Richard Lovelace.


 
A loose S A R A B A N D.

Set by Mr. Henry Lawes.

I
AH me ! the little Tyrant Theefe !
    As once my heart was playing,
He snatcht it up and flew away,
    Laughing at all my praying.

II
Proud of his purchase he surveyes,
    And curiously sounds it,
And though he sees it full of wounds,
    Cruel still on he wounds it.

III
And now this heart is all his sport,
    Which as a Ball he boundeth
From hand to breast, from breast to lip,
    And all it's rest confoundeth.

IV
Then as a Top he sets it up,
    And pitifully whips it ;
Sometimes he cloathes it gay and fine,
    Then straight againe he strips it.

V
He cover'd it with false beliefe,
    Which gloriously show'd it ;
And for a morning-Cushionet
    On's Mother he bestow'd it.

VI
Each day with her small brazen stings,
    A thousand times she rac'd it ;
But then at night, bright with her Gemmes,
    Once neere her breast she plac'd it.

VII
There warme it gan to throb and bleed ;
    She knew that smart and grieved ;
At length this poore condemned Heart
    With these rich drugges repreeved.

VIII
She washt the wound with a fresh teare,
    Which my Lucasta dropped,
And in the sleave-silke of her haire,
    'Twas hard bound up and wrapped.

IX
She proab'd it with her constancie,
    And found no Rancor nigh it ;
Only the anger of her eye,
    Had wrought some proud flesh by it.

X
Then prest she Narde in ev'ry veine
    Which from her kisses trilled ;
And with the balme heald all its paine
    That from her hand distilled.

XI
But yet this heart avoyds me still,
    Will not by me be owned ;
But's fled to it's Physitians breast,
There proudly sits inthroned.




* Henry Lawes, composer of both church music and court masques.



Source:
Lovelace, Richard.    The Poems of Richard Lovelace.
London: Unit Library, Ltd., 1904.    31-32.




to Works of Richard Lovelace


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