From Campion and Rosseter’s Book of Airs, 1601.
If I urge my kind desires,
She hath often vowed her love:
But alas no fruit I find.
That her fires are false I prove
Yet, in her, no fault I find.
I was thus unhappy born,
And ordained to be her scorn.
Yet if human care or pain,
May the heavenly order change;
She will hate her own disdain,
And repent she was so strange:
For a truer heart than I,
Never lived, nor loved to die.
From John Dowland’s First Book of Songs and Airs, 1597.
If my complaints could passions move,
Thy grief in my deep sighs still speaks,
Yet thou dost hope when I despair;
My heart for thy unkindness breaks;
Thou say’st thou can’st my harms repair,
And when I hope thou mak’st me hope in vain;
Yet for redress thou let’st me still complain.
Can Love be rich, and yet I want?
Is Love my judge, and yet am I condemned?
Thou plenty hast, yet me dost scant;
Thou made a god, and yet thy power contemned!
That I do live, it is thy power;
That I desire it is thy worth.
If love doth make men’s lives too sour,
Let me not love, nor live henceforth!
Die shall my hopes, but not my faith,
That you, that of my fall may hearers be,
May hear Despair, which truly saith
“I was more true to Love, than Love to me.”