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One like none, and lik'd of none, fittest were, |
For, things in fashion every man will wear. |
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Elegie. III. |
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Although thy hand and faith, and good word too |
Have seal'd thy love, which nothing should undoe. |
Yea though thou fall back, that Apostasie |
Confirms thy love, yet much, much I fear thee. |
Women are like the Arts, forc'd unto none, |
Open to'all searchers, unpriz'd if unknown. |
If I have caught a bird, and let him flie, |
Another Fouler using those means, as I, |
May catch the same bird; and, as these things be, |
Women are made for men, not him nor me. |
Foxes, goats and all beasts change when they please, |
Shall women; more hot, wily, wild than these, |
Be bound to one man, and bid Nature then |
Idly make them apter to'endure than men; |
They'are our cloggs, not their own; if a man be |
Chain'd to a gally, yet the gally'is free. |
Who hath a plow-land, casts all his seed-corn there, |
And yet allows his ground more corn should bear; |
Though Danuby into the sea must flow, |
The sea receives the Rhine, Volga: and Po, |
By nature, which gave it, this libertie. |
Thou lov'st, but oh! canst thou love it and me? |
Likeness glues love; and if that thou so doe, |
To make us like and love, must I change too? |
More than thy hate, I hate'it, rather let me |
Allow her change, than change as oft as shee, |
And so not teach, but force my'opinion, |
To love not any one, nor every one.
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[CW: To] |