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  • The Indifferent
    BY
    John Donne



    I CAN love both fair and brown ;
    Her whom abundance melts, and her whom want betrays ;
    Her who loves loneness best, and her who masks and plays ;
    Her whom the country form'd, and whom the town ;
    Her who believes, and her who tries ;
    Her who still weeps with spongy eyes,
    And her who is dry cork, and never cries.
    I can love her, and her, and you, and you ;
    I can love any, so she be not true.
    Will no other vice content you ?
    Will it not serve your turn to do as did your mothers ?
    Or have you all old vices spent, and now would find out others ?
    Or doth a fear that men are true torment you ?
    O we are not, be not you so ;
    Let me—and do you—twenty know ;
    Rob me, but bind me not, and let me go.
    Must I, who came to travel thorough you,
    Grow your fix'd subject, because you are true ?

    Venus heard me sigh this song ;
    And by love's sweetest part, variety, she swore,
    She heard not this till now ; and that it should be so no more.
    She went, examined, and return'd ere long,
    And said, "Alas ! some two or three
    Poor heretics in love there be,
    Which think to stablish dangerous constancy.
    But I have told them, 'Since you will be true,
    You shall be true to them who're false to you.' "

       
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