The Works of Mr. John Oldham | ||
149
SOME VERSE Written in Septemb. 1676.
Presenting a Book to COSMELIA.
Go, humble Gift, go to that matchless Saint,Of whom thou only wast a Copy meant:
And all, that's read in thee, more richly find
Compriz'd in the fair Volume of her mind;
That living System, where are fully writ
All those high Morals, which in Books we meet:
Easie, as in soft Air, there writ they are,
Yet firm, as if in Brass they graven were.
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As dull Divines, and holy Canters do;
She acts what they only in Pulpits prate,
And Theory to Practice does translate:
Nor her own Actions more obey her Will,
Than that obeys strict Virtues dictates still:
Yet does not Virtue from her Duty flow,
But she is good, because she will be so:
Her Virtue scorns at a low pitch to flie,
Tis all free Choice, nought of Necessity:
By such soft Rules are Saints above confin'd,
Such is the Tie, which them to Good does bind.
The scatter'd Glories of her happy Sex
In her bright Soul as in their Center mix:
And all that they possess but by Retail,
She hers by just Monopoly can call:
Whose sole Example does more Virtues shew,
Than Schoolmen ever taught, or ever knew.
No Act did e're within her Practice fall,
Which for the atonement of a Bush could call:
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But what a Saint at her last gasp might hear:
Scarcely her Thoughts have ever sullied been
With the least print, or stain of native Sin:
Devout she is, as holy Hermits are,
Who share their time 'twixt Extasie, and Prayer:
Modest, as infant Roses in their Bloom,
Who in a Blush their fragrant Lives consume:
So chaste, the Dead themselves are only more,
Who lie divorc'd from Objects, and from Power:
So pure, could Virtue in a Shape appear,
'Twould chuse to have no other Form, but Her:
So much a Saint, I scarce dare call her so,
For fear to wrong her with a name too low:
Such the Seraphick Brightness of her mind,
I hardly can believe her Womankind:
But think some nobler Being does appear,
Which to instruct the World, has lest the Sphere,
And condescends to wear a Body here.
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The greater Art by being form'd below;
Sure Heaven preserv'd her by the Fall uncurs'd,
To tell how good the Sex was made at first.
The Works of Mr. John Oldham | ||