SYDNEY GODOLPHIN. 1610-1643. SONG. OR love me less, or love me more; Bind me at least, or set me free! 'Tis true that I have nursed before That hope, of which I now complain ; Fearing to meet with your disdain. And yet have gained, by all this care, I see you wear that pitying smile Which you have still vouchsafed my smart, Content thus cheaply to beguile And entertain an harmless heart: But I no longer can give way To hope which doth so little pay; And yet I dare no freedom owe, Then give me more, or give me less : Or your unpitying beauties dress In their own free indifference! For I shall love the very scorn WILLIAM CARTRIGHT. 1611-1643. ["Comedies, Tragi-comedies, with other Poems." 1651.] A SIGH SENT TO HIS ABSENT LOVE. I SENT a sigh unto my blest one's car, I hastened after, lest some other fair Should mildly entertain this travelling air; It might mistake a lily for her ear; And having there took lodging, might still dwell And now it hears each thing that's whispered there. My sorrow makes a gem more blest than me! Yet, little pendant, porter to the ear, Let not my rival have admittance there; Only for admonition: so when she Gives ear to him, at least she'll think of me. TO CHLOE. WHO WISHED HERSELF YOUNG ENOUGH FOR ME. Chloe, why wish you that your years Would backwards run, till they meet mine? That perfect likeness, which endears Things unto things, might us combine? Our ages so in date agree, That twins do differ more than we. There are two births, the one when light First strikes the new-awakened sense; The other when two souls unite; And we must count our life from thence: When you loved me, and I loved you, Then both of us were born anew. Love then to us did new souls give, And in those souls did plant new powers; Since when another life we live, The breath we breathe is his, not ours: Love makes those young, whom age doth chill, And whom he finds young, keeps young still. Love, like that angel that shall call Our bodies from the silent grave, Unto one age doth raise us all, None too much, none too little have; Nay, that the difference may be none, He makes two not alike, but one. And now since you and I are such, Tell me what's yours, and what is mine? Our eyes, our ears, our taste, smell, touch, So by this, I as well may be Too old for you, as you for me. A VALEDICTION. Bid me not go where neither suns nor showers Where discontented things in sadness lie, When I am parted from those eyes, Should plant me in a bower, Where amongst happy lovers I might see One everlasting spring, Nor would those fall, nor these shine forth to me: Nature herself to him is lost, Who loseth her he honours most. Then fairest to my parting view display Your graces all in one full day; Whose blessed shapes I'll snatch and keep, till when I do return and view agen: So by this art fancy shall fortune cross, And lovers live by thinking on their loss. |