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Marinda

Poems and Translations upon Several Occasions [by Mary Monck]
  

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Canzone.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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 [I]. 
 II. 
 III. 
 IV. 
 V. 
 VI. 
 VII. 
 VIII. 
  
  
  

Canzone.

From Petrarch.

[I.]

Ye limpid Brooks, by whose clear Streams
My Goddess laid her tender Limbs,
Ye gentle Boughs, whose friendly Shade
Gave shelter to the lovely Maid,
Ye Herbs, and Flow'rs, so sweetly prest
By her soft rising snowy Breast,
Ye Zephirs mild, that breath'd around
The place where Love my Heart did wound;
Now at my Summons all appear,
And to my dying Words give ear.

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II.

If then my Destiny requires,
And Heaven with my Fate conspires,
That Love these Eyes shou'd weeping close,
Here let me find a soft Repose.
So Death will less my Soul affright,
And free from dread, my weary Spright
Naked alone will dare t'essay
The still unknown, tho' beaten way;
Pleas'd that her mortal Part will have
So safe a Port, so sweet a Grave.

III.

The cruel Fair, for whom I burn,
May one day to these Shades return,
And smiling with superiour Grace,
Her Lover seek around this Place,
And when instead of me she finds
Some crumbling Dust tost by the Winds,
She may feel Pity in her Breast,
And sighing wish me happy Rest,

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Drying her Eyes with her soft Veil,
Such Tears must sure with Heaven prevail.

IV.

Well I remember how the Flow'rs
Descended from these Boughs in Show'rs,
Encircled in the Fragrant Cloud
She sat, nor 'midst such Glory proud.
These Blossoms to her Lap repair,
These fall upon her flowing Hair,
(Like Pearls enchas'd in Gold they seem)
These on the Ground, these on the Stream;
In giddy Rounds these dancing say,
Here Love and Laura only sway.

V.

In rapt'rous Wonder oft I said,
Sure she in Paradise was made,
Thence sprang that bright Angelick State,
Those Looks, those Words, that Heav'nly Gate,
That Beauteous Smile, that Voice Divine,
Those Graces that around her shine,

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Transported I beheld the Fair,
And sighing cry'd, how came I here?
In Heav'n, amongst th'Immortal blest,
Here let me fix, and ever rest.