Richard Lovelace

A Paradox

I.
 
TIS true the beauteous Starre
   To which I first did bow
Burnt quicker, brighter far
   Then that which leads me now ;
       Which shines with more delight:
       For gazing on that light
       So long, neere lost my sight.
 
                         II.
 
Through foule, we follow
   For had the World one face
And Earth been bright as Ayre,
   We had knowne neither place ;
       Indians smell not their Neast:
       A Swisse or Finne tastes best,
       The Spices of the East.
 
                         III.
 
So from the glorious Sunne,
   Who to his height hath got,
With what delight we runne
   To some black Cave, or Grot!
       And Heav’nly Sydney you
       Twice read, had rather view
       Some odde Romance, so new.
 
                         IV.
 
The God that constant keepes
   Unto his Dieties,
Is poore in Joyes, and sleepes
   Imprison’d in the skies:
       This knew the wisest, who
       From Juno stole, below
       To love a Beare, or Cow.
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