WITH OTHER LYRIC POESIES.

To his Valentine.

Use, bid the Morn awake!

Sad Winter now declines,

Each bird doth choose a Make;

This day's Saint Valentine's.

For that good Bishop's sake

Get up, and let us see

What Beauty it shall be

That Fortune us assigns!

But, lo, in happy hour,

The place wherein she lies;

In yonder climbing Tower,

Gilt by the glitt'ring Rise.

O, Jove, that in a shower

(As once that Thunderer did,

When he in drops lay hid)

That I could her surprise!

Her canopy I'll draw,

With spangled plumes bedight:

No mortal ever saw

So ravishing a sight;

That it the Gods might awe,

And pow'rfully transpierce

The globy Universe,

Outshooting every light.

My lips I'll softly lay

Upon her heavenly cheek,

Dyed like the dawning day,

As polished ivory sleek;

And in her ear I'll say:

"O thou bright Morning Star!

'Tis I, that come so far,

My Valentine to seek.

"Each little bird, this tide,

Doth choose her lovèd pheere;

Which constantly abide

In wedlock all the year,

As Nature is their guide;

So may we Two be true

This year, nor change for new;

As turtles coupled were.

"The sparrow, swan, the dove,

Though Venus' birds they be;

Yet are they not for love,

So absolute as we!

For reason us doth move;

But they by billing woo.

Then try what we can do!

To whom each sense is free.

"Which we have more than they,

By livelier organs swayed;

Our Appetite each way

More by our Sense obeyed.

Our Passions to display,

This season us doth fit;

Then let us follow it,

As Nature us doth lead!

"One kiss in two let's breathe!

Confounded with the touch,

But half words let us speak!

Our lips employed so much,

Until we both grow weak:

With sweetness of thy breath,

O smother me to death!

Long let our joys be such!

"Let's laugh at them that choose

Their Valentines by lot;

To wear their names that use,

Whom idly they have got."

Saint Valentine, befriend!

We thus this Morn may spend:

Else, Muse, awake her not!


The Heart.

F thus we needs must go;

What shall our one Heart do,

This One made of our Two?

Madam, two Hearts we brake;

And from them both did take

The best, one Heart to make.

Half this is of your Heart,

Mine in the other part;

Joined by an equal Art.

Were it cemented, or sewn;

By shreds or pieces known,

We might each find our own.

But 'tis dissolved and fixed;

And with such cunning mixed,

No diff'rence that betwixt.

But how shall we agree,

By whom it kept shall be:

Whether by you or me?

It cannot two breasts fill;

One must be heart-less still,

Until the other will.

It came to me to-day:

When I willed it to say,

With Whether would it stay?

It told me, "In your breast,

Where it might hope to rest:

For if it were my guest,

"For certainty, it knew

That I would still anew

Be sending it to you!"

Never, I think, had two

Such work, so much, to do:

A Unity to woo!

Yours was so cold and chaste:

Whilst mine with zeal did waste;

Like Fire with Water placed.

How did my Heart intreat!

How pant! How did it beat,

Till it could give yours heat!

Till to that temper brought,

Through our perfection wrought,

That blessing either's thought.

In such a height it lies

From this base World's dull eyes;

That Heaven it not envies.

All that this Earth can show.

Our Heart shall not once know!

For it's too vile and low.


The Sacrifice to Apollo.

Riests of Apollo, sacred be the room

For this learned meeting! Let no barbarous groom,

How brave soe'er he be,

Attempt to enter!

But of the Muses free,

None here may venture!

This for the Delphian Prophets is prepared:

The profane Vulgar are from hence debarred!

And since the Feast so happily begins;

Call up those fair Nine, with their violins!

They are begot by Jove.

Then let us place them

Where no clown in may shove,

That may disgrace them:

But let them near to young Apollo sit;

So shall his foot-pace overflow with wit.

Where be the Graces? Where be those fair Three?

In any hand, they may not absent be!

They to the Gods are dear:

And they can humbly

Teach us, ourselves to bear,

And do things comely.

They, and the Muses, rise both from one stem:

They grace the Muses; and the Muses, them.

Bring forth your flagons, filled with sparkling wine

(Whereon swollen Bacchus, crownèd with a vine,

Is graven); and fill out!

It well bestowing

To every man about,

In goblets flowing!

Let not a man drink, but in draughts profound!

To our god Phœbus, let the Health go round!

Let your Jests fly at large; yet therewithal

See they be Salt, but yet not mixed with Gall!

Not tending to disgrace:

But fairly given,

Becoming well the place,

Modest and even,

That they, with tickling pleasure, may provoke

Laughter in him on whom the Jest is broke.

Or if the deeds of Heroes ye rehearse:

Let them be sung in so well-ordered Verse,

That each word have its weight,

Yet run with pleasure!

Holding one stately height

In so brave measure

That they may make the stiffest storm seem weak;

And damp Jove's thunder, when it loud'st doth speak.

And if ye list to exercise your vein,

Or in the Sock, or in the Buskined strain;

Let Art and Nature go

One with the other!

Yet so, that Art may show

Nature her mother:

The thick-brained audience lively to awake,

Till with shrill claps the Theatre do shake.

Sing Hymns to Bacchus then, with hands upreared!

Offer to Jove, who most is to be feared!

From him the Muse we have.

From him proceedeth

More than we dare to crave.

'Tis he that feedeth

Them, whom the World would starve. Then let the lyre

Sound! whilst his altars endless flames expire.


To his Rival.

Er loved I most,

By thee that's lost,

Though she were won with leisure;

She was my gain:

But to my pain,

Thou spoilest me of my treasure

The ship full fraught

With gold, far sought,

Though ne'er so wisely helmèd,

May suffer wrack

In sailing back,

By tempest overwhelmèd.

But She, good Sir!

Did not prefer

You, for that I was ranging:

But for that She

Found faith in me,

And She loved to be changing.

Therefore boast not

Your happy lot;

Be silent now you have her!

The time I knew

She slighted you,

When I was in her favour.

None stands so fast

But may be cast

By Fortune, and disgracèd:

Once did I wear

Her garter there,

Where you her glove have placèd.

I had the vow

That thou hast now,

And glances to discover

Her love to me;

And She to thee,

Reads but old lessons over.

She hath no smile

That can beguile;

But, as my thought, I know it:

Yea to a hair,

Both when, and where,

And how, she will bestow it.

What now is thine

Was only mine,

And first to me was given;

Thou laugh'st at me!

I laugh at thee!

And thus we two are even.

But I'll not mourn,

But stay my turn;

The wind may come about, Sir!

And once again

May bring me in;

And help to bear you out, Sir!


The Crier.

Ood folk, for gold or hire,

But help me to a Crier!

For my poor Heart is run astray

After two Eyes, that passed this way.

Oh yes! O yes! O yes!

If there be any man,

In town or country, can

Bring me my Heart again;

I'll please him for his pain.

And by these marks, I will you show

That only I this Heart do owe [own]:

It is a wounded Heart,

Wherein yet sticks the dart.

Every piece sore hurt throughout it:

Faith and Troth writ round about it.

It was a tame Heart, and a dear;

And never used to roam:

But having got this haunt, I fear

'Twill hardly stay at home

For God's sake, walking by the way,

If you my Heart do see;

Either impound it for a Stray.

Or send it back to me!


To his coy Love.

A Canzonet.

pray thee leave! Love me no more!

Call home the heart you gave me!

I but in vain that Saint adore

That can, but will not, save me.

These poor half kisses kill me quite!

Was ever man thus servèd?

Amidst an ocean of delight,

For pleasure to be starvèd.

Show me no more those snowy breasts

With azure riverets branchèd!

Where whilst mine Eye with plenty feeds,

Yet is my thirst not staunchèd.

O Tantalus, thy pains ne'er tell!

By me thou art prevented:

'Tis nothing to be plagued in Hell;

But, thus, in Heaven, tormented!

Clip me no more in those dear arms;

Nor thy "Life's Comfort" call me:

O these are but too powerful charms;

And do but more enthrall me.

But see how patient I am grown,

In all this coil about thee!

Come, nice Thing, let thy heart alone!

I cannot live without thee!


A Hymn to his Lady's Birth-place.

oventry, that dost adorn

The country [County] wherein I was born:

Yet therein lies not thy praise;

Why I should crown thy Towers with bays?

Coventry finely walled.

'Tis not thy Wall, me to thee weds;

Thy Ports; nor thy proud Pyramids;

Nor thy trophies of the Boar:

But that She which I adore,

(Which scarce Goodness's self can pair)

First there breathing, blest thy air.

The shoulder-bone of a Boar of mighty bigness.

Idea; in which name I hide

Her, in my heart deified.

For what good, Man's mind can see;

Only her ideas be:

She, in whom the Virtues came

In Woman's shape, and took her name.

She so far past imitation

As (but Nature our creation

Could not alter) she had aimed

More than Woman to have framed.

She whose truly written story,

To thy poor name shall add more glory,

Than if it should have been thy chance

T'have bred our Kings that conquered France.

Had she been born the former Age,

Two famous Pilgrimages: one in Norfolk, the other in Kent.

That house had been a Pilgrimage;

And reputed more Divine

Than Walsingham, or Becket's Shrine.

Godiva, Duke Leofric's wife, who obtained the freedom of the city of her husband, by riding through it naked.

That Princess, to whom thou dost owe

Thy Freedom (whose clear blushing snow

The envious sun saw; when as she

Naked rode to make thee free),

Was but her type: as to foretell

Thou shouldst bring forth One should excel

Her bounty; by whom thou shouldst have

More Honour, than she Freedom gave.

Queen Elizabeth.

And that great Queen, which but of late

Ruled this land in peace and State,

Had not been; but Heaven had sworn

A Maid should reign when She was born.

Of thy streets, which thou hold'st best,

And most frequent of the rest;

A noted street in Coventry.

His Mistress's birthday.

Happy Mich Park! Every year,

On the Fourth of August there,

Let thy Maids, from Flora's bowers,

With their choice and daintiest flowers

Deck thee up! and from their store,

With brave garlands crown that door!

The old man passing by that way,

To his son, in time, shall say:

"There was that Lady born: which

Long to after Ages shall be sung."

Who, unawares being passed by,

Back to that house shall cast his eye;

Speaking my verses as he goes,

And with a sigh shut every Close.

Dear City! travelling by thee,

When thy rising Spires I see,

Destined her Place of Birth;

Yet methinks the very earth

Hallowed is, so far as I

Can thee possibly descry.

Then thou, dwelling in this place,

(Hearing some rude hind disgrace

Thy city, with some scurvy thing

Which some Jester forth did bring)

Speak these Lines, where thou dost come,

And strike the slave for ever dumb.


[Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty]