Valediction To His Book
- I 'll tell thee now (dear love) what thou shalt do
- To anger destiny, as she doth us;
- How I shall stay, though she eloign me thus,
- And how posterity shall know it too;
- How thine may out-endure
- Sibyl's glory, and obscure
- Her who from Pindar could allure,
- And her, through whose help Lucan is not lame,
- And her, whose book (they say) Homer did find, and name.
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- Study our manuscripts, those myriads
- Of letters, which have past 'twixt thee and me;
- Thence write our annals, and in them will be
- To all whom love's subliming fire invades,
- Rule and example found;
- There the faith of any ground
- No schismatic will dare to wound,
- That sees, how Love this grace to us affords,
- To make, to keep, to use, to be these his records.
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- This book, as long-lived as the elements,
- Or as the world's form, this all-graved tome
- In cypher writ, or new made idiom;
- We for Love's clergy only are instruments;
- When this book is made thus,
- Should again the ravenous
- Vandals and Goths invade us,
- Learning were safe; in this our universe,
- Schools might learn sciences, spheres music, angels verse.
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- Here Love's divines—since all divinity
- Is love or wonder—may find all they seek,
- Whether abstract spiritual love they like,
- Their souls exhaled with what they do not see;
- Or, loth so to amuse
- Faith's infirmity, they choose
- Something which they may see and use;
- For, though mind be the heaven, where love doth sit,
- Beauty a convenient type may be to figure it.
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- Here more than in their books may lawyers find,
- Both by what titles mistresses are ours,
- And how prerogative these states devours,
- Transferr'd from Love himself, to womankind;
- Who, though from heart and eyes,
- They exact great subsidies,
- Forsake him who on them relies;
- And for the cause, honour, or conscience give;
- Chimeras vain as they or their prerogative.
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- Here statesmen—or of them, they which can read—
- May of their occupation find the grounds;
- Love, and their art, alike it deadly wounds,
- If to consider what 'tis, one proceed.
- In both they do excel
- Who the present govern well,
- Whose weakness none doth, or dares tell;
- In this thy book, such will there something see,
- As in the Bible some can find out alchemy.
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- Thus vent thy thoughts; abroad I 'll study thee,
- As he removes far off, that great heights takes;
- How great love is, presence best trial makes,
- But absence tries how long this love will be;
- To take a latitude
- Sun, or stars, are fitliest view'd
- At their brightest, but to conclude
- Of longitudes, what other way have we,
- But to mark when and where the dark eclipses be?
From: Songs and Sonnets, 1633.
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