Annotations
Titles: Members of Philips' Society of Friendship used titles or pseudonyms in their poetry
and letters to one another. Philips may be referencing these titles to remind the reader or Lucasia that they
have taken on pseudonyms, creating a sense of perplexity about the necessity of these names.
FRIENDSHIP'S MYSTERYS:
TO MY DEAREST LUCASIA
Come, my
Lucasia, since we see
That
miracles men's faith do move,
By wonder and by prodigy
To the dull, angry world let's prove
There's a
religion in our
Love.
5
For though we were design'd t'agree,
That fate no liberty destroys,
But our
election is as free
As
Angells, who with greedy choice
Are yet determin'd to their
Joys.
10
Our hearts are
doubled by their loss,
Here mixture is addition grown;
We both
diffuse and both
engross:
And we, whose minds are so much one,
Never, yet ever, are alone.
We court our own captivity,
Then
Thrones more great and innocent:
`
Twere banishment to be set free,
Since we weare
fetters whose intent
Not bondage is, but Ornament.
20
Divided Joys are tedious found,
And griefs united easyer grow:
We are our selves but by rebound,
And all our
titles shuffled so,
Both Princes, and both subjects too.
Our hearts are
mutuall victims lay'd,
While they (such power in friendship ly's)
Are
Altars, Priests, and off'rings made,
And each heart which thus kindly dy's,
Grows deathless by the sacrifise.
30