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 Odes  (1619)
 
 TO  HIS  VALENTINE
 
 
 | MUSE bid the morn awake, Sad winter now declines,
 Each bird doth choose a make;1
 This day's Saint Valentine's;
 For that good bishop's sake
 Get up and let us see,
 What beauty it shall be
 That fortune us assigns.
 
 But lo, in happy hour,
 The place wherein she lies,
 In yonder climbing tow'r,
 Gilt by the glitt'ring rise;
 O Jove! that in a show'r,
 As once that thund'rer did,
 When he in drops lay hid,
 That I could her surprise!
 
 Her canopy I'll draw,
 With spangled plumes bedight,
 No mortal ever saw
 So ravishing a sight;
 That it the gods might awe,
 And powerfully transpierce
 The globy universe,
 Out-shooting ev'ry light.
 
 My lips I'll softly lay
 Upon her heavenly cheek,
 Dyed like the dawning day,
 As polish'd ivory sleek:
 And in her ear I'll say:
 O, thou bright morning star,
 Tis I that come so far,
 My Valentine to seek.
 
 Each little bird, this tide,
 Doth choose her loved pheer,2
 Which constantly abide
 In wedlock all the year,
 As nature is their guide:
 So may we two be true
 This year nor change for new,
 As turtles3 coupled were.
 
 The sparrow, swan, the dove,
 Tho' Venus' birds they be,
 Yet are they not for love
 So absolute as we:
 For reason us doth move;
 They but by billing4 woo:
 Then try what we can do,
 To whom each sense is free.
 
 Which we have more than they,
 By livelier organs sway'd,
 Our appetite each way
 More by our sense obey'd:
 Our passions to display
 This season us doth fit;
 Then let us follow it,
 As nature us doth lead.
 
 One kiss in two let's break,
 Confounded with the touch;
 But half words let us speak,
 Our lips employ'd so much,
 Until we both grow weak;
 With sweetness of thy breath,
 O smother me to death;
 Long let our joys be such.
 
 Let's laugh at them that choose
 Their Valentines by lot;
 To wear their names that use,
 Whom idly they have got:
 Such poor choice we refuse;
 Saint Valentine befriend,
 We thus this morn may spend,
 Else, Muse, awake her not.
 
 
 
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 [AJ Notes:
 1. make, "mate".
 2. pheer, fere, spouse.
 3. turtles, turtledoves.
 4. billing, kissing (of doves).]
 
 
 
 
 Source:
 Beeching, H. C., ed.  A Selection from the Poetry of Samuel Daniel & Michael Drayton.
 London: J. M. Dent & Co., 1899. 92-94.
 
 
 
 
 
 
	
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 Persons of Interest
 Visit Encyclopedia
 
 
 Historical Events
 Field of the Cloth of Gold, 1520
 Pilgrimage of Grace, 1536
 The Babington Plot, 1586
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 Elizabethan Theatre
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 Images of London:
 London in the time of Henry VII. MS. Roy. 16 F. ii.
 London, 1510, the earliest view in print
 Map of England from Saxton's Descriptio Angliae, 1579
 Location Map of Elizabethan London
 Plan of the Bankside, Southwark, in Shakespeare's time
 Detail of Norden's Map of the Bankside, 1593
 Bull and Bear Baiting Rings from the Agas Map (1569-1590, pub. 1631)
 Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596
 Westminster in the Seventeenth Century, by Hollar
 Visscher's Panoramic View of London, 1616. COLOR
 
 
 
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