[Page 79]

To Cynthia.

A SONG.

I.
1 BORN with the Vices of my kind
2 I were Inconstant too;
3 Dear Cynthia, could I rambling find
4 More Beauty than in you:
II.
5 The rowling Surges of my Blood,
6 By virtue now ebb'd low;
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7 Should a new Shower encrease the Flood,
8 Too soon would over flow.
III.
9 But frailty when thy Face I see,
10 Does modestly retire;
11 Uncommon must her Graces be,
12 Whose look can bound desire.
IV.
13 Not to my Virtue, but thy Power
14 This Constancy is due,
15 When change it self can give no more,
16 'Tis easie to be true.

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Title (in Source Edition): To Cynthia. A 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. 79-80. [16],207,[1]p. (ESTC R17889) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [Harding C 1197 (1)].)

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