IDENTILIN$$ File F01800F 1654 mf M.E. 5-15-87 018.00F.0HE %1Elegie on his Mistris%2. 018.00F.001 BY our first strange and fatall interview 018.00F.002 By all desires which thereof did ensue, 018.00F.003 By our long starving hopes, by that remorse 018.00F.004 Which my words masculine, perswasive force 018.00F.005 Begot in thee, and by the memory 018.00F.006 Of hurts, which spies and rivals threatned me, 018.00F.007 I calmely beg. But by thy fathers wrath, 018.00F.008 By all paines, which want and divorcement hath, 018.00F.009 I conjure thee, and all the oathes which I 018.00F.010 And thou have sworne to seale joynt constancy, 018.00F.011 Here I unsweare, and oversweare them thus, 018.00F.012 Thou shalt not love by wayes so dangerous. 018.00F.013 Temper, o faire Love, loves impetuous rage, 018.00F.014 Be my true Mistris still, not my faign'd Page; 018.00F.015 I'll go, and, by thy kinde leave, leave behinde 018.00F.016 Thee, onely worthy to nurse in my minde, 018.00F.017 Thirst to come back; o if thou die before, 018.00F.018 My soule from other lands to thee shall soare, 018.00F.019 Thy (else Almighty) beauty cannot move 018.00F.020 Rage from the Seas, nor thy love teach them love, 018.00F.021 Nor tame wilde Boreas harshnesse; Thou hast read 018.00F.022 How roughly he in pieces shivered 018.00F.023 Faire Orithea, whom he swore he lov'd. 018.00F.024 Fall ill or good, 'tis madnesse to have prov'd 018.00F.025 Dangers unurg'd; Feed on this flatterie, 018.00F.026 That absent Lovers one in th'other be. 018.00F.027 Dissemble nothing, not a boy, nor change 018.00F.028 Thy bodies habit, nor minde, be not strange 018.00F.029 To thy self onely. All will spie in thy face 018.00F.030 A blushing womanly discovering grace. 018.00F.031 Richly cloath'd Apes, are call'd Apes, and as soone 018.00F.032 Eclips'd as bright we call the Moone the Moone. 018.00F.033 Men of France, changeable Chamelions, 018.00F.034 Spittles of diseases, shops of fashions, 018.00F.035 Loves fuellers, and the rightest company 018.00F.036 Of Players, which upon the worlds stage be, 018.00F.037 Will quickly know thee, and no lesse, alas! 018.00F.038 Th'indifferent Italian, as we passe 018.00F.039 His warme land, well content to thinke thee Page, 018.00F.040 Will hunt thee with such lust, and hideous rage, 018.00F.041 As %1Lots%2 faire guests were vext. But none of these 018.00F.042 Nor spungy hydroptique Dutch shall thee displease, 018.00F.043 If thou stay here. O stay here, for, for thee 018.00F.044 England is onely a worthy Gallerie, 018.00F.045 To walk in expectation, till from thence 018.00F.046 Our greatest King call thee to his presence. 018.00F.047 When I am gone, dreame me some happinesse, 018.00F.048 Nor let thy lookes our long hid love confesse, 018.00F.049 Nor praise, nor dispraise me, nor blesse, nor curse, 018.00F.050 Openly loves force, nor in bed fright thy Nurse 018.00F.051 With midnights startings, crying out, oh, oh, 018.00F.052 Nurse, o my love is slaine, I saw him go 018.00F.053 O're the white Alpes alone; I saw him, I, 018.00F.054 Assail'd, fight, taken, stabb'd, bleed, fall, and die. 018.00F.055 Augure me better chance, except dread %1Iove%2 018.00F.056 Thinke it enough for me to have had thy love. 018.00F.0SSom 018.00F.0$$om