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Epitaphes, Epigrams, Songs and Sonets

with a Discourse of the Friendly affections of Tymetes to Pyndara his Ladie. Newly corrected with additions, and set out by George Turbervile
 

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Of the diuers and contrarie passions and affections of his Loue.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Of the diuers and contrarie passions and affections of his Loue.

To Phisick those that long haue gone
and spent their time in griefe,
Affirme that Pacients in their paines
will shun their best reliefe.
They will refuse the Tysants taste
and wholesome drinkes despise,
Which to recure diseases fell
Phisitions did deuise:
But when they be debard the same
which so they shunde before,
They crie and call for Tysants then
as soueraigne for their sore.
Such is the wayward guise of those
with pangues that are opprest,
They wish for that they neuer had,
and shun that they possest.

98

I may to them right well compare
the Louers diuers thought,
That likes, and then mislikes againe
that they long earst had sought.
They will not, when they may, enioy
their harts desired choise:
They then defie, they then detest
with lowde and lothsome voice.
They will refuse when time doth serue,
but when such time is gone,
They sigh and schreach with mournefull crie
and make a ruthfull mone.
They little think that Time hath wings
or knoweth how to flie:
They hope to haue it still at hande
that swiftly passeth bie.
They thinke that Time will tarie them
and for their fansie stay,
But Time in little time is gone
it fleeteth fast away.
So standes the foole by fleeting floud
and looketh for a turne:
But Riuer runnes and still will run
and neuer shape returne.
What? doe they hope that beauties glasse
will still continue bright?
Nay, when the day is gone and past
by course appeeres the night.

[98]

For crooked age his woonted trade
is for to plough the face
With wrinckled furrowes, that before
was chiefe of Beauties grace.
Perhaps they thinke that men are mad,
and once intrapt in loue
Will neuer striue to breake the snare
nor neuer to remoue.
No Fowler that had wylie Wit
but will foresee such hap,
That Birds will alway buske and bate
and scape the Fowlers Trap.
And if their fortune fauor so,
then who doth mount so hie
As those that guilefull Pitfall tooke
prepared for to die?
What Fish doth fleete so fast as that
which lately hangde on hooke?
By happie hap if he escape,
he will not backwarde looke.
Take time therefore thou foolish Feeme,
whilst Time doth serue so well:
For Time away as fast doth flee
as any sound of Bell.
And thou perhaps in after Time
when Time is past and gone,
Shall lie lamenting losse of Time
as colde as any stone.

99

Yet were thou better take thy time
whilst yet thy Beautie serues,
For Beautie as the Flower fades
whome lack of Phœbus sterues.