Thomas Humphry Ward, ed. The English Poets. 1880–1918.rnVol. I. Early Poetry: Chaucer to Donne
Sir John Davies (15701626)Extracts from Nosce Teipsum: The Soul Compared to a Virgin Wooed in Marriage
A
Of divers princes, who do neighbour near;
On none of them can fix a constant thought,
Though she to all do lend a gentle ear:
Whom of great worth and power she hears to be;
If she be woo’d but by ambassador,
Or but his letters, or his pictures see:
Into the kingdom where her spouse doth reign;
Her eyes shall see what she conceiv’d in thought,
Himself, his state, his glory, and his train.
She woo’d and tempted is ten thousand ways,
By these great powers, which on the earth bear sway;
The wisdom of the world, wealth, pleasure, praise:
These do by fits her fantasy possess;
But she distastes them all within a while,
And in the sweetest finds a tediousness.
She once do fix her humble loving thought;
Who by His picture, drawn in every thing,
And sacred messages, her love hath sought;
This honey tasted still, is ever sweet;
The pleasure of her ravished thought is such,
As almost here she with her bliss doth meet:
This is her sovereign good, and perfect bliss:
Her longings, wishings, hopes all finished be,
Her joys are full, her motions rest in this.
There doth she manna eat, and nectar drink;
That Presence doth such high delights present,
As never tongue could speak, nor heart could think.