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NTINE, MISTRESS MARGARET FALCONBRIDGE. Now is your turn, my dearest, to be set A gem in this eternal coronet: 'Twas rich before, but since your name is down It sparkles now like Ariadne's crown. Blaze by this sphere for ever: or this do, Let me and it shine evermore by you. 790. TO OENONE. Sweet Oenone, do but say Love thou dost, though love says nay. Speak me fair; for lovers be Gently kill'd by flattery. 791. VERSES. Who will not honour noble numbers, when Verses out-live the bravest deeds of men? 792. HAPPINESS. That happiness does still the longest thrive, Where joys and griefs have turns alternative. 793. THINGS OF CHOICE LONG A-COMING. We pray 'gainst war, yet we enjoy no peace; _Desire deferr'd is that it may increase_. 794. POETRY PERPETUATES THE POET. Here I myself might likewise die, And utterly forgotten lie, But that eternal poetry Repullulation gives me here Unto the thirtieth thousand year, When all now dead shall reappear. _Repullulation_, rejuvenescence. _Thirtieth thousand year_, an allusion to the doctrine of the Platonic year. 797. KISSES. Give me the food that satisfies a guest: Kisses are but dry banquets to a feast. 798. ORPHEUS. Orpheus he went, as poets tell, To fetch Eurydice from hell; And had her; but it was upon This short but strict condition: Backward he should not look while he Led her through hell's obscurity: But ah! it happened, as he made His passage through that dreadful shade, Revolve he did his loving eye, For gentle fear or jealousy; And looking back, that look did sever Him and Eurydice for ever. 803. TO SAPPHO. Sappho, I will choose to go Where the northern winds do blow Endless ice and endless snow: Rather than I once would see But a winter's face in thee, To benumb my hopes and me. 804. TO HIS FAITHFUL FRIEND, M. JOHN CROFTS, CUP-BEARER TO THE KING. For all thy many courtesies to me, Nothing I have, my Crofts, to send to thee For the requital, save this only one Half of my just remuneration. For since I've travell'd all this realm throughout To seek and find some few immortals out To circumspangle this my spacious sphere, As lamps for everlasting shining here; And having fix'd thee in mi
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