THE CURSE. 
by John Donne
             
             
WHOEVER guesses, thinks, or dreams, he knows  
Who is my mistress, wither by this curse ;  
            Him,
only for his purse  
            May
some dull whore to love dispose,  
And then yield unto all that are his foes ;  
    May he be scorn'd by one, whom all else scorn,  
    Forswear to others, what to her he hath sworn,  
    With fear of missing, shame of getting, torn.  
             
Madness his sorrow, gout his cramps, may he  
Make, by but thinking who hath made him such ;  
            And
may he feel no touch  
            Of
conscience, but of fame, and be  
Anguish'd, not that 'twas sin, but that 'twas she ;  
    Or may he for her virtue reverence  
    One that hates him only for impotence,  
    And equal traitors be she and his sense.  
             
May he dream treason, and believe that he  
Meant to perform it, and confesses, and die,  
            And
no record tell why ;  
            His
sons, which none of his may be,  
Inherit nothing but his infamy ;  
    Or may he so long parasites have fed,  
    That he would fain be theirs whom he hath bred,
             
    And at the last be circumcised for bread.  
             
The venom of all stepdames, gamesters' gall,  
What tyrants and their subjects interwish,  
            What
plants, mine, beasts, fowl, fish,  
            Can
contribute, all ill, which all  
Prophets or poets spake, and all which shall  
    Be annex'd in schedules unto this by me,  
    Fall on that man ; For if it be a she  
    Nature beforehand hath out-cursèd me.  
             
             
              Source: 
Donne, John. Poems of John Donne. vol I.  
E. K. Chambers, ed. 
London: Lawrence & Bullen, 1896. 42-43. 
            
            
  
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