Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, TO ELLINDA UPON HIS LATE RECOVERY; A PARADOX, by RICHARD LOVELACE



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Classic and Contemporary Poetry

TO ELLINDA UPON HIS LATE RECOVERY; A PARADOX, by                 Poet Analysis     Poet's Biography
First Line: How I grieve that I am well!
Last Line: And for love compell'd to wander.


HOW I grieve that I am well!
All my health was in my sickness;
Go then, Destiny, and tell
Very death is in this quickness.

Such a fate rules over me,
That I glory when I languish,
And do bless the remedy
That doth feed, not quench my anguish.

'Twas a gentle warmth that ceas'd
In the vizard of a fever;
But I fear, now I am eas'd,
All the flames, since I must leave her.

Joys, though wither'd, circled me,
When unto her voice inured,
Like those who by harmony
Only can be throughly cured.

Sweet, sure, was that malady,
Whilst the pleasant angel hover'd,
Which ceasing, they are all, as I,
Angry that they are recover'd.

And as men in hospitals,
That are maim'd, are lodg'd and dined;
But when once their danger falls,
Ah, th' are healed to be pined!

Fainting so, I might before
Sometime have the leave to hand her,
But lusty, am beat out of door,
And for love compell'd to wander.





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