University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
The Poetical Works of William Drummond of Hawthornden

With "A Cypresse Grove": Edited by L. E. Kastner

expand sectionI. 
collapse sectionII. 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
collapse sectionI. 
 i. 
 ii. 
 iii. 
 iv. 
 v. 
 vi. 
 vii. 
 viii. 
 ix. 
 x. 
 xi. 
 xii. 
 xiii. 
 xiv. 
 xv. 
 xvi. 
 xvii. 
 xviii. 
 xix. 
 xx. 
 xxi. 
 xxii. 
 xxiii. 
 xxiv. 
 xxv. 
 xxvi. 
 xxvii. 
 xxviii. 
 xxix. 
 xxx. 
 xxxi. 
 xxxii. 
 xxxiii. 
 xxxiv. 
 xxxv. 
 xxxvi. 
 xxxvii. 
expand sectionii. 
expand sectionIII. 
expand sectioniv. 
expand section 

v.

[Great Queene whom to the liberall Heauens propine]

Great Queene whom to the liberall Heauens propine
All what their force or influence can impart;
Whose Vertues rare, whose Beauties braue but art
Makes thee aboue thy sacred sex to shine.
Resembling much those Goddesses diuine;
The thundrers Bride for thy heroicke hart,
Cytherȩa for proportion of each part,
Joues braine-born gyrle for judgment and ingyne.
But now I feare my flatrie flows to farre;
Three Goddesses in one are rarelie seene,
Nor can a goddesse be vngrate—you are.
What rests then but, a Woman, and a Queene:
A Woman in vnconstancie and change,
A Queene because so statlie & so strange.