[Page 77]

A SONG.

I.
1 I Follow'd Fame and got Renown,
2 I rang'd all o'er the Park and Town,
3 I haunted Plays, and there grew wise,
4 Observing my own modish Vice;
5 Friends and Wine I next did try,
6 Yet I found no solid Joy,
7 Greatest Pleasures seem too small,
8 Till Sylvia made amends for all.
II.
9 But see the state of humane Bliss,
10 How vain our best Contentment is,
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11 As of my Joy she was the Chief,
12 So was she too my greatest Grief,
13 Fate, that I might be undone,
14 Dooms this Angel but for one,
15 And, alas, too plain I see,
16 That I am not the happy he.

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Title (in Source Edition): A SONG.
Themes:
Genres: song

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D'Urfey, Thomas, 1653-1723. New poems, consisting of satyrs, elegies, and odes together with a choice collection of the newest court songs set to musick by the best masters of the age / all written by Mr. D'Urfey. London: Printed for J. Bullord ... and A. Roper ..., 1690, pp. 77-78. [16],207,[1]p. (ESTC R17889) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [Harding C 1197 (1)].)

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