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John Donne Selected Poems-8

        tO w a cumbersome unwieldiness

        And burdenous corpulence my love had grown,

        But t I did, to make it less,

        And keep it in proportion,

        Give it a diet, made it feed upon

        t ion

        Above one sig,

        Of s    ;

        And if sometimes by stealt

        A sress ,

        And t to feast upon t, I let him see

        t to me.

        If ear, I bri so

        it    nouris ;

        If    him know

        t a tear w ;

        erfeit, as was    ;

        For eyes, , but s.

        ever ate I    t,

        But burnt ters o me ;

        And if t favour made ,

        I said, "If any title be

        veyd by t dot avail,

        to be tietail?"

        to fly

        At w, and when, and how, and where I choose.

        No of sports I lie,

        And noher falers use,

        I spring a mistress, se, sigh, and weep ;

        And t, go talk or sleep.

        BEFORE I sig gasp, let me breathe,

        Great Love, some legacies ; I h

        Mine eyes tus, if mine eyes    see ;

        If thee ;

        My too Fame ; to ambassadors mine ears ;

        to ears ;

        t taugofore

        By making me serve y more,

        t I so none, but suuch before.

        My stancy I to ts give ;

        My truto t t do live ;

        My iy and openness,

        to Jesuits ; to buffoons my pensiveness ;

        My sileo any, wh been ;

        My moo a Capu :

        taug me, by appointing me

        to love there, where no love received    be,

        Only to give to sucy.

        My faito Roman Catholics ;

        All my good o tics

        Of Amsterdam ; my best civility

        And courtso an Uy ;

        My modesty I give to soldiers bare ;

        My patie gamesters share :

        taug me, by making me

        Love    y,

        Only to give to t t my gifts indignity.

        I give my reputation to those

        ry to foes ;

        to sess ;

        My siess to physis, or excess ;

        to nature all t I in r ;

        And to my pany my    :

        thou, Love, by making me adore

        this love in me before,

        taug me to make, as t restore.

        to    tolls,

        I give my pten rolls

        Of moral sels I to Bedlam give ;

        My brazen medals unto them which live

        In    of bread ; to them which pass among

        All fners, mine Englisongue :

        though, Love, by making me love one

        portion

        For younger lovers, dost my gifts tion.

        t Ill undo

        too.

        ties h

        t forth ;

        And all yrao more use shall have,

        than a sun-dial in a grave :

        taug me by making me

        Love    bothee,

        to i, and practise to annie all three.

        o s harm,

        Nor question much,

        t subtle h of hair, which s my arm ;

        tery, t not touch ;

        For tis my outward soul,

        Viceroy to t, wo heaven being gone,

        ill leave to trol

        Aion.

        For if ts fall

        t

        tie ts, and make me one of all,

        trengt

        ter brain,

        better do t ; except s t I

        By this should know my pain,

        As prisoo die.

        eer s by it, bury it h me,

        For since I am

        Loves martyr, it migry,

        If into othese relics came.

        As twas y

        to afford to it all t a soul    do,

        So tis some bravery,

        t since you would have none of me, I bury some of you.

        LIttLE t thou, poor flower,

        chd six or seven days,

        A every hour

        Gave to to t to raise,

        And no laugriumphis bough,

        Little t thou,

        t it    I shall

        to-morro at all.

        Little t t,

        t labourest yet to le thee,

        And t by o get a part

        In a forbidden or forbidding tree,

        And    iffness by long siege to bow,

        Little t thou

        t to-morroh wake,

        Must ake.

        But t to be

        Subtle to plague t say,

        Alas ! if you must go,    to me?

        ay

        You go to friends, w

        Various tent

        to your eyes, ears, and taste, and every part ;

        If t need your ?

        ell tay    know,

        stayd and do,

        A , t makes no show,

        Is to a    a kind of g.

        ; or having none,

        Knohee for one?

        Practice may make    ;

        But take my word, s know a .

        Meet me in London, then,

        ty days    see

        Me fres, by being h men,

        tayd still hee.

        Fods sake, if you , be you so too ;

        I will give you

        to another friend, whom we shall find

        As glad to have my body as my mind.

        t MONtGOMERY CAStLE

        UPON t IS SItUAtE.

        UPON this Primrose hill,

        il

        A s go

        to his own primrose, and grow manna so ;

        And wy

        Make a terrestrial galaxy,

        As tars do in the sky ;

        I o find a true love ; and I see

        t tis not a mere    is she,

        But must or more or less than woman be.

        Yet kno, which flower

        I wish ; a six, or four ;

        For srue-love less than woman be,

        Shen, should she

        Be more t above

        All t of sex, and to move

        My    to study    to love.

        Boters ; si reside

        Falsehood in woman, I could more abide,

        S, ture falsified.

        Live, primrose, thrive

        itrue number five ;

        And, woman, w,

        iterious number be tent ;

        ten is t number ; if en

        Belongs to ea

        Eacake half us men ;

        Or—if t serve turn—since all

        Numbers are odd, or even, and they fall

        First into five, ake us all.
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