T. R. Smith, comp. Poetica Erotica: Rare and Curious Amatory Verse. 1921–22.
Nature That Washed Her Hands
By Sir Walter Raleigh (1554?1618)(From Harlein MS. 6917, fol. 48) NATURE that wash’d her hands in milk | |
And had forgot to dry them, | |
Instead of earth took snow and silk | |
At Love’s request to try them, | |
If she a mistress could compose | 5 |
To please Love’s fancy out of those. | |
Her eyes he would should be of light; | |
A violet breath, and lips of jelly; | |
Her hair not black, nor over-bright; | |
And of the softest down her belly: | 10 |
As for her inside he’ld have it | |
Only of wantonness and wit. | |
At Love’s entreaty such a one | |
Nature made, but with her beauty | |
She hath framed a heart of stone; | 15 |
So as Love, by ill destiny, | |
Must die for her whom Nature gave him, | |
Because her darling would not save him. | |
But Time, which Nature doth despise, | |
And rudely gives her love the lie, | 20 |
Makes Hope a fool, and Sorrow wise, | |
His hands do[th] neither wash nor dry; | |
But being made of steel and rust, | |
Turns snow and silk and milk to dust. | |
The light, the belly, lips, and breath, | 25 |
He dims, discolours, and destroys; | |
With those he feeds, but fills not, Death, | |
Which sometimes were the food of joys: | |
Yea Time doth dull each lively wit, | |
And dries all wantonness with it. | 30 |
Oh, cruel Time, which takes in trust, | |
Our youth, our joys, and all we have, | |
And pays us but with age and dust; | |
Who in the dark and silent grave, | |
When we have wander’d all our ways, | 35 |
Shuts up the story of our days. | |