And every day Seize her sweet prey, All fresh and fragrant as He rises, O let the blissful heart hold fast Her heavenly armful; she shall taste She shall have power To rifle and deflower The rich and roseal spring of those rare sweets, What joy, what bliss, How many heavens at once it is To have her God become her Lover. :0: TO THE SAME PARTY: COUNSEL CONCERNING HER CHOICE. Dear, Heaven designéd soul ! Amongst the rest Of suitors that besiege your maiden breast My fortune try And venture to speak one good word, Not for myself, alas ! but for my dearer Lord? Of froth and bubbles, what to look for here: Peacocks and apes, Illustrious flies, Gilded dunghills, glorious lies; And deep disguises, Oaths of water words of wind? Truth bids me say 'tis time you cease to trust Your soul to any son of dust. 'Tis time you listen to a braver love, Which from above Calls you up higher And bids you come And choose your room Among His own fair sons of fire; Where you among The golden throng, That watches at His palace doors And follow those fair stars of yours ; Stars much too fair and pure to wait upon -The false smiles of a sublunary sun. Sweet, let me prophesy that at last 't will prove Lays up his purer and more precious vows, And means them for a far more worthy Spouse Than this World of lies can give ye : Even for Him, with Whom nor cost, Nor love, nor labour can be lost; Of His high stratagem to win your heart : Kindly to cross you That, at the next remove Thence, He might toss you And strike your troubled heart Home to Himself, to hide it in His breast, Of Love, of life, and everlasting rest. That thus shall wake Your wise soul, never to be won Now with a love below the sun. Your first choice fails; O when you choose again May it not be among the sons of men! Alerías: THE COMPLAINT OF THE FORSAKEN WIFE OF SAINT ALEXIS. THE FIRST ELEGY. I, LATE the Roman youth's loved praise and pride, Whom long none could obtain, though thousands tried ; Lo, here am left (alas !) for my lost mate T' embrace my tears, and kiss an unkind fate. Sure in my early woes stars were at strife, Nor can I tell (and this new tears doth breed) Some solace in my sorrow's certainty : I'd send my woes in words should weep for me. And sure where lovers make their wat❜ry graves, 'Here 't was the Roman maid found a hard fate, While through the World she sought her wand'ring mate ; O live, so rare a love! live! and in thee The too frail life of female constancy. Farewell; and shine, fair soul, shine there above, THE SECOND ELEGY. Though all the joys I had fled hence with thee, For him, alas! ne'er shall I need to be |