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the two MSS. THE HOURGLASSE. Doe but consider this small dust running in this glasse, By atoms moved; Would you believe that this the body ever was Of one that loved; Who in his mistresse flames playing like a fly, Burnt to cinders by her eye? Yes! and in death as life unblest, To have it exprest Even ashes of lovers have no rest. I also enclose a copy of another poem I have discovered, which appears to me very curious, and, from the date, written the very year of the visit of Prince Charles and Buckingham to the court of Spain. Has it ever been printed, and who is the author? What sodaine change hath dark't of late The glory of the Arcadian state? The fleecy flocks refuse to feede The Lambes to play, the Ewes to breede The altars make(s) the offeringes burne That Jack and Tom may safe returne. The Springe neglectes his course to keepe, The Ayre continual stormes do weepe, The pretty Birdes disdaine to singe, The Maides to smile, the woods to springe, The Mountaines droppe, the valleys morne Till Jack and Tom do safe returne. What may that be that mov'd this woe? Whose want afflicts Arcadia so? The hope of Greece, the proppe of artes, Was prinly Jack, the joy of hartes. And Tom was to his Royall Paw His trusty swayne, his chiefest maw. The loftye Toppes of Menalus Did shake with winde from Hesperus, Whose sweete delicious Ayre did fly Through all the Boundes of Arcady, Which mov'd a vaine in Jack and Tom To see the coast the winde came from. This winde was love, which Princes state To Pages turn, but who can hate Where equall fortune love procures, Or equall love success assures? So virtuous Jack shall bring from Greece The Beautyous prize, the Golden fleece. Love is a world of many paines, Where coldest hills, and hottest playnes, With barren rockes and fertill fieldes By turne despaire and comforte yeldes; But who can doubt of prosperous lucke Where Love and fortune both conducte? Thy Grandsire great, and father too, Were thine examples thus to doe, Whose brave attempts, in heate of love, Both France and Denmark did approve. For Jack and Tom do nothing newe When Love and Fortune they pursue. Kind shepheardes that have lov'd them long, Be not rasfe in censuringe wronge, Correct your feares, leave of t
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