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Poems consisting of Epistles and Epigrams, Satyrs, Epitaphs and Elogies, Songs and Sonnets

With variety of other drolling Verses upon several Subjects. Composed by no body must know whom, and are to be had every body knows where, and for somebody knows what [by John Eliot]
 

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A Sonnet.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Sonnet.

[Love, be as froward as thou wilt]

Love, be as froward as thou wilt,
I ask no Mercy for my guilt;
Though I confess I have deny'd
Thy Laws of Cruelty and Pride.
Lay on thy Punishments, I fear
Thee least when most I bear.
Spend all thy shafts at me, and cry
To Mother for a new supply:
Thy Bowstrings break, let her repair
Them up again with her own Hair,
And give a fresh charge on me. I
Can neither beg relief nor fly.
Yet to the hazard of thy Crown,
If I should perish by thy frown,
Where I a perfect Rebell fall,
The world shall me a Martyr call.
And (I hope) in revenge of me
Abolish quite thy Laws and thee.