Wit A Sporting In a pleasant Grove Of New Fancies By H. B. [i.e. Henry Bold] |
His Protestation to his Mistris.
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Wit A Sporting In a pleasant Grove Of New Fancies | ||
His Protestation to his Mistris.
Noon, day, and midnight shal at once be seen,Trees at one time shall be both red and green.
Summer and winter shall at one time show
Ripe ears of corn, and up to th'ears in snow:
Seas shall be sandless, Fields be voyd of grass,
Shapeless the world, as when all Chaos was;
Before my dear sweet Love, I will bee
False to my Vow, or fall away from thee.
Wit A Sporting In a pleasant Grove Of New Fancies | ||