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 The eye responsible, the golden hair, And none is held without the other, fair: All spring together, all together fade; Such intermix'd affection should invade Two perfect lovers: which being yet unseen, Their virtues and their comforts copied been In beauty's concord, subject to the eye, And that, in Hymen, pleas'd so matchlessly, That lovers were esteem'd in their full grace, Like form and colour mix'd in Hymen's face; And such sweet concord was thought worthy then Of torches, music, feasts, and greatest men: So Hymen look'd, that e'en the chastest mind He mov'd to join in joys of sacred kind: For only now his chin's first down consorted His head's rich fleece, in golden curls contorted; And as he was so lov'd, he lov'd so too, So should best beauties, bound by nuptials, do.

Bright Eucharis, who was by all men said The noblest, fairest, and the richest maid Of all th' Athenian damsels, Hymen lov'd With such transmission, that his heart remov'd From his white breast to hers; but her estate, In passing his, was so interminate