You that think Love can convey, No other way eyes, into the heart His fatal dart, casements, and but hear This Syren sing, And on the wing Of her sweet voice it shall appear That Love can enter at the ear:
But through the Close up those
Then unveil your eyes, behold The curious mould Where that voice dwells; and as we know, When the cocks crow, We freely may Gaze on the day;
So may you, when the music's done, Awake, and see the rising Sun.
TO ONE THAT DESIRED TO KNOW MY MISTRESS.
SEEK not to know my love, for she Hath vow'd her constant faith to me; Her mild aspects are mine, and thou Shalt only find a stormy brow: For, if her beauty stir desire
In me, her kisses quench the fire; Or, I can to Love's fountain go, Or dwell upon her ills of snow: But when thou burn'st, she shall not spare One gentle breath to cool the air; Thou shalt not climb those alps, nor spy Where the sweet springs of Venus lie. Search hidden nature, and there find A treasure to enrich thy mind; Discover arts not yet reveal'd, But let my mistress live conceal'd; Though men by knowledge wiser grow, Yet here 'tis wisdom not to know.
TO MY RIVAL.
HENCE, vain intruder! hast away,
Wash not with unhallowed brine The footsteps of my Celia's shrine; Nor on her purer altars lay Thy empty words, accents that may Some looser dame to love incline: She must have offerings more divine; Such pearly drops, as youthful May Scatters before the rising day;
Such smooth soft language, as each line Might stroake1 an angry god, or stay
Jove's thunder, make the hearers pine With envy do this, thou shalt be Servant to her, rival with me.
1 An ancient phrase for pacify.
BOLDNESS IN LOVE.
MARK how the bashful morn in vain Courts the amorous marigold With sighing blasts and weeping rain; Yet she refuses to unfold: But when the planet of the day Approacheth with his powerful ray, Then she spreads, then she receives His warmer beams into her virgin leaves'. So shalt thou thrive in love, fond boy;
If thy tears and sighs discover Thy grief, thou never shalt enjoy
The just reward of a bold lover: But when with moving accents thou Shalt constant faith and service vow, Thy Celia shall receive those charms With open ears, and with unfolded arms.
PARTING, CELIA WEEPS.
WEEP not, my dear, for I shall go Loaden enough with my own woe: Add not thy heaviness to mine; Since fate our pleasures must disjoin, Why should our sorrows meet? If I Must go, and lose thy company, I wish not theirs; it shall relieve My grief, to think thou dost not grieve. Yet grieve and weep, that I may bear Every sigh and every tear Away with me; so shall thy breast And eyes, discharg'd, enjoy their rest: And it will glad my heart, to see Thou wert thus loth to part with me.
ON THE LADY MARY VILLIERS'.
THE lady Mary Villiers lies Under this stone: with weeping eyes The parents that first gave her breath, And their sad friends, laid her in earth. If any of them, reader, were Known unto thee, shed a tear: Or if thyself possess a gem, As dear to thee as this to them; Though a stranger to this place, Bewail in their's thine own hard case; For thou perhaps at thy return
Mayst find thy darling in an urn.
'Daughter of George Villiers duke of Buckingham.
ANOTHER.
THE purest soul that e'er was sent Into a clayey tenement Inform'd this dust; but the weak mould Could the great guest no longer hold; The substance was too pure; the flame Too glorious that thither came: Ten thousand Cupids brought along A grace on each wing, that did throng For place there till they all opprest The seat in which they sought to rest; So the fair model broke, for want Of room to lodge th' inhabitant.
ANOTHER.
THIS little vault, this narrow room, Of love and beauty is the tomb : The dawning beam, that 'gan to clear Our clouded sky, lies darken'd here, For ever set to us, by death
Sent to inflame the world beneath '. 'Twas but a bud, yet did contain More sweetness than shall spring again; A budding star that might have grown Into a sun, when it had blown. This hopeful beauty did create New life in Love's declining state; But now his empire ends, and we From fire and wounding darts are free: His brand, his bow, let no man fear; The flames, the arrows, all lie here.
ON THE LADY S. WIFE TO SIR W. S.
THE harmony of colours, features, grace, Resulting airs (the magic of a face) Of musical sweet tunes, all which combin'd To crown one sovereign beauty, lie confin'd To this dark vault: she was a cabinet Where all the choicest stones of price were set; Whose native colours and pure lustre lent Her eye, cheek, lip, a dazzling ornament; Whose rare and hidden virtues did express Her inward beauties and mind's fairer dress; The constant diamond, the wise chrysolite, The devout sapphire, em'rald apt to write Records of mem'ry, cheerful agate, grave And serious onyx, topaz that doth save The brain's calm temper, witty amethyst; This precious quarry, or what else the list On Aaron's ephod planted had, she wore: One only pearl was wanting to her store; Which in her Saviour's book she found exprest; To purchase that, she sold Death all the rest.
Politeness, as well as charity, must incline us to believe, that the bard alludes in this expression to the heathen mythology, and that by the words "world beneath" he means the Elysium of the ancients.
MARIA WENTWORTH',
PRIMO
THOME COMITIS CLEVELAND FILIA GENITA, VIRGINIAM ANIMAM EXHALAVIT. AN. DOM.-ET. SUÆ-
AND here the precious dust is laid, Whose purely tempered clay was made So fine that it the guest betray'd.
Else the soul grew so fast within, It broke the outward shel! of sin, And so was hatch'd a cherubin.
In height it soar'd to God above, In depth it did to knowledge move, And spread in breadth to gen'ral love.
Before, a pious duty shin'd To parents; courtesy, behind; On either side an equal mind.
Good to the poor, to kindred dear, To servants kind, to friendship clear, To nothing but herself severe.
So, though a virgin, yet a bride To every grace, she justify'd A chaste polygamy, and dy'd.
Learn from hence (reader) what small trust We owe this world, where Virtue must, Frail as our flesh, crumble to dust.
ON THE DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM2.
BEATISSIMIS MANIBUS CHARISSIMI VIRI ILLMA
SIC PARENTAVIT.
WHEN, in the brazen leaves of fame, The life the death of Buckingham Shall be recorded, if Truth's hand Incise the story of our land, Posterity shall see a fair Structure, by the studious care Of two kings raised, that no less Their wisdom than their pow'r express; By blinded zeal (whose doubtful light Made Murder's scarlet robe seem white, Whose vain-deluding phantasms charm'd A clouded sullen soul, and arm'd A desperate hand thirsty of blood) Torn from the fair earth where it stood; So the majestic fabric fell. His actions let our annals tell;
'She was the eldest daughter of sir Thomas Wentworth, who was afterwards raised to the title of Cleveland, and to several important dignities in the state, by the interest of archbishop Laud.
2 This was George Villiers, the first duke of Buckingham, who was introduced to the court of James I. as his favourite; and afterwards, in the reign of Charles I. ascended to the highest dignities. He was the admiration and terrour of his time.
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