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A Deposition From Love

I was foretold, your rebell ***

Nor love, nor pitty knew;

And with what scorn you use to vex

Poor hearts that humbly sue;

Yet I believ’d, to crown our pain,

Could we the fortress win,

The happy Lover sure should gain

A Paradise within:

I thought Loves plagues, like Dragons sate,

Only to fright us at the gate.

 

But I did enter, and enjoy

What happy Lovers prove;

For I could kiss, and sport, and toy,

And taste those sweets of love;

Which had they but a lasting state,

Or if in Celia’s brest

The force of love might not abate,

Jove were too mean a guest.

But now her breach of faith, farre more

Afflicts, than did her scorn before.

 

Hard fate! to have been once possest,

As victor, of a heart

Atchiev’d with labour, and unrest,

And then forc’d to depart.

If the stout Foe will not resigne

When I besiege a Town,

I lose, but what was never mine;

But he that is cast down

From enjoy’d beauty, feels a woe,

Only deposed Kings can know.

t
Written by
Thomas Carew
1595-1640 / English
Lines·Words
30·180
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