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- FOR her gait if she be walking,
- Be she sitting I desire her
- For her state's sake, and admire her
- For her wit if she be talking:
- Gait and state and wit approve her;
- For which all and each I love her.
- Be she sullen, I commend her
- For a modest; be she merry,
- For a kind one her prefer I.
- Briefly, everything doth lend her
- So much grace and so approve her
- That for everything I love her.
- William Browne of Tavistock

- GENTLE nymphs, be not refusing,
- Love's neglect is Time's abusing,
- They and Beauty are but lent you,
- Take the one and keep the other;
- Love keeps fresh what age doth smother;
- Beauty gone, you will repent you.
- 'Twill be said when ye have proved,
- Never swains more truly loved;
- Oh then, fly all nice behaviour.
- Pity fain would, as her duty,
- Be attending still on Beauty,
- Let her not be out of favour.
-
from Britannia's Pastorals
- William Browne of Tavistock

- SO shuts the marigold her leaves
- At the departure of the sun;
- So from the honeysuckle sheaves
- The bee goes when the day is done;
- So sits the turtle when she is but one,
- And so all woe, as I since she is gone.
- To some few birds kind Nature hath
- Made all the summer as one day;
- Which once enjoyed, cold winter's wrath
- As night they sleeping pass away.
- Those happy creatures are that know not yet
- The pain to be deprived or to forget.
- I oft have heard men say there be
- Some that with confidence profess
- The helpful Art of Memory;
- But could they teach forgetfulness
- I'd learn, and try what further art could do
- To make me love her and forget her too.
-
from Britannia's Pastorals
- William Browne of Tavistock

- [The Birth of the River Tavis]
- AS I have seen upon a bridal day
- Full many maids clad in their best array,
- In honour of the bride come with their flaskets
- Filled full with flowers: others in wicker baskets
- Bring from the marish* rushes to
o'erspread [marsh]
- The ground whereon to church the lovers tread;
- Whilst that the quaintest youth of all the plain
- Ushers their way with many a piping strain:
- So, as in joy at this fair river's*
birth, [the river Tavis]
- Triton came up a channel with his mirth,
- And called the neighboring nymphs each in her turn
- To pour their pretty rivulets from their urn.
- To wait upon this new-delivered spring,
- Some running through the meadows, with them bring
- Cowslip and mint; and 'tis another's lot
- To light upon some gardener's curious knot,
- Whence she upon her breast, love's sweet repose,
- Doth bring the queen of flowers, the English Rose.
- Some from the fen bring reeds, wild thyme from downs;
- Some from a grove the bay that poets crowns;
- Some from an aged rock the moss hath torn,
- And leaves him naked unto winter's storm;
- Another from her banks, in mere goodwill,
- Brings nutriment for fish, the camomile.
- Thus all bring somewhat, and do overspread
- The way the spring unto the sea doth tread.
-
from Britannia's Pastorals
- William Browne of Tavistock

- NOW that the Spring hath filled our veins
- With kind and active fire,
- And made green liveries for the plains,
- And every grove a choir;
- Sing we a song of merry glee,
- And Bacchus fill the bowl.
- Then here's to thee! And thou to me
- And every thirsty soul.
- Nor care nor sorrow e'er paid debt,
- Nor never shall do mine;
- I have no cradle going yet,
- Not I, by this good wine.
- No wife at home to send for me,
- No hogs are in my ground,
- No suit at law to pay a fee;
- Then round, old jockey, round!
- Shear sheep that have them, cry we still,
- But see that no man 'scape
- To drink of the sherry
- That makes us so merry,
- And plump as the lusty grape.
- William Browne of Tavistock

- SHALL I love again, and try
- If I still must love to lose,
- And make weak mortality
- Give new birth unto my woes?
- No, let me ever live from Love's enclosing,
- Rather than love to live in fear of losing.
- One whom hasty Nature gives
- To the world without his sight,
- Not so discontented lives,
- As a man deprived of light;
- 'Tis knowledge that gives vigour to our woe,
- And not the want but loss that pains us so.
- With the Arabian bird then be
- Both the lover and beloved;
- Be thy lines thy progeny
- By some gracious fair approved;
- So may'st thou live, and be beloved of many,
- Without the fear of loss or want of any.
- William Browne of Tavistock

- WELCOME, welcome, do I sing,
- Far more welcome than the spring;
- He that parteth from you never
- Shall enjoy a spring for ever.
- Love, that to the voice is near,
- Breaking from your iv'ry pale,
- Need not walk abroad to hear
- The delightful nightingale.
- Welcome, welcome, then I sing, etc.
- Love, that looks still on your eyes
- Though the winter have begun
- To benumb our arteries,
- Shall not want the summer's sun.
- Welcome, welcome, then I sing, etc.
- Love, that still may see your cheeks
- Where all rareness still reposes,
- Is a fool if e'er he seeks
- Other lilies, other roses.
- Welcome, welcome, then I sing, etc.
- Love, to whom your soft lip yields,
- And perceives your breath in kissing,
- All the odours of the fields
- Never, never shall be missing.
- Welcome, welcome, then I sing, etc.
- Love, that question would anew
- What fair Eden was of old,
- Let him rightly study you
- And a brief of that behold.
- Welcome, welcome, then I sing, etc.
- William Browne of Tavistock

- UNDERNEATH this sable hearse
- Lies the subject of all verse,
- Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother;
- Death, ere thou hast slain another
- Fair and learned and good as she,
- Time shall throw a dart at thee.
- William Browne of Tavistock

- A ROSE, as fair as ever saw the north,
- Grew in a little garden all alone;
- A sweeter flower did Nature ne'er put forth,
- Nor fairer garden yet was never known.
- The maidens danced about it more and more,
- And learned bards of it their ditties made;
- The nimble fairies by the pale-faced moon
- Watered the root and kissed her pretty shade.
- But well-a-day, the gardener careless grew,
- The maids and fairies both were kept away,
- And in a drought the caterpillars threw
- Themselves upon the bud and every spray.
- God shield the stock! if Heaven send no supplies,
- The fairest blossom of the garden dies.
- William Browne of Tavistock

- DOWN in a valley, by a forest's side,
- Near where the crystal Thames rolls on her waves,
- I saw a mushroom stand in haughty pride,
- As if the lilies grew to be his slaves.
- The gentle daisy, with her silver crown,
- Worn in the breast of many a shepherd's lass;
- The humble violet, that lowly down
- Salutes the gay nymphs as they trimly pass:
- These, with many more, methought, complained
- That Nature should those needless things produce,
- Which not alone the sun from others gained,
- But turn it wholly to their proper use.
- I could not choose but grieve that Nature made
- So glorious flowers to live in such a shade.
- William Browne of Tavistock

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