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death_n life_n lord_n sin_n 21,606 5 4.7055 4 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A70762 The illustrious wife: viz. that excellent poem, Sir Thomas Overburie's wife illustrated by Giles Oldisworth, nephew to the same Sir T.O. Oldisworth, Giles, 1619-1678.; Overbury, Thomas, Sir, 1581-1613. Sir Thomas Overburie his wife. aut 1673 (1673) Wing O608A; ESTC R214465 5,062 55

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Whence a Maid ravish'd more a Virgin is Then that Maid which hath onely wish'd amiss Lust onely by religion is with-stood Lust Object is with-out its Strength within Moralty resists but in cold blood Respect of Credit feareth Shame not Sin But no place dark enough for such Offence She findes that 's watch'd by her own Conscience Now may I trust her Body with her Mind Yea here-upon secure I nere shall rue The pangs of Jealousie yet Love doth find More pain to doubt then know she is Vn-true For Patience is the Cure of Evils-known But Doubt is still impatient Doubt hath none Be then that Thought once stirr'd 't will never die Nor will my greif more mild by custom prove Untill her new life my Fears satisfie Th' Anguish is more or less as is my Love This punishment to Jealousie is due That it may prove one False can't prove one True Suspicion may the Will of Lust restrain Goodness prevents from having such a will A Wife that 's Good doth Chast and more contain Chastitie is but Abstinence from ill And is though in a Wife that 's bad the best Of qualities in a Good Wife the least Prudence must keep us Chast not Jealousie Such lawfull things to be avoided are As may the cause of things unlawfull be Lust ere it hurts is best descri'd a far Lust is a sin of two He that is sure Of either person is of both secure Give me next Good an Vunderstanding Wife By Nature wise not learned by much Art Some Knowledg in her will to all my life More Scope of Conversation impart Besides 't will in-bred virtue fortifie They are most firmly good who best know why A passive Vnderstanding to conceive And judgment to discern I wish to find Beyond these all as hazardous I leave Learning and pregnant witt in Woman-kind What they find malleable that they make frail And do not add more Ballast but more Sail. Domestick Charge doth best that Sex befit Contiguous Business so to fix the Mind That leisure space for Fancies not admit Their leisure 't is corrupteth Woman-kind Else being plac'd from many Vices free They had to Heaven a speedier way then we Bookes are a part of Mans prerogative In formall Ink they Thoughts and Voices hold That we to them our best spare houres may give And make Time present travel that of old Our life Fame peiceth longer at the end And Bookes our life do farther backward send As Good and Knowing let her be Discreet This to the others Substance lustre brings Discretion doth consider what is meet Goodness but what is lawfull only Things Not Circumstances Without this even holy Mens learning and witt are curious folly To keep their Name since 't is in others hands Needs Discretion Their Credit is by farr More frail then Them On likelihoods it stands And hard to be disprove'd Lusts slanders are Their Carriage not their Chastitie alone Must keep their Name chaste from Suspicion Womens Behaviour is a surer Barr Then is their No This fairely doth denie Without denying Hereby fond men are Kept even from Hope In part too blam is she Which hath without consent bin onely tride He comes too neer that comes to be denied Now since a Woman we to marrie are A Soul and Body not a Soul alone When one is Good then be the other Fair Beautie is Health and Beautie both in one Be she so Fair that she most Wives contain So Fair that change can yeeld to Me no gain So Fair at least let me imagine Her That Thought to me is Truth Opinion Cannot in matter of Opinion err With no eyes shall I see her but mine own And as my heart conceiveth Her to be Such is she to my Sight my Touch and Me. The Face we may the Seat of Beautie call In it a Taste of the whole Bodie lies Nay even a Relish of the Mind with-all And of the Face the life moves in the Eyes So like each other these two Eyes we see That these two Eyes two but in number be Beautie in decent Shape and Colour lies Colours the matter are and Shape the Soul The Soul doth from no single part arise But keeps a just proportion in the whole Such is the pure spirituall harmonie Of every part united in the Eye Love is a kind of Superstition Fearing that Idoll which it self hath fram'd Lust is a Fire which rather from its own Temper then from its Object is enflam'd Beautie is loves object Wom●n lusts to gain Love love requires Lust only to obtain No circumstance doth Beautie beautifie Like gracefull Fashion native Comliness This even getts pardon for Deformitie Beget Art cannot but Art may redress When Nature had fix'd Beantie perfect made Something she left for Motion to adde But let that Motion more to Modestie Tend then t' Assurance Modestie doth set The Face in her just Form from Passions free 'T is both the Minds and Bodies Beautie met But Modestie no Virtue can Eye see This is the Faces onely Chastitie Where Goodness failes there Modestie withstands Hence 't is that Women though they weaker be And their Desires more strong yet in their hands The Chastitie of Men doth often lie Of all sins lusts would sins most common grow All these good parts a perfect Woman make Add Love to me they make a perfect Wife Without her love her Beautie I did take For that of Pictures dead Love gives it life Till now 〈◊〉 Beautie like the Sun did shine 〈…〉 it onely Alive And of this love let Reason Father be And Passion Mother Let it from the one It s Being take from th' other its Degree Self-love which second loves are built upon Will make me if not Her her love regard No man but favours his own worths reward As Good and Wise so be she Fit for me With me to will and Not to will the same My Wife is mine Adopted Self and She As Me so what I love to love must frame 〈◊〉 God to Men in Marriage Wom●● gi●es 〈◊〉 must submit to 〈◊〉 not 〈…〉 FINIS Sir Thomas Overburie his Epitaph written by Him-self THe Span of my daies measur'd here I rest That is my Body but my Soul its Guest Is hence ascended Whither neither Time Nor Faith nor Hope but onely Love can climbe Where being now enlightned she doth know The Truth of all men argue of below Onely this Dust doth here in pawn remain That when the World dissolves She 'l come again G. O. to the Reader THe Husband having well set down his Wife Joynes his own Epitaph next under-neath To wit Though Marriage be a double life That double life is plac'd next door to Death That is To such as neither Flesh controul Nor do to their LORDS CHRIST espouse their Soul But Graves them-selves are made a Marriage-bed To such as die to sin and JESUS wedd Pro 19. 14. 18. 22. A prudent Wife is from the LORD and whosoever findeth her obtaineth a favour from the LORD To him in all his Dispensations be glory forever and ever ascribed Amen Amen FINIS Imprimatur Ex. Aed Lambethani● Martii 16 1672. THO. TOMKYNS