"Dear Object of my Love! didst thou but know / The Tortures, that I daily undergo / For thy dear sake, thou sure woud'st be so kind, / To weep the Troubles that invade my mind."

— Ephelia (fl. 1679-1682)


Place of Publication
London
Publisher
Printed for James Courtney [etc.]
Date
1682
Metaphor
"Dear Object of my Love! didst thou but know / The Tortures, that I daily undergo / For thy dear sake, thou sure woud'st be so kind, / To weep the Troubles that invade my mind."
Metaphor in Context
Dear Object of my Love! didst thou but know
The Tortures, that I daily undergo
For thy dear sake, thou sure woud'st be so kind,
To weep the Troubles that invade my mind
;
I need not tell thee that I dearly love,
No, all my Actions will my Passion prove:
For thee I've left the wise, the great, the good,
And on my Vows, not my Preferment stood.
Think then, dear Strephon, how unkind thou art,
To prove the Torturer of that tender heart,
That chose thee out to be its chief Delight,
And knows no real Joy but in thy sight.
Since first thy Courtship me to Love inclin'd,
Thou ne're hast been one hour out of my mind.
How tedious then must thy long absence be
To her, that wishes nothing else to see,
And lives not, but when in thy Company?
Haste then dear Love! for if thou longer stay,
My Griefs will make me sigh my Soul away.
Categories
Provenance
Searching "mind" and "invad" in HDIS (Poetry)
Citation
Text from Female Poems On Several Occasions. Written by Ephelia 2nd ed. (London: James Courtney, 1682).

See also Poems by Ephelia (c. 1697): The Premier Facsimile Edition of the Collected Manuscript & Published Poems, ed. Maureen Esther Mulvhihill (Delmar, NY: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1992).
Date of Entry
05/04/2005
Date of Review
03/11/2010

The Mind is a Metaphor is authored by Brad Pasanek, Assistant Professor of English, University of Virginia.