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All the workes of Iohn Taylor the Water-Poet

Being Sixty and three in Number. Collected into one Volume by the Author [i.e. John Taylor]: With sundry new Additions, corrected, reuised, and newly Imprinted

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Sonnet. 5.

[Thou fortunes foot-ball, whom she vs'd to tosse]

Thou fortunes foot-ball, whom she vs'd to tosse,
From wrong to wrong, from wo to wo againe:
From griefe rebounding backe to pinching paine,
As't please the blind-fold Dame to blesse or crosse:
But thou, vnmou'd with either gaine or losse,
Nor ioy, nor care, could vexe thy constant braine:
Thou smil'dst at all her buffets with disdaine,
And all her fauours thou esteem'dst as drosse:
Her and her Fauorites thou still didst deeme
Iust as they are, not as they seeme to be:
Her Minions all as fooles thou didst esteeme,
And that's the cause she would not fauour thee:
Then since such reck'ning she of fooles doth make:
Would thou hadst beene one, for her fauours sake.