They that fawn'd on him before, SONG. Take, oh, take those lips away, The collection entitled 'The Passionate Pilgrim,' &c., ends with the Sonnet to Sundry Notes of Music which we have numbered XIX. Malone adds to the collection this exquisite song, of which we find the first verse in Measure for Measure.' End of the Passionate Pilgrim. VERSES AMONG THE ADDITIONAL POEMS TO CHESTER'S LOVE'S MARTYR, PRINTED IN 1601. LET the bird of loudest lay, But thou, shrieking harbinger, To this troop come thou not near. From this session interdict Let the priest in surplice white, And thou, treble-dated crow a There is a curious coincidence in a passage in The Tem pest:' "Now I will believe That there are unicorns; that in Arabia b Can-knows. Here the anthem doth commence : So they lov'd, as love in twain Hearts remote, yet not asunder; So between them love did shine, Property was thus appall'd, Reason, in itself confounded, That it cried how true a twain a Threne-funereal song. |