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Poems consisting of Epistles and Epigrams, Satyrs, Epitaphs and Elogies, Songs and Sonnets

With variety of other drolling Verses upon several Subjects. Composed by no body must know whom, and are to be had every body knows where, and for somebody knows what [by John Eliot]
 

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Upon leaving off mourning for his Mistres.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Upon leaving off mourning for his Mistres.

Hence faint resembler of my woes, adew,
I have thoughts sabler, blacker far then you:
Can griefs so real, so immence be shown
By that which has no being, a privation?
(For so we black define) how can I call
You Emblems of my sorrows, when that all
Those mournfull thoughts you do pretend t'express
(It seems) I banish, when I please t'undress.
My 'Griefs no sorowfull figure ere defines,
But those black thoughts that round my essence twines
None can depict the soul I weare within
But he who paints me in an Ethiops skin.
The night which mourns the absence of the sun
And to express her loss puts darkness on
Yet smiles in stars, and when she goes away
Postilions forth a lovely dauning gray.
I am all darkeness, I have not one spark
Of hope or comfort to be day my dark.
Besorrowed soul, sorrow which nought can ease,
Nought can becalme, nor nought but death appease
And when I'm dead insculp upon my grave,
Here lies my Anna's mourner, once her slave.