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t I with restless rivers of remorse, Have bathed the banks where my fair Phillis lies. The moaning lines which weeping I have written, And writing read unto my ruthful sheep, And reading sent with tears that never fitten, To my love's queen, that hath my heart in keep, Have made my lambkins lay them down and sigh; But Phillis sits, and reads, and calls them trifles. Oh heavens, why climb not happy lines so high, To rent that ruthless heart that all hearts rifles! None writes with truer faith, or greater love, Yet out, alas! I have no power to move. V Ah pale and dying infant of the spring, How rightly now do I resemble thee! That selfsame hand that thee from stalk did wring, Hath rent my breast and robbed my heart from me. Yet shalt thou live. For why? Thy native vigour Shall thrive by woeful dew-drops of my dolor; And from the wounds I bear through fancy's rigour, My streaming blood shall yield the crimson color. The ravished sighs that ceaseless take their issue From out the furnace of my heart inflamed, To yield you lasting springs shall never miss you; So by my plaints and pains, you shall be famed. Let my heart's heat and cold, thy crimson nourish, And by my sorrows let thy beauty flourish. VI It is not death which wretched men call dying, But that is very death which I endure, When my coy-looking nymph, her grace envying, By fatal frowns my domage doth procure. It is not life which we for life approve, But that is life when on her wool-soft paps I seal sweet kisses which do batten love, And doubling them do treble my good haps. 'Tis neither love the son, nor love the mother, Which lovers praise and pray to; but that love is Which she in eye and I in heart do smother. Then muse not though I glory in my miss, Since she who holds my heart and me in durance, Hath life, death, love and all in her procurance. VII How languisheth the primrose of love's garden! How trill her tears, th' elixir of my senses! Ambitious sickness, what doth thee so harden? Oh spare, and plague thou me for her offences! Ah roses, love's fair roses, do not languish; Blush through the milk-white veil that holds you covered. If heat or cold may mitigate your anguish, I'll burn, I'll freeze, but you shall
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