Since you've granted me permission to love,
How will you act?
Am I to your joy, or emotion arouse,
Once I commence pursue;
Shall you trouble, or mock, or love me too?
All trivial beauty can scorn, and I
Spight of your hate
Absent your consent can see, and die;
Grant a loftier Lot!
’Tis easy to destroy, you can fashion.
Thus give me consent to adore, & love me too
Without intent
To raise, as Affection's cursed defiers behave
As complaining Poets lament,
Acclaim to their beauty, from their weeping gaze.
Grief is a puddle and reflects not clear
One's charm's beams;
Delights are clear streames, your vision appear
Morose in gloomier verses,
Within cheerfull numbers they gleam bright with prayse.
Which shall not allude to express you lovely
Wounds, fires, and arrows,
Gales in your countenance, snares in your locks,
Suborning all your parts,
Or else to deceive, or torture trapped souls.
I shall make your vision like morning orbs appear,
Like soft, and fayr;
Thy brow as crystal even, and clear,
Whereas your tousled locks
Will flow like a calm Area of the Atmosphere.
Rich The natural world's hoard (which is the Writer's Riches)
I will expend, to adorn
One's beauties, if your Source of Delight
In matching gratitude
One but unlock, so we one another bless.
The piece delves the relationship of love and praise, where the speaker engages with a lady who seeks his love. Rather, he proposes a reciprocal exchange of artistic admiration for personal pleasures. This language is graceful, combining refined traditions with frank expressions of longing.
Within the lines, the poet rejects common motifs of unrequited love, such as grief and weeping, claiming they dim true beauty. He prefers happiness and admiration to emphasize the lady's qualities, vowing to render her vision as shining orbs and her hair as streaming air. The technique emphasizes a pragmatic yet artful outlook on bonds.
Rich Nature’s store (which is the Writer's Wealth)
I will use, to adorn
Your graces, if your Mine of Delight
With equal gratitude
One but release, so we each other bless.
The stanza summarizes the core bargain, where the author vows to employ his artistic gifts to honor the maiden, in return for her willingness. This language combines devout undertones with worldly desires, providing depth to the verse's theme.
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