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- [This text of Shakespeare's Sonnets is based on facsimiles of the
- Huntington-Bridgewater copy and the Bodleian copy of the 1609 Quarto,
- Apsley imprint. The text has been compared to the Folger Shakespeare
- Library's 1609 Quarto of the Sonnets. It was entered by Hardy M. Cook,
- <hmcook@boe00.minc.umd.edu>, and submitted to the SHAKSPER Global
- Electronic Conference <SHAKSPER@utoronto.bitnet> in October 1991.
- It may be FREELY distributed for scholarly, educational, or literary
- purposes, so long as this paragraph remains intact, and no fee or
- copyright is claimed. Use of this text for commercial purposes is
- strictly forbidden.]
-
-
-
- TO.THE.ONLIE.BEGETTER.OF.
- THESE.INSVING.SONNETS.
- Mr.W.H.ALL.HAPPINESSE.
- AND.THAT.ETERNITIE.
- PROMISED.
- BY.
- OVR.EVER-LIVING.POET.
- WISHETH.
- THE.WELL-WISHING.
- ADVENTVRER.IN.
- SETTING.
- FORTH.
-
-
-
-
- T. T.
-
- SHAKE-SPEARES,
- <it>SONNETS<it>.
-
- FRom fairest creatures we desire increase,
- That thereby beauties <it>Rose<it> might neuer die,
- But as the riper should by time decease,
- His tender heire might beare his memory:
- But thou contracted to thine owne bright eyes,
- Feed'st thy lights flame with selfe substantiall fewell,
- Making a famine where aboundance lies,
- Thy selfe thy foe,to thy sweet selfe too cruell:
- Thou that art now the worlds fresh ornament,
- And only herauld to the gaudy spring,
- Within thine owne bud buriest thy content,
- And tender chorle makst wast in niggarding:
- Pitty the world, or else this glutton be,
- To eate the worlds due,by the graue and thee.
-
- 2
- WHen fortie Winters shall beseige thy brow,
- And digge deep trenches in thy beauties field,
- Thy youthes proud liuery so gazed on now,
- Wil be a totter'd weed of smal worth held:
- Then being askt,where all thy beautie lies,
- Where all the treasure of thy lusty daies;
- To say within thine owne deepe sunken eyes,
- Were an all-eating shame,and thriftlesse praise.
- How much more praise deseru'd thy beauties vse,
- If thou couldst answere this faire child of mine
- Shall sum my count,and make my old excuse
- Proouing his beautie by succession thine.
- This were to be new made when thou art ould,
- And see thy blood warme when thou feel'st it could,
-
- 3
- LOoke in thy glasse and tell the face thou vewest,
- Now is the time that face should forme an other,
- Whose fresh repaire if now thou not renewest,
- Thou doo'st beguile the world, vnblesse some mother.
- For where is she so faire whose vn-eard wombe
- Disdaines the tillage of thy husbandry?
- Or who is he so fond will be the tombe,
- Of his selfe loue to stop posterity?
- Thou art thy mothers glasse and she in thee
- Calls backe the louely Aprill of her prime,
- So thou through windowes of thine age shalt see,
- Dispight of wrinkles this thy goulden time.
- But if thou liue remembred not to be,
- Die single and thine Image dies with thee.
-
- 4
- VNthrifty louelinesse why dost thou spend,
- Vpon thy selfe thy beauties legacy?
- Natures bequest giues nothing but doth lend,
- And being franck she lends to those are free:
- Then beautious nigard why doost thou abuse,
- The bountious largesse giuen thee to giue?
- Profitles vserer why do ost thou vse
- So great a summe of summes yet can'st not liue?
- For hauing traffike with thy selfe alone,
- Thou of thy selfe thy sweet selfe dost deceaue,
- Then how when nature calls thee to be gone,
- What acceptable <it>Audit<it> can'st thou leaue?
- Thy vnus'd beauty must be tomb'd with thee,
- Which vsed liues th'executor to be.
-
- 5
- THose howers that with gentle worke did frame,
- The louely gaze where euery eye doth dwell
- Will play the tirants to the very same,
- And that vnfaire which fairely doth excell:
- For neuer resting time leads Summer on,
- To hidious winter and confounds him there,
- Sap checkt with frost and lustie leau's quite gon.
- Beauty ore-snow'd and barenes euery where,
- The were not summers distillation left
- A liquid prisoner pent in walls of glasse,
- Beauties effect with beauty were bereft,
- Nor it nor noe remembrance what it was.
- But flowers distil'd though they with winter meete,
- Leese but their show,their substance still liues sweet.
-
-
- 6
- THen let not winters wragged hand deface,
- In thee thy summer ere thou be distil'd:
- Make sweet some viall;treasure thou some place,
- With beautits treasure ere it be selfe kil'd:
- That vse is not forbiffen vsery,
- Which happies those that pay the willing lone;
- That's for thy selfe to breed an other thee,
- Or ten times happier be it ten for one,
- Ten times thy selfe were happier then thou art,
- If ten of thine ten times refigur'd thee,
- Then what could death doe if thou should'st depart,
- Leauing thee liuing in posterity?
- Be not selfe-wild for thou art much too faire,
- To be deaths conquest and make wormes thine heire.
-
- 7
- LOe in the Orient when the gracious light,
- Lifts vp his burning head,each vnder eye
- Doth homage to his new appearing sight,
- Seruing with lookes his sacred maiesty,
- And hauing climb'd the steepe vp heauenly hill,
- Resembling strong youth in his middle age,
- Yet mortall lookes adore beauty still,
- Attending on his goulden pilgrimage:
- But when from high-most pich with wery car,
- Like feeble age he reeleth from the day,
- The eyes(fore dutious)now conuerted are
- From his low tract and looke an other way:
- So thou,thy selfe out-going in thy noon:
- Vnlook'd on diest vnlesse thou get a sonne.
-
- 8
- MVsick to heare,why hear'st thou musick sadly,
- Sweets with sweets warre not ,ioy delights in ioy:
- Why lou'st thou that which thou receaust not gladly,
- Or else receau'st with pleasure thine annoy?
- If the true concord of well tuned sounds,
- By vnions married do offend thine eare,
- They do but sweetly chide thee,who confounds
- In singleness the parts that thou should'st beare:
- Marke how one string sweet husband to an other,
- Strikes each in each by mutuall ordering;
- Resembling sire,and child,and happy mother,
- Who all in one,one pleasing note so sing:
- Whose speechlesse song being many,seeming one,
- Sings this to thee thou single wilt proue none.
-
- 9.
- IS it for feare to wet a widdowes eye,
- That thou consum'st thy selfe in single life?
- Ah;if thou issulesse shalt hap to die,
- The world will waile thee like a makelesse wife,
- The world wilbe thy widdow and still weepe,
- That thou no forme of thee hast left behind,
- When euery priuat widdow well may keepe,
- By childrens eyes,her husbands shape in minde:
- Looke what an vnthrift in the world doth spend
- Shifts but his place,for still the world inioyes it
- But beauties waste hath in the world an end,
- And kept vnvsde the vser so destroyes it:
- No loue toward others in that bosome fits
- That on himselfe such murdrous shame commits.
-
-
- IO
- FOr shame deny that thou bear'st loue to any
- Who for thy selfe art so vnprouident
- Graunt if thou wilt,thou art belou'd of many,
- But that thou none lou'st is most euident:
- For thou art so possest with murdrous hate,
- That gainst thy selfe thou stickst not to conspire,
- Seeking that beautious roofe to ruinate
- Which to repaire should be thy chiefe desire :
- O change thy thought,that I may change my minde,
- Shall hate be fairer log'd then gentle loue?
- Be as thy presence is gracious and kind,
- Or to thy selfe at least kind harted proue,
- Make thee an other selfe for loue of me,
- That beauty still may liue in thine or thee.
-
- II
- AS fast as thou shalt wane so fast thou grow'st,
- In one of thine,from that which thou departest,
- And that fresh bloud which yongly thou bestow'st,
- Thou maist call thine,when thou from youth conuertest,
- Herein liues wisdome,beauty,and increase,
- Without this follie,age,and could decay,
- If all were minded so,the times should cease,
- And threescoore yeare would make the world away:
- Let those whom nature hath not made for store,
- Harsh,featurelesse,and rude ,barrenly perrish,
- Looke whom she best indow'st,she gaue the more;
- Which bountious guift thou shouldst in bounty cherrish,
- She caru'd thee for her seale,and ment therby,
- Thou shouldst print more,not let that coppy die.
-
- I2
- WHen I doe count the clock that tels the time,
- And see the braue day sunck in hidious night,
- When I behold the violet past prime,
- And sable curls or siluer'd ore with white:
- When lofty trees I see barren of leaues,
- Which erst from heat did canopie the herd
- And Sommers greene all girded vp in sheaues
- Borne on the beare with white and bristly beard:
- Then of thy beauty do I question make
- That thou among the wastes of time must goe,
- Since sweets and beauties do them-selues forsake,
- And die as fast as they see others grow,
- And nothing gainst Times sieth can make defence
- Saue breed to braue him,when he takes thee hence.
-
- I3
- O That you were yourself,but loue you are
- No longer yours,then you yourself here liue,
- Against this cumming end you should prepare,
- And your sweet semblance to some other giue.
- So should that beauty which you hold in lease
- Find no determination,then you were
- You self again after your selfes decease,
- When your sweet issue your sweet forme should beare.
- Who lets so faire a house fall to decay,
- Which husbandry in honour might vphold
- Against the stormy gusts of winters day
- And barren rage of deaths eternall cold?
- O none but vnthrifts, deare my loue you know,
- You had a Father,let your son say so.
-
-
- I4
- NOt from the stars do I my iudgement plucke,
- And yet me thinkes I haue Astronomy,
- But not to tell of good,or euil lucke,
- Of plagues,of dearths,or seasons quallity,
- Nor can I fortune to breef mynuits tell;
- Pointing to each his thunder,raine and winde,
- Or say with Princes if it shal go wel
- By oft predict that I in heauen finde.
- But from thine eies my knowledge I deriue,
- And constant stars in them I read such art
- As truth and beautie shal together thriue
- If from thyself,to store thou wouldst conuert:
- Or else of thee this I prognosticate,
- Thy end is Truthes and Beauties doome and date.
-
- I5
- WHen I consider euery thing that growes
- Holds in perfection but a little moment.
- That this huge stage presenteth nought but showes
- Whereon the Stars in secret influence comment.
- When I perceiue that men as plants increase,
- Cheared and checkt euen by the selfe-same skie:
- Vaunt in their youthfull sap,at height decrease,
- And were their braue state out of memory.
- Then the conceit of this inconstant stay,
- Sets you most rich in youth before my sight,
- Where wastfull time debateth with decay
- To change your day of youth to sullied night,
- And all in war with Time for loue of you
- As he takes from you,I ingraft you new.
-
- I6
- BVt wherefore do not you a mightier waie
- Make warre vppon this bloodie tirant time?
- And fortifie your selfe in your decay
- With meanes more blessed then my barren rime?
- Now stand you on the top of happie houres,
- And many maiden gardens yet vnset,
- With vertuous wish would beare your liuing flowers,
- Much liker then your painted counterfeit:
- So should the lines of life that life repaire
- Which this (Time's pensel or my pupill pen)
- Neither in inward worth nor outward faire
- Can make you liue your selfe in eies of men.
- To giue away your selfe,keeps your selfe still,
- And you must liue drawne by your owne sweet skill,
-
- I7
- WHo will beleeue my verse in time to come
- If it were fild with your most high deserts?
- Though yet heauen knowes it is but as a tombe
- Which hides your life , and shewes not halfe your parts:
- If I could write the beauty of your eyes,
- And in fresh numbers number all your graces,
- The age to come would say this Poet lies,
- Such heauenly touches nere toucht earthly faces.
- So should my papers (yellowed with their age)
- Be scorn'd,like old men of lesse truth then tongue,
- And your true rights be termd a Poets rage,
- And stretched miter of an Antique song.
- But were some childe of yours aliue that time,
- You should liue twice in it,and in my rime.
-
- I8.
- SHall I compare thee to a Summers day?
- Thou art more louely and more temperate:
- Rough windes do shake the darling buds of Maie,
- And Sommers lease hath all too short a date:
- Sometime too hot the eye of heauen shines,
- And often is his gold complexion dimm'd,
- And euery faire from faire some-time declines,
- By chance,or natures changing course vntrim'd:
- But thy eternall Sommer shall not fade,
- Nor loose possession of that faire thou ow'st,
- Nor shall death brag thou wandr'st in his shade,
- When in eternall lines to time thou grow'st,
- So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
- So long liues this,and this giues life to thee,
-
- I9
- DEuouring time blunt thou the Lyons pawes,
- And make the earth deuoure her owne sweet brood,
- Plucke the keene teeth from the fierce Tygers yawes,
- And burne the long liu'd Phaenix in her blood,
- Make glad and sorry seasons as thou fleet'st,
- And do what ere thou wilt swift-footed time
- To the wide world and all her fading sweets:
- But I forbid thee one most hainous crime,
- O carue not with thy howers my loues faire brow,
- Nor draw noe lines there with thine antique pen,
- Him in thy course vntainted doe allow,
- For beauties patterne to succeeding men.
- Yet doe thy worst ould Time despight thy wrong,
- My loue shall in my verse euer liue young.
-
- 20
- A Womans face with natures owne hand painted,
- Haste thou the Master Mistris of my passion,
- A womans gentle hart but not acquainted
- With shifting change as is false womens fashion,
- An eye more bright then theirs,lesse false in rowling:
- Gilding the obiect where-vpon it gazeth,
- A man in hew all <it>Hews<it> in his controwling,
- Which steales mens eyes and womens soules amaseth.
- And for a woman wert thou first created,
- Till nature as she wrought thee fell a dotinge,
- And by addition me of thee defeated,
- By adding one thing to my purpose nothing.
- But since she prickt thee out for womens pleasure,
- Mine be thy loue and thy loues vse their treasure.
-
- 2I
- SO is it not with me as with that Muse,
- Stird by a painted beauty to his verse,
- Who heauen itself for ornament doth vse,
- And euery faire with his faire doth reherse,
- Making a coopelment of proud compare
- With Sunne and Moone,with earth and seas rich gems:
- With Aprills first borne flowers and all things rare,
- That heauens ayre in this huge rondure hems,
- O let me true in loue but truly write,
- And then beleeue me,my loue is as faire,
- As any mothers childe,though not so bright
- As those gould candells fixt in heauens ayer:
- Let them say more that like of heare-say well,
- I will not prayse that purpose not to sell.
-
- 22
- MY glasse shall not perswade me I am ould,
- So long as youth and thou are of one date,
- But when in thee times forrwes I behould,
- Then look I death my daies should expiate.
- For all that beauty that doth couer thee,
- Is but the seemely rayment of my heart,
- Which in thy brest doth liue,as thine in me,
- How can I then be elder then thou art?
- O therefore loue be of thy selfe so wary,
- As I not for my selfe,but for thee will,
- Bearing thy heart which I will keepe so chary
- As tender nurse her babe from faring ill,
- Presume not on thy heart when mine is slaine,
- Thou gau'st me thine not to giue back againe.
-
- 23
- AS an vnperfect actor on the stage,
- Who with his feare is put besides his part,
- Or some fierce thing repleat with too much rage,
- Whose strengths abondance weakens his owne heart;
- So I for feare of trust,forget to say,
- The perfect ceremony of loues right,
- And in mine owne loues strength seeme to decay,
- Ore-charg'd with burthen of mine owne loues might:
- O let my books be then the eloquence,
- And domb presagers of my speaking brest,
- Who pleade for loue,and look for recompence,
- More then that tonge that more hath more exprest.
- O learne to read what silent loue hath writ,
- To heare wit eies belongs to loues fine wiht.
-
- 24
- MIne eye hath play'd the painter and hath steeld,
- Thy beauties forme in table of my heart,
- My body is the frame wherein ti's held,
- And perspectiue it is best Painters art.
- For through the Painter must you see his skill,
- To finde where your true Image pictur'd lies,
- Which in my bosomes shop is hanging stil,
- That hath his windowes glazed with thine eyes:
- Now see what good-turnes eyes for eies haue done,
- Mine eyes haue drawne thy shape,and thine for me
- Are windowes to my brest, where-through the Sun
- Delights to peepe,to gaze therein on thee
- Yet eyes this cunning want to grace their art
- They draw but what they see,know not the hart.
-
- 25
- LEt those who are in fauor with their stars,
- Of publike honour and proud titles bost,
- Whilst I whome fortune of such tryumph bars
- Vnlookt for ioy in that I honour most;
- Great Princes fauorites their faire leaues spread,
- But as the Marygold at the suns eye,
- And in them-selues their pride lies buried,
- For at a frowne they in their glory die.
- The painefull warrier famosed for worth,
- After a thousand victories once foild,
- Is from the booke of honour rased quite,
- And all the rest forgot for which he toild:
- Then happy I that loue and am beloued
- Where I may not remoue,nor be remoued.
-
- 26
- LOrd of my loue,to whome in vassalage
- Thy merrit hath my dutie strongly knit;
- To thee I send this written ambassage
- To witnesse duty, not to shew my wit.
- Duty so great,which wit so poore as mine
- May make seeme bare,in wanting words to shew it;
- But that I hope some good conceipt of thine
- In thy soules thought(all naked) will bestow it:
- Till whatsoeuer star that guides my mouing,
- Points on me gratiously with fair aspect,
- And puts apparrell on my tottered louing,
- To show me worthy of their sweet respect,
- Then may I dare to boast how I doe loue thee,
- Till then,not show my head where thou maist proue me
-
- 27
- WEary with toyle,I hast me to my bed,
- The deare repose for lims with trauaill tired,
- But then begins a iourny in my head
- To worke my mind,when boddies work's expired.
- For then my thoughts(from far where I abide)
- Intend a zelous pilgrimage to thee,
- And keepe my drooping eye-lids open wide,
- Looking on darknes which the blind doe see.
- Saue that my soules imaginary sight
- Presents their shaddoe to my sightles view,
- Which like a iewel(hunge in ghastly night)
- Makes blacke night beautious,and her old face new.
- Loe thus by day my lims,by night my mind,
- For thee,and for my selfe,noe quiet finde.
-
- 28
- HOw can I then returne in happy plight
- That am debard the benifit of rest?
- When daies oppression is not eazd by night,
- But day by night and night by day oprest.
- And each(though enimes to ethers raigne)
- Doe in consent shake hands to torture me,
- The one by toyle,the other to complaine
- How far I toyle,still farther off from thee.
- I tell the Day to please him thou art bright,
- And do'st him grace when clouds doe blot the heauen:
- So flatter I the swart complexiond night,
- When sparkling stars twire not thou guil'st th'eauen.
- But day doth daily draw my sorrowes longer, (stronger
- And night doth nightly make greefes length seeme
-
- 29
- WHen in disgrace with Fortune and mens eyes,
- I all alone beweepe my out-cast state,
- And trouble deafe heauen with my bootlesse cries.
- And looke vpon my selfe and curse my fate.
- Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,
- Featur'd like him,like him with friends possest,
- Desiring this mans art,and that mans skope,
- With what I most inioy contented least,
- Yet in these thoughts my selfe almost despising,
- Haplye I thinke on thee,and then my state,
- (Like to the Larke at breake of daye arising)
- From sullen earth sings himns at Heauens gate,
- For thy sweet loue remembred such welth brings,
- That then I skorne to change my state with Kings.
-
- 30
- WHen to the Sessions of sweet silent thought,
- I sommon vp remembrance of things past,
- I sigh the lacke of many a thing I sought.
- And with old woes new waile my deare times waste:
- Then can I drowne an eye(vn-vsd to flow)
- For precious friends hid in deaths dateles night,
- And weepe a fresh loues long since canceld woe,
- And mone th'expence of many a vannisht sight.
- Then can I greeue at greeuances fore-gon,
- And heauily from woe to woe tell ore
- The sad account of fore-bemoned mone,
- Which I new pay as if not payd before.
- But if the while I thinke on thee (deare friend)
- All losses are restord,and sorrowes end.
-
- 3I
- Thy bosome is indeared with all hearts,
- Which I by lacking haue supposed dead,
- And there raignes Loue and all Loues louing parts,
- And all those friends which I thought buried.
- How many a holy and obsequious teare
- Hath deare religious loue stolne from mine eye,
- As interest of the dead,which now appeare,
- But things remou'd that hidden in there lie.
- Thou art the graue where buried loue doth liue,
- Hung with the tropheis of my louers gon,
- Who all their parts of me to thee did giue,
- That due of many,now is thine alone.
- Their images I lou'd, I view in thee,
- And thou(all they)hast all the all of me.
-
- 32
- IF thou suruiue my well contented daie,
- When that churle death my bones with dust shall couer
- And shalt by fortune once more re-suruay:
- These poore rude lines of thy deceased Louer:
- Compare them with the bett'ring of the time,
- And though they be out-stript by euery pen,
- Reserue them for my loue,not for their rime,
- Exceeded by the hight of happier men.
- Oh then voutsafe me but this louing thought,
- Had my friends Muse growne with this growing age,
- A dearer birth then this his loue had brought:
- To march in ranckes of better equipage:
- But since he died and Poets better proue,
- Theirs for their stile ile read,his for his loue.
-
- 33
- FVll many a glorious morning haue I seene,
- Flatter the mountaine tops with soueraine eie,
- Kissing with golden face the meadowes greene;
- Gilding pale streames with heauenly alcumy:
- Anon permit the basest cloudes to ride,
- With ougly rack on his celestiall face,
- And from the for-lorne world his visage hide
- Stealing vnseene to west with this disgrace:
- Euen so my Sunne one early morne did shine,
- With all triumphant splendor on my brow,
- But out alack,he was but one houre mine,
- The region cloud hath mask'd him from me now.
- Yet him for this,my loue no whit disdaineth,
- Suns of the world may staine,whe[n] heauens sun staineth.
-
- 34
- WHy didst thou promise such a beautious day,
- And make me trauaile forth without my cloake,
- To let bace cloudes ore-take me in my way,
- Hiding thy brau'ry in their rotten smoke.
- Tis not enough that through the cloude thou breake,
- To dry the raine on my storme-beaten face,
- For no man well of such a salue can speake,
- That heales the wound,and cures not the disgrace:
- Nor can thy shame giue phisicke to my griefe,
- Though thou repent , yet I haue still the losse,
- Th'offenders sorrow lends but weake reliefe
- To him that beares the strong offenses losse.
- Ah but those teares are pearle which thy loue sheeds,
- And they are ritch,and ransome all ill deeds.
-
- 35
- NO more bee greeu'd at that which thou hast done,
- Roses haue thornes,and siluer fountaines mud,
- Cloudes and eclipses staine both Moone and Sunne,
- And loathsome canker liues in sweetest bud.
- All men make faults,and euen I in this,
- Authorizing thy trespas with compare,
- My selfe corrupting saluing thy amisse,
- Excusing their sins more then their sins are:
- For to thy sensuall fault I bring in sence,
- Thy aduerse party is thy Aduocate,
- And gainst my selfe a lawfull plea commence,
- Such ciuill war is in my loue and hate,
- That I an accessary needs must be,
- To that sweet theefe which sourely robs from me,
-
- 36
- LEt me confesse that we two must be twaine,
- Although our vndeuided loues are one:
- So shall those blots that do with me remaine,
- Without thy helpe , by me be borne alone.
- In our two loues there is but one respect,
- Though in our liues a seperable spight,
- Which though it alter not loues sole effect,
- Yet doth it steale sweet houres from loues delight,
- I may not euer-more acknowledge thee,
- Least my bewailed guilt should do thee shame,
- Nor thou with publike kindnesse honour me,
- Vnlesse thou take that honour from thy name:
- But doe not so,I loue thee in such sort,
- As thou being mine,mine is thy good report.
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- 37
- AS a decrepit father takes delight,
- To see his actiue childe do deeds of youth,
- So I , made lame by Fortunes dearest spight
- Take all my comfort of thy worth and truth.
- For whether beauty,birth,or wealth,or wit,
- Or any of these all,or all,or more
- Intitled in their parts,do crowned sit,
- I make my loue ingrafted to this store:
- So then I am not lame,poore,nor despis'd,
- Whilst that this shadow doth such substance giue,
- That I in thy abundance am suffic'd,
- And by a part of all thy glory liue:
- Looke what is best,that best I wish in thee,
- This wish I haue,then ten times happy me.
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- 38
- HOw can my Muse want subiect to inuent
- While thou dost breathe that poor'st into my verse,
- Thine owne sweet argument,to excellent,
- For euery vulgar paper to rehearse:
- Oh giue thy selfe the thankes if aught in me,
- Worthy perusal stand against thy sight,
- For who's so dumbe that cannot write to thee,
- When thou thy selfe dost giue inuention light?
- Be thou the tenth Muse,ten times more in worth
- Then those old nine which rimers inuocate,
- And he that calls on thee,let him bring forth
- Eternal numbers to out-liue long date.
- If my slight Muse doe please these curious daies,
- The paine be mine,but thine shal be the praise.
-
- 39
- OH how thy worth with manners may I singe,
- When thou art all the better part of me?
- What can mine owne praise to mine owne selfe bring;
- And what is't but mine owne when I praise thee,
- Euen for this,let vs diuided liue,
- And our deare loue loose name of single one,
- That by this seperation I may giue:
- That due to thee which thou deseru'st alone:
- Oh absence what a torment wouldst thou proue,
- Were it not thy soure leisure gaue sweet leaue,
- To entertaine the time with thoughts of loue,
- Which time and thoughts so sweetly dost deceiue.
- And that thou teachest how to make one twaine,
- By praising him here who doth hence remaine.
-
- 40
- TAke all my loues,my loue,yea take them all,
- What hast thou then more then thou hadst before?
- No loue,my loue,that thou maist true loue call,
- All mine was thine,before thou hadst this more:
- Then if for my loue,thou my loue receiuest,
- I cannot blame thee,for my loue thou vsest,
- But yet be blam'd,if thou this selfe deceauest
- By willful taste of what thy selfe refusest.
- I doe forgiue thy robb'rie gentle theefe
- Although thou steale thee all my pouerty:
- And yet loue knowes it is a greater griefe
- To beare loues wrong,then hates knowne iniury.
- Lasciuious grace,in whom all il wel showes,
- Kill me with spights yet we must not be foes.
-
- 4I
- THose pretty wrongs that liberty commits,
- When I am some-time absent from thy heart,
- Thy beautie,and thy yeares full well befits,
- For still temptation followes where thou art.
- Gentle thou art,and therefore to be wonne,
- Beautious thou art,therefore to be assailed.
- And when a woman woes,what womans sonne,
- Will sourely leaue her till he haue preuailed.
- Aye me,but yet thou mightst my seate forbeare,
- And chide thy beauty,and thy straying youth,
- Who lead thee in their ryot euen there
- Where thou art forst to breake a two-fold truth:
- Hers by thy beauty tempting her to thee,
- Thine by thy beautie beeing false to me.
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- 42
- THat thou hast her it is not all my griefe,
- And yet it may be said I lou'd her deerely,
- That she hath thee is of my wayling cheefe,
- A losse in loue that touches me more neerely.
- Louing offendors thus I will excuse yee,
- Thou doost loue her,because thou knowst I loue her,
- And for my sake euen so doth she abuse me,
- Suffring my friend for my sake to approoue her,
- If I loose thee,my losse is my loues gaine,
- And loosing her,my friend hath found that losse,
- Both finde each other,and I loose both twaine,
- And both for my sake lay on me this crosse,
- But here's the ioy,my friend and I are one,
- Sweete flattery,then she loues but me alone.
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- 43
- WHen most I winke then doe mine eyes best see,
- For all the day they view things vnrespected,
- But when I sleepe,in dreames they looke on thee,
- And darkely bright,are bright in darke directed.
- Then thou whose shaddow shaddowes doth make bright,
- How would thy shadowes forme,forme happy show,
- To the cleere day with thy much cleerer light,
- When to vn-seeing eyes thy shade shines so?
- How would(I say)mine eyes be blessed made,
- By looking on thee in the liuing day?
- When in dead night their faire imperfect shade
- Through heauy sleepe on sightlesse eyes doth stay?
- All dayes are nights to see till I see thee,
- And nights bright daies when dreams do shew thee me.
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- 44
- IF the dull substance of my flesh were thought,
- Iniurious distance should not stop my way,
- For then despight of space I would be brought,
- From limits farre remote,where thou doost stay,
- No matter then although my foote did stand
- Vpon the farthest earth remoou'd from thee,
- For nimble thought can iumpe both sea and land,
- As soone as thinke the place where he would be.
- But ah,thought kills me that I am not thought
- To leape large lengths of miles when thou art gone,
- But that so much of earth and water wrought,
- I must attend,times leasure with my mone.
- Receiuing naughts by elements so sloe,
- But heauie teares,badges of eithers woe.
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- 45
- THe other two,slight ayre,and purging fire,
- Are both with thee,where euer I abide,
- The first my thought,the other my desire,
- These present absent with swift motion slide.
- For when these quicker Elements are gone
- In tender Embassie of loue to thee,
- My life being made of foure,with two alone,
- Sinkes downe to death,opprest with melancholie.
- Vntill liues composition be recured,
- By those swift messengers return'd from thee,
- Who euen but now come back againe assured,
- Of their fair health,recounting it to me.
- This told,I ioy,but then no longer glad,
- I send them back againe and straight grow sad.
-
- 46
- MIne eye and heart are at a mortall warre,
- How to deuide the conquest of thy sight,
- Mine eye,my heart their pictures sight would barre,
- My heart,mine eye the freedome of that right,
- My heart doth plead that thou in him doost lye,
- (A closet neuer pearst with christall eyes)
- But the defendant doth that plea deny,
- And sayes in him their faire appearance lyes.
- To side this title is impannelled
- A quest of thoughts,all tennants to the heart,
- And by their verdict is determined
- The cleere eyes moyitie,and the deare hearts part.
- As thus,mine eyes due is their outward part,
- And my hearts right,their inward loue of heart.
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- 47
- BEtwixt mine eye and heart a league is tooke,
- And each doth good turnes now vnto the other,
- When that mine eye is famisht for a looke,
- Or heart in loue with sighes himselfe doth smother;
- With my loues picture then my eye doth feast,
- And to the painted banquet bids my heart:
- An other time mine eye is my hearts guest,
- And in his thoughts of loue doth share a part.
- So either by thy picture or my loue,
- Thy seife away,are present still with me,
- For thou nor farther then my thoughts canst moue,
- And I am still with them,and they with thee.
- Or if they sleepe, thy picture in my sight
- Awakes my heart,to hearts and eyes delight.
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- 48
- HOw carefull was I when I tooke my way,
- Each trifle vnder truest barres to thrust,
- That to my vse it might vn-vsed stay
- From hands of falsehood,in sure wards of trust ?
- But thou,to whom my iewels trifles are,
- Most worthy comfort,now my greatest griefe,
- Thou best of deerest,and mine onely care,
- Art left the prey of euery vulgar theefe.
- Thee haue I not lockt vp in any chest,
- Saue where thou art not,though I feele thou art,
- Within the gentle closure of my brest,
- From whence at pleasure thou maist come and part,
- And euen thence thou wilt be stolne I feare,
- For truth prooues theeuish for a prize so deare.
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- 49
- AGainst that time ( if euer that time come )
- When I shall see thee frowne on my defects,
- When as thy loue hath cast his vtmost summe,
- Cauld to that audite by aduis'd respects,
- Against that time when thou shalt strangely passe,
- And scarcely greete me with that sunne thine eye,
- When loue conuerted from the thing it was
- Shall reasons finde of setled grauitie.
- Against that time do I insconce me here
- Within the knowledge of mine own desart,
- And this my hand,against my selfe vpreare,
- To guard the lawfull reasons on thy part,
- To leaue poore me,thou hast the strengh of lawes,
- Since why to loue,I can alledge no cause.
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- 50
- HOw heauie doe I iourney on the way,
- When what I seeke (my wearie trauels end)
- Doth teach that ease and that repose to say
- Thus farre the miles are measurde from thy friend.
- The beast that beares me,tired with my woe,
- Plods duly on,to beare that waight in me,
- As if by some instinct the wretch did know
- His rider lou'd not speed being made from thee:
- The bloody spurre cannot prouoke him on,
- That some-times anger thrusts into his hide,
- Which heauily he answers with a grone,
- More sharpe to me then spurring to his side,
- For that same grone doth put this in my mind,
- My greefe lies onward and my ioy behind.
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- 5I
- THus can my loue excuse the slow offence,
- Of my dull bearer,when from thee I speed,
- From where thou art,why shoulld I hast me thence,
- Till I returne of posting is noe need.
- O what excuse will my poore beast then find,
- When swift extremity can seeme but slow,
- Then should I spurre though mounted on the wind,
- In winged speed no motion shall I know,
- Then can no horse with my desire keepe pace,
- Therefore desire( of perfects loue being made )
- Shall naigh noe dull flesh in his fiery race,
- But loue,for loue,thus shall excuse my iade,
- Since from thee going,he went wilfull slow,
- Towards thee ile run,and giue him leaue to goe.
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- 52
- SO am I as the rich whose blessed key,
- Can bring him to his sweet vp-locked treasure,
- The which he will not eu'ry hower suruay,
- For blunting the fine point of seldome pleasure.
- Therefore are feasts so sollemne and so rare,
- Since sildom comming in the long yeare set,
- Like stones of worth they thinly placed are,
- Or captaine Iewells in the carconet.
- So is the time that keepes you as my chest,
- Or as the ward-robe which the robe doth hide,
- To make some speciall instant speciall blest,
- By new vnfoulding his imprison'd pride.
- Blessed are you whose worthinesse giues skope,
- Being had to tryumph,being lackt to hope.
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- 53
- WHat is your substance,whereof are you made,
- That millions of strange shaddowes on you tend?
- Since euery one,hath euery one,one shade,
- And you but one,can euery shaddow lend:
- Describe <it>Adonis<it> and the counterfet,
- Is poorely immitated after you,
- On <it>Helens<it> cheeke all art of beautie set,
- And you in <it>Grecian<it> tires are painted new:
- Speake of the spring,and foyzon of the yeare,
- The one doth shaddow of your beautie show,
- The other as your bountie doth appeare,
- And you in euery blessed shape we know.
- In all externall grace you haue some part,
- But you like none,none you for constant heart.
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- 54
- OH how much more doth beautie beautious seeme,
- By that sweet ornament which truth doth giue,
- The Rose lookes faire, but fairer we it deeme
- For that sweet odor,which doth in it liue:
- The Canker bloomes haue full as deepe a die,
- As the perfumed tincture of the Roses,
- Hang on such thornes,and play as wantonly,
- When sommers breath their masked buds discloses:
- But for their virtue only is their show,
- They liue vnwoo'd, and vnrespected fade,
- Die to themselues . Sweet Roses doe not so,
- Of their sweet deathes, are sweetest odors made:
- And so of you,beautious and louely youth,
- When that shall vade,by verse distils your truth.
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- 55
- NOt marble, nor the guilded monument,
- Of Princes shall out-liue this powrefull rime,
- But you shall shine more bright in these contents
- Then vnswept stone, besmeer'd with sluttish time.
- When wastefull warre shall <it>Statues<it> ouer-turne,
- And broiles roote out the worke of masonry,
- Nor <it>Mars<it> his sword, nor warres quick fire shall burne:
- The liuing record of your memory.
- Gainst death,and all obliuious emnity
- Shall you pace forth, your praise shall stil finde roome,
- Euen in the eyes of all posterity
- That weare this world out to the ending doome.
- So til the iudgement that your selfe arise,
- You liue in this,and dwell in louers eies.
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- 56
- Sweet loue renew thy force, be it not said
- Thy edge should blunter be then apetite,
- Which but too daie by feeding is alaied,
- To morrow sharpned in his former might.
- So loue be thou,although too daie thou fill
- Thy hungrie eies,euen till they winck with fulnesse,
- Too morrow see againe,and doe not kill
- The spirit of Loue,with a perpetual dulnesse:
- Let this sad <it>Intrim<it> like the Ocean be
- Which parts the shore,where two contracted new,
- Come daily to the banckes,that when they see:
- Returne of loue,more blest may be the uiew.
- As cal it Winter,which being ful of care,
- Makes So[m]mers welcome,thrice more wish'd,more rare:
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- 57
- BEing your slaue what should I doe but tend,
- Vpon the houres,and times of your desire?
- I haue no precious time at al to spend;
- Nor seruices to doe til you require.
- Nor dare I chide the world without end houre,
- Whilst I(my soueraine)watch the clock for you,
- Nor thinke the bitternesse of absence sowre,
- When you haue bid your seruant once adieue.
- Nor dare I question with my iealious thought,
- Where you may be,or your affaires suppose,
- But like a sad slaue stay and thinke of nought
- Saue where you are , how happy you make those.
- So true a foole is loue,that in your Will,
- (Though you doe any thing)he thinkes no ill.
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- 58
- THat god forbid,that made me first your slaue,
- I should in thought controule your times of pleasure,
- Or at your hand th'account of houres to craue,
- Being your vassail bound to staie your leisure.
- Oh let me suffer(being at your beck)
- Th'imprison'd absence of your libertie,
- And patience,tame to sufferance bide each check,
- Without accusing you of iniury.
- Be where you list,your charter is so strong,
- That you your selfe may priuiledge your time
- To what you will,to you it doth belong,
- Your selfe to pardon of selfe-doing crime.
- I am to waite,though waiting so be hell,
- Not blame your pleasure be it ill or well.
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- 59
- IF their bee nothing new,but that which is,
- Hath beene before , how are our braines beguild,
- Which laboring for inuention beare amisse
- The second burthen of a former child ?
- Oh that record could with a back-ward looke,
- Euen of fiue hundreth courses of the Sunne,
- Show me your image in some antique booke,
- Since minde at first in carrecter was done.
- That I might see what the old world could say,
- To this composed wonder of your frame,
- Whether we are mended,or where better they,
- Or whether reuolution be the same.
- Oh sure I am the wits of former daies,
- To subiects worse haue giuen admiring praise.
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- 60
- LIke as the waues make towards the pibled shore,
- So do our minuites hasten to their end,
- Each changing place with that which goes before,
- In sequent toile all forwards do contend.
- Natiuity once in the maine of light.
- Crawles to maturity,wherewith being crown'd,
- Crooked eclipses gainst his glory fight,
- And time that gaue,doth now his gift confound.
- Time doth transfixe the flourish set on youth,
- And delues the paralels in beauties brow,
- Feedes on the rarities of natures truth,
- And nothing stands but for his sieth to mow.
- And yet to times in hope,my verse shall stand
- Praising thy worth,despight his cruell hand.
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- 6I
- IS it thy wil,thy Image should keepe open
- My heauy eielids to the weary night?
- Dost thou desire my slumbers should be broken,
- While shadowes like to thee do mocke my sight?
- Is it thy spirit that thou send'st from thee
- So farre from home into my deeds to prye,
- To find out shames and idle houres in me,
- The skope and tenure of thy Iealousie?
- O no,thy loue though much,is not so great,
- It is my loue that keepes mine eie awake,
- Mine owne true loue that doth my rest defeat,
- To plaie the watch-man euer for thy sake.
- For thee watch I,whilst thou dost wake elsewhere,
- From me farre of , with others all too neere.
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- 62
- Sinne of selfe-loue possesseth al mine eie,
- And all my soule,and al my euery part;
- And for this sinne there is no remedie,
- It is so grounded inward in my heart.
- Me thinkes no face so gratious is as mine,
- No shape so true,no truth of such account,
- And for my selfe mine owne worth do define,
- As I all other in all worths surmount.
- But when my glasse shewes me my selfe indeed
- Beated and chopt with tand antiquitie,
- Mine owne selfe loue quite contrary I read
- Selfe,so selfe louing were iniquity,
- Tis thee(my selfe)that for my selfe I praise,
- Painting my age with beauty of thy daies.
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- 63
- AGainst my loue shall be as I am now
- With times iniurious hand crusht and ore-worne,
- When houres haue dreind his blood and fild his brow
- With lines and wrincles,when his youthfull morne
- Hath trauaild on to Ages steepie night,
- And all those beauties whereof now he's King
- Are vanishing,or vanisht out of sight,
- Stealing away the treasure of his Spring.
- For such a time do I now fortifie
- Against confounding Ages cruell knife,
- That he shall neuer cut from memory
- My sweet loues beauty,though my louers life.
- His beautie shall in these blacke lines be seene,
- And they shall liue , and he in them still greene.
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- 64
- WHen I haue seene by times fell hand defaced
- The rich proud cost of outworne buried age,
- When sometime loftie towers I see downe rased,
- And brasse eternall slaue to mortall rage.
- When I haue seene the hungry Ocean gaine
- Aduantage on the Kingdome of the shoare,
- And the firme soile win of the watry maine,
- Increasing store with losse,and losse with store.
- When I haue seene such interchange of state,
- Or state it selfe confounded, to decay,
- Ruine hath taught me thus to ruminate
- That Time will come and take my loue away.
- This thought is as a death which cannot choose
- But weepe to haue,that which it feares to loose.
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- 65
- SInce brasse,nor stone,nor earth,nor boundlesse sea,
- But sad mortallity ore-swaies their power,
- How with this rage shall beautie hold a plea,
- Whose action is no stronger then a flower?
- O how shall summers hunny breath hold out,
- Against the wrackfull siedge of battring dayes,
- When rocks impregnable are not so stoute ,
- Nor gates of steele so strong but time decayes?
- O fearefull meditation,where alack,
- Shall times best Iewel from times chest lie hid?
- Or what strong hand can hold his swift foote back,
- Or who his spoile or beautie can forbid?
- O none,vnless this miracle haue might,
- That in black inck my loue may still shine bright.
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- 66
- TYr'd with all these for restfull death I cry,
- As to behold desert a beggar borne,
- And needie Nothing trimd in iollitie,
- And purest faith vnhappily forsworne,
- And gilded honor shamefully misplast,
- And maiden vertue rudely strumpeted,
- And right perfection wrongfully disgrac'd,
- And strength by limping sway disabled,
- And arte made tung-tide by authoritie,
- And Folly (Doctor-like) controulling skill,
- And simple-Truth miscalde Simplicitie,
- And captiue-good attending Captaine ill.
- Tyr'd with all these,from these would I be gone,
- Saue that to dye,I leaue my loue alone.
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- 67
- AH wherefore with infection should he liue,
- And with his presence grace impietie,
- That sinne by him aduantage should atchiue,
- And lace it selfe with his societie ?
- Why should false painting immitate his cheeke,
- And steale dead seeing of his liuing hew?
- Why should poore beautie indirectly seeke,
- Roses of shaddow,since his Rose is true ?
- Why should he liue,now nature banckrout is,
- Beggerd of blood to blush through liuely vaines,
- For she hath no exchecker now but his,
- And proud of many,liues vpon his gaines?
- O him she stores,to show what welth she had,
- In daies long since,before these last so bad.
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- 68
- THus is his cheeke the map of daies out-worne,
- When beauty liu'd and dy'ed as flowers do now,
- Before these bastard signes of faire were borne,
- Or durst inhabit on a liuing brow:
- Before the goulden tresses of the dead,
- The right of sepulchers,were shorne away,
- To liue a scond life on second head,
- Ere beauties dead fleece made another gay:
- In him those holy antique howers are seene,
- Without all ornament,it selfe and true,
- Making no summer of an others greene,
- Robbing no ould to dresse his beauty new,
- And him as for a map doth Nature store,
- To shew faulse Art what beauty was of yore.
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- 69
- THose parts of thee that the worlds eye doth view,
- Want nothing that the thought of hearts can mend:
- All toungs(the voice of soules)giue thee that end,
- Vttring bare truth,euen so as foes Commend.
- Their outward thus with outward praise is crownd,
- But those same toungs that giue thee so thine owne,
- In other accents doe this praise confound
- By seeing farther then the eye hath showne.
- They looke into the beauty of thy mind,
- And that in guesse they measure by thy deeds,
- Then churls their thoughts(although their eies were kind)
- To thy faire flower ad the rancke smell of weeds,
- But why thy odor matcheth not thy show,
- The solye is this,that thou doost common grow.
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- 70
- THat thou are blam'd shall not be thy defect,
- For slanders marke was euer yet the faire,
- The ornament of beauty is suspect,
- A Crow that flies in heauens sweetest ayre.
- So thou be good,slander doth but approue,
- Their worth the greater beeing woo'd of time,
- For Canker vice the sweetest buds doth loue,
- And thou present'st a pure vnstained prime.
- Thou hast past by the ambush of young daies,
- Either not assayld,or victor beeing charg'd,
- Yet this thy praise cannot be soe thy praise,
- To tye vp enuy,euermore inlarged,
- If some suspect of ill maskt not thy show,
- Then thou alone kingdomes of hearts shouldst owe.
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