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Poetical Works of Edmund Waller and Sir John Denham by Sir John Denham;Edmund Waller
page 63 of 438 (14%)
So with our plaints offended, and our tears,
Wise Somnus to that paradise repairs;
Waits on her will, and wretches does forsake,
To court the nymph for whom those wretches wake.
More proud than Phoebus of his throne of gold 9
Is the soft god those softer limbs to hold;
Nor would exchange with Jove, to hide the skies
In dark'ning clouds, the power to close her eyes;
Eyes which so far all other lights control,
They warm our mortal parts, but these our soul!
Let her free spirit, whose unconquer'd breast
Holds such deep quiet and untroubled rest,
Know that though Venus and her son should spare
Her rebel heart, and never teach her care,
Yet Hymen may in force his vigils keep,
And for another's joy suspend her sleep. 20

[1] She is said to have been like Dudu--

'Large, and languishing, and lazy,
Yet of a beauty that might drive you crazy.'




OF THE MISREPORT OF HER BEING PAINTED.


As when a sort of wolves infest the night
With their wild howlings at fair Cynthia's light,
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