Tottels Miscellany, 1557
GIVE place, you ladies, and begone! Boast not yourselves at all! For here at hand approacheth
one Whose face will stain you all.
The virtue of her lively looks Excels the precious stone; I wish to have none other books To
read or look upon.
In each of her two crystal eyes Smileth a naked boy; It would you all in heart suffice To see
that lamp of joy.
I think Nature hath lost the mould Where she her shape did take; Or else I doubt if Nature
could So fair a creature make.
She may be well compared Unto the Phoenix kind, Whose like was never seen or heard, That
any man can find.
In life she is Diana chaste, In troth Penelopey; In word and eke in deed steadfast. What will
you more we say?
If all the world were sought so far, Who could find such a wight? Her beauty twinkleth like a
star Within the frosty night.
Her rosial colour comes and goes With such a comely grace, More ruddier, too, than doth the
rose, Within her lively face.
At Bacchus feast none shall her meet, Ne at no wanton play, Nor gazing in an open street, Nor
gadding as a stray.
The modest mirth that she doth use Is mixd with shamefastness; All vice she doth wholly
refuse, And hateth idleness.
O Lord! it is a world to see How virtue can repair, And deck in her such honesty, Whom Nature
made so fair.
Truly she doth so far exceed Our women nowadays, As doth the jeliflower a weed; And more a
thousand ways.
How might I do to get a graff Of this unspotted tree? For all the rest are plain but chaff, Which
seem good corn to be.
This gift alone I shall her give; When death doth what he can, Her honest fame shall ever
live Within the mouth of man. ? by John Heywood
Tottels Miscellany, 1557
SHALL I thus ever long, and be no whit the neare?1 And shall I still complain to thee, the which me will
not hear? Alas! say nay! say nay! and be no more so dumb, But open thou thy manly mouth and say that
thou wilt come: Whereby my heart may think, although I see not thee, That thou wilt comethy word so
swareif thou a live man be. The roaring hugy waves they threaten my poor ghost, And toss thee up and
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