The Definition of Love
- My Love is of a birth as rare
- As 'tis for object strange and high
- It was begotten by despair
- Upon Impossibility.
- Magnanimous Despair alone
- Could show me so divine a thing,
- Where feeble hope could n'er have flown
- But vainly flapt its Tinsel Wing.
- And yet I quickly might arrive
- Where my extended Soul is fixt,
- But Fate does Iron weedges drive,
- And alwaies crouds it self betwixt.
- For Fate with jealous Eyes does see
- Two perfect Loves; nor lets them close:
- Their union wouldher ruine be,
- And her Tyrannick pow'r despose.
- And therefore her Decrees of Steel
- Us as the distant Poles have plac'd,
- (Though Loves whole World on us doth wheel)
- Not by themselves to be embrac'd.
- Unless the giddy heaven fall,
- And Earth some new Convulsion tear;
- And, us to joyn, the World should all
- Be cram'd into a Planisphere.
- As Lines so Loves oblique may well
- Themselves in every Angle greet:
- But our so truly Paralel,
- Though infinite can neever meet.
- Therefore the Love which us doth bind.
- But Fate so enviously debarrs
- Is the Conjunction of the Mind,
- And Opposition of the Stars.