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A poem by Richard Lovelace |
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You Are Deceiv'd [ode] |
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Title: You Are Deceiv'd [ode] Author: Richard Lovelace [More Titles by Lovelace] I. You are deceiv'd; I sooner may, dull fair, II. What chains but are too light for me, should I III. That strange force on the ignoble hath renown; IV. How bright the fair Paulina<4> did appear, Notes: <1> The constellation so called. In old drawings Cassiopeia is represented as a woman sitting in a chair with a branch in her hand, and hence the allusion here. Dixon, in his CANIDIA, 1683, part i. p. 35, makes his witches say:--
<2> William Habington published his poems under the name of CASTARA, a fictitious appellation signifying the daughter of Lord Powis. This lady was eventually his wife. The first edition of CASTARA appeared in 1634, the second in 1635, and the third in 1640. <3> Waller's SACHARISSA, i.e. Lady Dorothy Sydney. <4> Lollia Paulina, who first married Memmius Regulus, and subsequently the Emperor Caligula, from both of whom she was divorced. She inherited from her father enormous wealth. [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |