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Love compared to a tennis-play

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Love compared to a tennis-play
by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

Originally printed as the work of Sir Edward Dyer, it was reassigned to Oxford in 1935, following manuscript attribution to Oxford. A version was published in John Cotgrave's Wit's Interpreter (1685).

1473654Love compared to a tennis-playEdward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

Whenas the heart at tennis plays, and men to gaming fall,
Love is the court, hope is the house, and favour serves the ball.
The ball itself is true desert; the line, which measure shows,
Is reason, whereon judgment looks how players win or lose.
The jetty is deceitful guile; the stopper, jealousy,
Which hath Sir Argus' hundred eyes wherewith to watch and pry.
The fault, wherewith fifteen is lost, is want of wit and sense,
And he that brings the racket in is double diligence.
And lo, the racket is freewill, which makes the ball rebound;
And noble beauty is the chase, of every game the ground.
But rashness strikes the ball awry, and where is oversight?
"A bandy ho", the people cry, and so the ball takes flight.
Now, in the end, good-liking proves content the game and gain.
Thus, in a tennis, knit I love, a pleasure mixed with pain.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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