WHERE, like a pillow on a bed, | |
A pregnant bank swell'd up, to rest | |
The violet's reclining head, | |
Sat we two, one another's best. | |
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Our hands were firmly cemented | 5 |
By a fast balm, which thence did spring ; | |
Our eye-beams twisted, and did thread | |
Our eyes upon one double string. | |
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So to engraft our hands, as yet | |
Was all the means to make us one ; | 10 |
And pictures in our eyes to get | |
Was all our propagation. | |
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As, 'twixt two equal armies, Fate | |
Suspends uncertain victory, | |
Our souls—which to advance their state, | 15 |
Were gone out—hung 'twixt her and me. | |
| |
And whilst our souls negotiate there, | |
We like sepulchral statues lay ; | |
All day, the same our postures were, | |
And we said nothing, all the day. | 20 |
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If any, so by love refined, | |
That he soul's language understood, | |
And by good love were grown all mind, | |
Within convenient distance stood, | |
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He—though he knew not which soul spake, | 25 |
Because both meant, both spake the same— | |
Might thence a new concoction take, | |
And part far purer than he came. | |
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This ecstasy doth unperplex | |
(We said) and tell us what we love ; | 30 |
We see by this, it was not sex ; | |
We see, we saw not, what did move : | |
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But as all several souls contain | |
Mixture of things they know not what, | |
Love these mix'd souls doth mix again, | 35 |
And makes both one, each this, and that. | |
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A single violet transplant, | |
The strength, the colour, and the size— | |
All which before was poor and scant— | |
Redoubles still, and multiplies. | 40 |
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When love with one another so | |
Interanimates two souls, | |
That abler soul, which thence doth flow, | |
Defects of loneliness controls. | |
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We then, who are this new soul, know, | 45 |
Of what we are composed, and made, | |
For th' atomies of which we grow | |
Are souls, whom no change can invade. | |
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But, O alas ! so long, so far, | |
Our bodies why do we forbear? | 50 |
They are ours, though not we ; we are | |
Th' intelligences, they the spheres. | |
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We owe them thanks, because they thus | |
Did us, to us, at first convey, | |
Yielded their senses' force to us, | 55 |
Nor are dross to us, but allay. | |
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On man heaven's influence works not so, | |
But that it first imprints the air ; | |
For soul into the soul may flow, | |
Though it to body first repair. | 60 |
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As our blood labours to beget | |
Spirits, as like souls as it can ; | |
Because such fingers need to knit | |
That subtle knot, which makes us man ; | |
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So must pure lovers' souls descend | 65 |
To affections, and to faculties, | |
Which sense may reach and apprehend, | |
Else a great prince in prison lies. | |
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To our bodies turn we then, that so | |
Weak men on love reveal'd may look ; | 70 |
Love's mysteries in souls do grow, | |
But yet the body is his book. | |
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And if some lover, such as we, | |
Have heard this dialogue of one, | |
Let him still mark us, he shall see | 75 |
Small change when we're to bodies gone. | |