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The Snail

Wise emblem of our politic world,

Sage snail, within thine own self curl'd;

Instruct me softly to make haste,

Whilst these my feet go slowly fast.    Compendious snail! thou seem'st to me,

Large Euclid's strict epitome;

And in each diagram dost

Thee from the point unto the ring;

A figure now triangular,

An oval now, and now a square;

And then a serpentine dost crawl,

Now a straight line, now crook'd, now all.  Preventing rival of the day,

Th'art up and openest thy ray,

And ere the morn cradles the

Th'art broke into a beauteous noon.

Then when the sun sups in the deep,

Thy silver horns ere Cynthia's peep;

And thou from thine own liquid

New Phoebus heav'st thy pleasant head.    Who shall a name for thee create,

Deep riddle of mysterious state?

Bold Nature that gives common

To all products of seas and earth,

Of thee, as earthquakes, is afraid,

Nor will thy dire deliv'ry aid.    Thou thine own daughter then, and sire,

That son and mother art entire,

That big still with thy self dost go,

And liv'st an aged embryo;

That like the cubs of India,

Thou from thyself a while dost play;

But frighted with a dog or gun,

In thine own belly thou dost run,

And as thy house was thine own womb,

So thine own womb concludes thy tomb.    But now I must (analyz'd king)Thy economic virtues sing;

Thou great stay'd husband still within,

Thou, thee, that's thine dost discipline;

And when thou art to progress bent,

Thou mov'st thy self and tenement,

As warlike Scythians travell'd,

Remove your men and city too;

Then after a sad dearth and rain,

Thou scatterest thy silver train;

And when the trees grow nak'd and old,

Thou clothest them with cloth of gold,

Which from thy bowels thou dost spin,

And draw from the rich mines within.    Now hast thou chang'd thee saint; and

Thy self a fane that's cupola'd;

And in thy wreathed cloister

Walkest thine own grey friar too;

Strict, and lock'd up, th'art hood all o'er,

And ne'er eliminat'st thy door.

On salads thou dost feed severe,

And 'stead of beads thou dropp'st a tear;

And when to rest, each calls the bell,  Thou sleep'st within thy marble cell,

Where in dark contemplation plac'd,

The sweets of nature thou dost taste;

Who now with time thy days resolve,

And in a jelly thee dissolve,

Like a shot star, which doth

Upward, and rarify the air.

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Richard Lovelace

Richard Lovelace (9 December 1617 – 1657) was an English poet in the seventeenth century. He was a cavalier poet who fought on behalf of the kin…

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