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e soule is musicke, and doth therefore joy In accents musicall, which he that hates With points of discord is together tyed, And barkes at _Reason_, Consonant in sense. Divine _Eugenia_, beares the ocular forme Of musicke, and of _Reason_, and presents The soule exempt from flesh in flesh inflam'd[31]; Who must not love her then, that loves his soule? To her I write; my friend, the starre[32] of friends Will needs have my strange lines greet her strange eies And for her sake ile power my poore Soule forth In floods of inke; but did not his kinde hand Barre me with violent grace, I wood consume In the white flames of her impassionate love, Ere my harsh lipps shood vent the odorous blaze. For I am desperate of all worldly joyes, And there was never man so harsh to men. When I am fullest of digested life I seeme a livelesse _Embrion_ to all, Each day rackt up in night-like Funerall. Sing, good _Horatio_, whilst I sigh, and write. _Canto. The Letter. Suffer him to love that suffers not loving; my love is without passion, and therefore free from alteration._ Prose is too harsh, and Verse is Poetry. Why shood I write; then? merrit[33] clad in inke Is but a mourner, and as good as naked. I will not write, my friend shall speake for me. Sing one stave more, my good _Horatio_. _Canto_. I must remember I know whom I love A dame of learning, and of life exempt From all the idle fancies of her Sex, And this, that to an other dame wood seeme Perplext and foulded in a rudelesse[34] vaile, Will be more cleere then ballads to her eye. Ile write, if but to satisfie my friend. Your third staunce sweet _Horatio_, and no more. _Canto_. How vainele doe I offer my strange love? I marry, and bid states, and entertaine Ladies with tales, and jests, and Lords with newes, And keepe a House to feast _Acteons_ hounds That eate their Master, and let idle guests Draw me from serious search of things divine? To bid them sit, and welcome, and take care To sooth their pallats with choyce kitchin-stuff, As all must doe that marry, and keepe House, And then looke on the left side of my yoake Or on the right perhaps, and see my wife Drawe in a quite repugnant course from me, Busied to starch her French purles, and her puffs, When I am in my _Anima reflexa. Quid est faelicitas? quae origo rerum_? And make these beings that are knowne to be The onely ser
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