To Amoret, Of the Difference 'Twixt Him and Other Lovers, and What True Love Is

by Henry Vaughan

Mark, when the evening's cooler wings
    Fan the afflicted air, how the faint sun,
        Leaving undone,
        What he begun,
Those spurious flames suck'd up from slime and earth
        To their first, low birth,
        Resigns, and brings.

They shoot their tinsel beams and vanities,
    Threading with those false fires their way;
        But as you stay
        And see them stray,
You lose the flaming track, and subtly they
        Languish away,
        And cheat your eyes.

Just so base, sublunary lovers' hearts
    Fed on loose profane desires,
        May for an eye
        Or face comply:
But those remov'd, they will as soon depart,
        And show their art,
        And painted fires.

Whilst I by pow'rful love, so much refin'd,
    That my absent soul the same is,
        Careless to miss
        A glance or kiss,
Can with those elements of lust and sense
        Freely dispense,
        And court the mind.

Thus to the North the loadstones move,
    And thus to them th' enamour'd steel aspires:
        Thus Amoret
        I do affect;
And thus by wingèd beams, and mutual fire,
        Spirits and stars conspire:
        And this is Love.


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