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                  <text>Vs

-

SONNET 143. I careful provident. 5 dispatch haste. 5 holds her in
chase runs after her. 8 Not prizing disregarding.
ii thy hope that
which you hope to catch.
thy Will the man you are pursuing, pre­
sumably the poet’s friend (with a quibble on the sense of “carnal desire”).

’

Lo, as a careful housewife runs to catch
One of her feathered creatures broke away,
Sets down her baJae, and makes all swift dispatch
In pursuit of the thing she would have stay;
But
Whilst
if thou
her catch
neglectedf
thy hope,
^il^turn
holds
back
hertoinme
chase,
Cries to catch her whose busy care is bent
To follow that which fli^s before her fac^,
NoTprizing her poor i nt^ ^jfcontent J
So runn^st thou aft^r^a?which flies from thee»
Whilst I thy bab^ chase thee afar behind;

uni’T '•

SONNET 144. I of comfort and despair one which offers comfort and the
other which offers despair. Comfort (the hope for divine mercy) and
despair are in theological terms the forces which vie for man’s soul and
lead to salvation or damnation. 2 suggest me still continually urge me.
4 colour'd ill (a) of dark complexion (b) of evil nature.
6 side the
PASSIONATE PILGRIM, MALONE; Q: (jsjght.” 8 foul pride display of ugliness.
10 directly clearly, unambiguously.
ii But being . . . each friend but
when they are both absent from me, each being friend to the other.
12 one . . . hell i.e. they are engaged in sexual intercourse. 14 Till my
. . . one out until my evil angel has infected my good one with venereal

u Two loves I have, of comfort and ^es^air,
spirits do suggest me still.
better angel is a man right jait.
The worser spirit a woman colour’d
To wih'ineloon to hell, my female^
Tempteth my better angel from myside,And would corrupt my ^nt to
Agoing his purity with he^ OU ridas—jAi^d whether that mj^^ge
turn’d fien
i^Sjispect I may, yet not directly tell;
But being both from me, both to egch friend,
I guess one angel in another’s hell.'
this shall I ne’er know,'But live in doubt,
(Till my bad angel fire my good one out.

" t;''

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