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Home  »  The Poems of John Donne  »  The Damp

John Donne (1572–1631). The Poems of John Donne. 1896.

Songs and Sonnets

The Damp

WHEN I am dead, and doctors know not why,

And my friends’ curiosity

Will have me cut up to survey each part,

When they shall find your picture in my heart,

You think a sudden damp of love

Will thorough all their senses move,

And work on them as me, and so prefer

Your murder to the name of massacre,

Poor victories; but if you dare be brave,

And pleasure in your conquest have,

First kill th’ enormous giant, your Disdain;

And let th’ enchantress Honour, next be slain;

And like a Goth or Vandal rise,

Deface records and histories

Of your own arts and triumphs over men,

And without such advantage kill me then,

For I could muster up, as well as you,

My giants, and my witches too,

Which are vast Constancy and Secretness;

But these I neither look for nor profess;

Kill me as woman, let me die

As a mere man; do you but try

Your passive valour, and you shall find then,

Naked you have odds enough of any man.