There is continuall spring, and haruest there
2 Continuall, both meeting at one time:
For both the boughes doe laughing blossomes beare,
4 And with fresh colours decke the wanton Prime,
And eke attonce the +heauy+ trees they clime,
6 Which seeme to labour vnder their fruits lode:
The whiles the ioyous birdes make their pastime
8 Emongst the shadie leaues, their sweet abode,
And their true loues without suspition tell abrode.
5 heauy > heauenly 1590
1 There is continual spring, and harvest there
harvest > autumn; harvest-time
2 Continual, both meeting at one time: 3 For both the boughs do laughing blossoms bear,
the boughs do > [do the boughs]
4 And with fresh colours deck the wanton prime,
wanton > rank, luxuriant, hence: abundant; undisciplined, unchaste prime > springtime
5 And eke at once the heavy trees they climb,
eke > also at once > simultaneously, together heavy > (See Textual Appendix) they > (An ambiguous pronoun. Refers perhaps to all the creatures in the garden, or just to the birds. Most likely it is redundant (i.e. it is the trees which climb), the word being included only for the sake of the metre)