Page:The Works of Abraham Cowley - volume 2 (ed. Aikin) (1806).djvu/101

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IMPOSSIBILITIES.
85
True lovers oft by Fortune are envied;
Oft earth and hell against them strive;
But Providence engages on their side,
And a good end at last does give:
At last, just men and lovers always thrive.

As stars (not powerful else) when they conjoin,
Change, as they please, the world's estate;
So thy heart in conjunction with mine
Shall our own fortunes regulate;
And to our stars themselves prescribe a fate.

'T would grieve me much to find some bold romance,
That should two kind examples shew,
Which before us in wonders did advance;
Not that I thought that story true,
But none should Fancy more, than I would Do.

Through spite of our worst enemies, thy friends;
Through local banishment from thee;
Through the loud thoughts of less-concerning ends,
As easy shall my passage be,
As was the amorous youth's o'er Helle's sea:

In vain the winds, in vain the billows, roar:
In vain the stars their aid deny'd;
He saw the Sestian tower on th' other shore;
Shall th' Hellespont our loves divide?
No, not the Atlantick ocean's boundless tide.