For God’s sake hold your tongue, and let me
love,
Or chide my palsy, or my gout,
My five gray hairs, or ruined
fortune, flout,
With wealth your state, your mind with arts
improve,
Take you a course, get you a place,
Observe His
Honor, or His Grace,
Or the King’s real, or his stamped
face
Contemplate; what you will, approve,
So you will let me
love.
Alas, alas, who’s injured by my love?
What merchant’s ships
have my sighs drowned?
Who says my tears have overflowed his
ground?
When did my colds a forward spring remove?
When did
the heats which my veins fill
Add one man to the plaguy bill?
Soldiers find wars, and lawyers find out still
Litigious men, which
quarrels move,
Though she and I do love.
Call us what you will, we
are made such by love;
Call her one, me another fly,
We’re tapers too,
and at our own cost die,
And we in us find the eagle and the
dove.
The phoenix riddle hath more wit
By us: we two being
one, are it.
So, to one neutral thing both sexes fit.
We die and rise
the same, and prove
Mysterious by this love.
We can die by it, if
not live by love,
And if unfit for tombs and hearse
Our legend be, it
will be fit for verse;
And if no piece of chronicle we
prove,
We’ll build in sonnets pretty rooms;
As well a well-wrought
urn becomes
The greatest ashes, as half-acre tombs
, And by these hymns,
all shall approve
Us canonized for love:
And thus invoke us: You whom
reverend love
Made one another’s hermitage;
You, to whom love was
peace, that now is rage;
Who did the whole world’s soul contract, and
drove
Into the glasses of your eyes
(So made such mirrors,
and such spies,
That they did all to you epitomize)
Countries, towns,
courts: Beg from above
A pattern of your love!
(1633)
The Canonization/ 封圣 -- John Donne/约翰·邓恩
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