A Apostacy Of One, And But One Lady Poem by Richard Lovelace

A Apostacy Of One, And But One Lady

Rating: 2.6


I.
That frantick errour I adore,
And am confirm'd the earth turns round;
Now satisfied o're and o're,
As rowling waves, so flowes the ground,
And as her neighbour reels the shore:
Finde such a woman says she loves;
She's that fixt heav'n, which never moves.

II.
In marble, steele, or porphyrie,
Who carves or stampes his armes or face,
Lookes it by rust or storme must dye:
This womans love no time can raze,
Hardned like ice in the sun's eye,
Or your reflection in a glasse,
Which keepes possession, though you passe.

III.
We not behold a watches hand
To stir, nor plants or flowers to grow;
Must we infer that this doth stand,
And therefore, that those do not blow?
This she acts calmer, like Heav'ns brand,
The stedfast lightning, slow loves dart,
She kils, but ere we feele the smart.

IV.
Oh, she is constant as the winde,
That revels in an ev'nings aire!
Certaine as wayes unto the blinde,
More reall then her flatt'ries are;
Gentle as chaines that honour binde,
More faithfull then an Hebrew Jew,
But as the divel not halfe so true.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM

Three developmentalists and the Lourde is the Doctrines of Jean Piaget. The Alphabet is the soup of honors that one spoon to many sugars spell Avogadro ot the fork redemptiono for their united Absolambabuzar Jung, are the System Internation from Galapagos to the eternal Sinai Peninsula's Ark of the Glorious Covenants.

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