom who ever dare 348
  • Even as lame things thirst their perfection, so 208
  • Faire eies do not think scorne to read of Love 447
  • Faire, great, and good, since seeing you, wee see 224
  • Faire soule, which wast, not onely, as all soules bee, 271
  • *Farewel ye guilded follies, pleasing troubles, 465
  • Father of Heaven, and him, by whom 338
  • Father, part of his double interest 329
  • Fond woman, which would'st have thy husband die, 79
  • For every houre that thou wilt spare mee now 13
  • For Godsake hold your tongue, and let me love 14
  • For the first twenty yeares, since yesterday, 69
  • *Fye, Fye you sonnes of Pallas what madd rage 435
  • God grant thee thine own wish, and grant thee mine, 400
  • Goe, and catche a falling starre, 8
  • *Goe and Count her better howres 451
  • Good wee must love, and must hate ill, 32
  • *Greate and goode if she deryde mee 452
  • *Greate Lord of love, how busy still thou art 448
  • Haile Bishop Valentine, whose day this is, 127
  • Harke newes, o envy, thou shalt heare descry'd 104
  • Hast thee harsh verse, as fast as thy lame measure 205
  • He is starke mad, who ever sayes, 48
  • He that cannot chuse but love, 73
  • ±Hee that would write an Epitaph for thee, 374
  • *He was the Word that spake it, 427
  • Her of your name, whose fair inheritance 317
  • ±_Heere lies Deane Donne_; Enough; Those words alone 388
  • Here's no more newes, then vertue,'I may as well 187
  • Here take my Picture; though I bid farewell, 86
  • Here where by All All Saints invoked are, 221
  • Honour is so sublime perfection, 218
  • How sits this citie, late most populous, 354
  • I am a little world made cunningly 324
  • I am two fooles, I know, 16
  • I am unable, yonder begger cries, 76
  • I can love both faire and browne, 12
  • ±I cannot blame those men, that knew thee well, 373
  • I fixe mine eye on thine, and there 45
  • I have done one braver thing 10
  • I'll tell thee now (deare Love) what thou shalt doe 29
  • I long to talke with some old lovers ghost, 54
  • I never stoop'd so low, as they 66
  • I scarce beleeve my love to be so pure 33
  • ±I see in his last preach'd, and printed Booke, 3
  • I sing no harme good sooth to any wight, 105
  • I sing the progresse of a deathlesse soule, 295
  • *I that y^{e} higher half of loues 440
  • I wonder by my troth, what thou, and I 7
  • If, as mine is, thy life a slumber be, 209
  • If faithfull soules be alike glorifi'd 325
  • *If great men wrong me, I will spare my selfe; 415
  • *If her disdaine least change in you can move, 430
  • If in his Studie he hath so much care 77
  • If poysonous mineralls, and if that tree, 326
  • *If shaddowes be the pictures excellence; 460
  • If yet I have not all thy love, 17
  • If you from spoyle of th'old worlds farthest end 76
  • Image of her whom I love, more then she, 95
  • Immensitie cloysterd in thy deare wombe, 319
  • *In that, ô Queene of Queenes, thy birth was free 427
  • ±_In thy Impression of_ Donnes _Poems rare_, 3
  • In what torn ship soever I embarke, 352
  • ±Is _Donne_, great _Donne_ deceas'd? then England say 376
  • Is not thy sacred hunger of science 212
  • Kinde pitty chokes my spleene; brave scorn forbids 154
  • Kindly I envy thy songs perfection 210
  • _Klockius_ so deeply hath sworne, ne'r more to come 77
  • Language thou art too narrow, and too weake 284
  • Let mans Soule be a Spheare, and then, in this, 336
  • Let me powre forth 38
  • Like Esops fellow-slaves, O _Mercury_, 78
  • Like one who'in her third widdowhood doth professe 185
  • Little think'st thou, poore flower, 59
  • ±Long since this taske of teares from you was due, 394
  • Looke to mee faith, and looke to my faith, God; 267
  • _Love_, any devill else but you, 34
  • *Love bred of Glances twixt amorous eyes 450
  • *Love if a god thou art, 448
  • ±_Lucy_, you brightnesse of our Spheare, who are, 6
  • Mad paper stay, and grudge not here to burne 216
  • *Madam that flea that Crept between your brests 459
  • Man is a lumpe, where all beasts kneaded bee, 193
  • Man is the World, and death th'Ocean, 279
  • Man to Gods image; _Eve_, to mans was made, 201
  • Marke but this flea, and marke in this, 40
  • Marry, and love thy _Flavia_, for, shee 80
  • *Men write that love and reason disagree, 406
  • Moyst with one drop of thy blood, my dry soule 321
  • Muse not that by thy mind thy body is led: 207
  • My Fortune and my choice this custome break, 292
  • *My love doth fly w^{th} wings of feare 437
  • My name engrav'd herein, 25
  • *Nature amaz'd sawe man without mans ayde 443
  • Natures lay Ideot, I taught thee to love, 89
  • No Lover saith, I love, nor any other 69
  • No _Spring_, nor _Summer_ Beauty hath such grace, 92
  • *Not Kisse? By Jove I must, and make impression 456
  • Not that in colour it was like thy haire, 96
  • Nothing could make me sooner to confesse 251
  • ±Now by one yeare, time and our frailtie have 392
  • Now thou hast lov'd me one whole day, 9
  • *Now y'have killd mee with yo^{r} scorne 450
  • *O eyes, what do you see? 438
  • *O frutefull garden, and yet never tilde, 434
  • O might those sighes and teares returne againe 323
  • O Thou which to search out the secret parts 211
  • *O what a blisse 441
  • Of that short Roll of friends writ in my heart 212
  • Oh do not die, for I shall hate 21
  • Oh, let mee not serve so, as those men serve 87
  • Oh my blacke Soule! now thou art summoned 323
  • Oh, to vex me, contraryes meet in one: 331
  • Oh to what height will love of greatnesse drive 172
  • Once, and but once found in thy company, 84
  • Our storme is past, and that storms tyrannous rage, 178
  • Out of a fired ship, which, by no way 75
  • _Parturiunt madido quae nixu praela, recepta_, 397
  • _Philo_, with twelve yeares study, hath beene griev'd 77
  • ±Poets attend, the Elegie I sing 380
  • Pregnant again with th'old twins Hope, and Feare, 206
  • _Qui prius assuetus Serpentum fasce Tabellas_ 398
  • _Quod arte ausus es hic tuâ, Poeta_, 398
  • _Quot_, _dos haec_, Linguists perfetti, _Disticha_ fairont, 174
  • Reason is our Soules left hand, Faith her right 189
  • Salute the last and everlasting day, 321
  • Salvation to all that will is nigh; 319
  • See Sir, how as the Suns hot Masculine flame 317
  • Send home my long strayd eyes to mee, 43
  • Send me some token, that my hope may live, 72
  • *Shall I goe force an Elegie? abuse 410
  • Shee'is dead; And all which die 64
  • Show me deare Christ, thy spouse, so bright and clear. 330
  • Since Christ embrac'd the Crosse it selfe, dare I 331
  • *Since ev'ry Tree beginns to blossome now 433
  • Since I am comming to that Holy roome, 368
  • Since she must go, and I must mourn, come Night, 100
  • Since she whom I lov'd hath payd her last debt 330
  • Sir, more then kisses, letters mingle Soules; 180
  • Sir; though (I thanke God for it) I do hate 149
  • *Sleep, next Society and true friendship, 401
  • Sleep sleep old Sun, thou canst not have repast 333
  • So, so breake off this last lamenting kisse, 68
  • Some man unworthy to be possessor 36
  • Some that have deeper digg'd loves Myne then I, 39
  • Sorrow, who to this house scarce knew the way: 287
  • *Soules joy, now I am gone, 429
  • Spit in my face you Jewes, and pierce my side, 327
  • Stand still, and I will read to thee 71
  • *Stay, O sweet, and do not rise, 432
  • Sweetest love, I do not goe, 18
  • Take heed of loving mee, 67
  • Tamely, fraile body,'abstaine to day; to day 334
  • *Tell her if she to hired servants shew 416
  • *Tell me who can when a player dies 443
  • That I might make your Cabinet my tombe, 291
  • *That unripe side of earth, that heavy clime 417
  • The heavens rejoyce in motion, why should I 113
  • *The State and mens affaires are the best playes 414
  • The Sun-beames in the East are spred, 141
  • ±This decent Urne a sad inscription weares, 389
  • This is my playes last scene, here heavens appoint 324
  • *This lyfe it is not life, it is a sight 437
  • This twilight of two yeares, not past nor next, 198
  • *Those drossy heads & irrepurged braynes 440
  • Thou art not so black, as my heart, 65
  • Thou art repriv'd old yeare, thou shalt not die, 135
  • Thou hast made me, And shall thy worke decay? 322
  • Thou in the fields walkst out thy supping howers, 78
  • Thou shalt not laugh in this leafe, Muse, nor they 168
  • Thou which art I, ('tis nothing to be soe) 175
  • Thou, whose diviner soule hath caus'd thee now 351
  • Though I be _dead_, and buried, yet I have 220
  • Thy father all from thee, by his last Will, 77
  • Thy flattering picture, _Phryne_, is like thee, 77
  • Thy friend, whom thy deserts to thee enchaine, 208
  • Thy sinnes and haires may no man equall call 77
  • Till I have peace with thee, warr other men, 122
  • 'Tis lost, to trust a Tombe with such a quest, 245
  • Tis the yeares midnight, and it is the dayes, 44
  • 'Tis true, 'tis day; what though it be? 23
  • *To sue for all thy Love, and thy whole hart 449
  • ±To have liv'd eminent, in a degree 371
  • T'have written then, when you writ, seem'd to mee 195
  • To make the doubt cleare, that no woman's true, 108
  • To what a combersome unwieldinesse 55
  • _Transiit in Sequanam Moenus; Victoris in aedes;_ 397
  • *True Love findes witt, but he whose witt doth move 412
  • Twice or thrice had I loved thee, 22
  • Two, by themselves, each other, love and feare 75
  • ±Two Soules move here, and mine (a third) must move 249
  • Vnder an undermin'd, and shot-bruis'd wall 76
  • Vnseasonable man, statue of ice, 131
  • Vpon this Primrose hill, 61
  • Vengeance will sit above our faults; but till 350
  • Well dy'd the World, that we might live to see 229
  • Well; I may now receive, and die; My sinne 158
  • Went you to conquer? and have so much lost 188
  • *What if I come to my mistris bedd 453
  • What if this present were the worlds last night? 328
  • *What is o^{r} life? a play of passion 441
  • When by thy scorne, O murdresse, I am dead, 47
  • *When fortune, love, and Tyme bad me be happie, 440
  • When I am dead, and Doctors know not why, 63
  • When I dyed last, and, Deare, I dye 20
  • When my grave is broke up againe 62
  • When that rich Soule which to her heaven is gone, 231
  • ±When thy _Loose_ raptures, _Donne_, shall meet with Those 372
  • Where is that holy fire, which Verse is said 124
  • Where, like a pillow on a bed, 51
  • *Wherefore peepst thou, envious daye? 451
  • Whether that soule which now comes up to you 288
  • Whilst yet to prove, 70
  • ±Who dares say thou art dead, when he doth see 384
  • Who ever comes to shroud me, do not harme 58
  • Who ever guesses, thinks, or dreames he knowes 41
  • Who ever loves, if he do not propose 116
  • Who makes the Past, a patterne for next yeare, 183
  • ±Who shall doubt, _Donne_, where I a _Poet_ bee, 6
  • ±Who shall presume to mourn thee, _Donne_, unlesse 382
  • Why are wee by all creatures waited on? 327
  • *Why chose shee black; was it that in whitenes 436
  • Why this man gelded _Martiall_ I muse, 78
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinne where I begunne, 369
  • Wilt thou forgive that sinn, where I begunn, 370
  • Wilt thou love God, as he thee! then digest, 329
  • With his kinde mother who partakes thy woe, 320
  • *Wonder of Beautie, Goddesse of my sense, 447
  • You have refin'd mee, and to worthyest things 191
  • You that are she and you, that's double shee, 227
  • Your mistris, that you follow whores, still taxeth you: 76
  • Zealously my Muse doth salute all thee, 207
  • * * * * *
  • OXFORD: HORACE HART, M.A.
  • PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
  • * * * * *
  • Transcriber's Note:
  • - - indicates italic script; + + indicates Old English script;
  • = = indicates bold script or non-italic text within italic
  • passages; ^ or ^{} indicates a superscript.
  • Doubtful words or passages were checked against a 1968 reprint
  • of the 1933 edition, based, by the author, on this larger 1912
  • edition.
  • The Mediæval long 's' has been replaced by the modern 's', but
  • usually the capital 'V' for 'U', and lower case v/u, u/v have
  • been retained (as in the 1968 reprint).
  • The spelling is, of course, early 17th century.
  • Unspaced punctuation, e.g. "Thy beauty,'and all parts,", is
  • as printed in this, and the 1968 reprint, and denotes elisions
  • (the running together of words to fit the metre).
  • In general, footnotes have been moved to the ends of their
  • relevant sections, and linenotes to the ends of their
  • relevant poems. An exception is on page 251 et seq., where the
  • footnotes fit naturally in sequence with the linenotes.
  • '_See note_' (usually) refers to poem note in the Commentary
  • in Volume II.
  • Page 7: 'seelily', from Middle English, via Old English, Old
  • Saxon, West Germanic.... 'sely', 'seely', from 'sælig' etc.
  • 'seely' also occurs in other poems.
  • The modern word 'silly' has evolved from Old English sælig
  • (holy, blessed, fortunate, prosperous, happy) through meanings
  • of 'innocent', 'naive', 'unworldly', 'foolish' ....
  • Page 65: 'A Ieat Ring Sent.' Ieat = Jeat, probably jet,
  • a black semi-precious stone, popular in English costume
  • jewellery.
  • Page 95: Notes: Elegy X. 'S96' is given twice, with different
  • titles. Second entry possible error, but retained.
  • Page 251: The Author has placed the footnotes to the
  • sidenotes, in order, with the linenotes. This is probably the
  • least confusing place for them, so they have been retained
  • here.
  • Page 262: Printer's error: 'foveraigne' corrected to
  • 'soveraigne'.
  • Page 276: Printer's error: _169-69_ corrected to _1639-69_.
  • "[176 them. _D_: them; _1633_, _1639-69_: them, _1635_]"
  • Pages 390-392: This Latin text contains a number of instances
  • of words ending in 'que', and a few instances (at the ends of
  • words) of the letter 'q' with an acute accent (stress mark)
  • and a subscript which looks like '3', but is 'Latin Small
  • Letter ET'.
  • This is a Mediæval scribal abbreviation for 'que' (indicating
  • 'and') at the ends of certain words. To avoid problems with
  • the text, all the abbreviated words in this passage have been
  • written out in full.
  • Page 405, line note 133: _OF_ corrected to _O'F_. Probable
  • printer's error.
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Poems of John Donne [2 vols.]
  • Volume I, by John Donne
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