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Dia Poemata

Poetick Feet Standing Upon Holy Ground: Or, Verses on certain Texts of Scripture. With Epigrams, &c. By E. E. [i.e. Edmund Elys]
 
 

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[I'm slave to grief (not mine own man)]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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[I'm slave to grief (not mine own man)]

I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan, very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was Wonderfull, passing the love of women. 2 Sam. 1. 26.

I'm slave to grief (not mine own man)
For thee, my brother Jonathan.
'Twixt us, who were in life all-one,
Death could cause no division:
I can't forsake thee dead, but I,
Sith thou art dead, must dayly die.
Tearing thee off, my souls best part,
Fate could not choose but break my heart.
Those arrows, which thou shot'st did prove,
The arrows of our mutual love.

7

Most pleasant hast thou been to me:
No Woman ever lov'd, like thee.
W'had more then Marriage-union;
Our souls had copulation.
Our heart-blood was so mixt, that we
Were 'kin by Consanguinity.
Thus't could not be thou shouldst be slain,
And I not feel the utmost pain.
Thy fate strikes at me: in thy knell,
Methinks I hear my Passing-bell.
I scarce survive! with sighs disturb'd my breath,
Seems to be seiz'd on by the pangs of Death.