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Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.

Stanzas

XIII. Anonymous

LOVE’S a fire ever burning,

Mounting high, though often turning;

Quench it, ye more is flaming;

None can stifle it by taming.

Lust’s a fire, still consuming,

Lighting never, ever fuming;

Quench it, it is straight aswaging;

Give it vent, it’s ever raging.

Love’s a spirit ever acting,

Nought for love, but love exacting;

Boundlesse in its search and notion,

Restlesse in its course and motion.

Lust’s a spirit ever acting

For vile ends, base work exacting,

Lawes impossible affecting;

Nought but blind obedience expecting.

Love’s a starre grosse hearts refining,

Clouded sometimes, and then shining;

And this fortune telling ever,

He who loveth ceaseth never.

Lust’s a wandring starre ne’re shining

For our good, but still designing

With her false lights to deceive us,

And of truth and peace bereave us.

Love’s a river ever flowing,

Fruit and plenty still bestowing;

Wafting us into an ocean

Where we drowne in love’s devotion.

Lust’s a river overflowing

All her banks, to our undoing,

And a sea that’s ever raging—

Neither heat nor thirst aswaging.

Love’s a garden where sweet flowers

Yield their sent and shady bowers,

Ready are to fill with pleasure

Those who to love are at leisure.

Lust’s a garden void of flowers,

Where wild weeds make bainfull bowers;

Fitted to destroy at leisure

Those whose deity is pleasure.

Love’s a fort, whose highest tower

Keeps a strict watch over hower;

Hath its parts so well combining,

As it fears not force nor mining.

Lust’s a fortresse, ever paying

Those who trust it with betraying;

And to yield so quickly signing,

As it feares not force nor mining.

Love’s a temple, where is stor’d

But one saint to be ador’d;

And whose altars feed their fire

With heart single and intire.

Lust’s a temple, where the devill

Under every shape that’s evil

Is ador’d; and whose fires

Black and scorch with foul desires.

Love is musick, where the meeter

Makes the harmony the sweeter;

If yt tell a heavenly story,

Then ye musick turnes to glory.

Lust is musick, where the poet

Contributes so much unto it,

As at ye best what was but madnesse

Ends in anguish and in sadnesse.

Love’s a master, ever pleasing,

Bonds untying, burthens easing;

Chide he may, but never rages;

One whose very work is wages.

Lust is twenty thousand masters,

Breaking heads and giving plaisters;

Fierce and foolish in commanding,

To his bargaine never standing.