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		<title><![CDATA[Sonett-Forum - Wroth, Lady Mary]]></title>
		<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/</link>
		<description><![CDATA[Sonett-Forum - https://sonett-archiv.com/forum]]></description>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2026 03:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[The sun hath no long journey now to go]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=19949</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 18:49:32 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
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			<description><![CDATA[The sun hath no long journey now to go, <br />
   While I a progress have in my desires; <br />
   Disasters dead-low-water-like do show <br />
   The sand, that overlooked my hoped-for hires. <br />
<br />
Thus I remain like one that's laid in briars, <br />
   Where turning brings new pain and certain woe,  <br />
   Like one, once burned, bids me avoid the fires,  <br />
   But love, true fire, will not let me be slow. <br />
<br />
Obedience, fear and love do all conspire  <br />
   A worthless conquest gained to ruin me,  <br />
   Who did but feel the height of blest desire <br />
   When danger, doubt and loss I straight did see.  <br />
Restless I live, consulting what to do,  <br />
And more I study, more I still undo.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[The sun hath no long journey now to go, <br />
   While I a progress have in my desires; <br />
   Disasters dead-low-water-like do show <br />
   The sand, that overlooked my hoped-for hires. <br />
<br />
Thus I remain like one that's laid in briars, <br />
   Where turning brings new pain and certain woe,  <br />
   Like one, once burned, bids me avoid the fires,  <br />
   But love, true fire, will not let me be slow. <br />
<br />
Obedience, fear and love do all conspire  <br />
   A worthless conquest gained to ruin me,  <br />
   Who did but feel the height of blest desire <br />
   When danger, doubt and loss I straight did see.  <br />
Restless I live, consulting what to do,  <br />
And more I study, more I still undo.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Here all alone in silence might I mourne]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=19948</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 18:48:31 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=19948</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Here all alone in silence might I mourne:<br />
        But how can silence be where sorrowes flow?<br />
        Sighs with complaints have poorer paines out-worne;<br />
        But broken hearts can only true griefe show. <br />
<br />
Drops of my dearest bloud shall let Love know <br />
        Such teares for her I shed, yet still do burne, <br />
        As no spring can quench least part of my woe, <br />
        Till this live earth, againe to earth doe turne.<br />
<br />
Hatefull all thought of comfort is to me, <br />
        Despised day, let me still night possesse;<br />
        Let me all torments feele in their excesse, <br />
        And but this light allow my state to see.<br />
<br />
Which still doth wast, and wasting as this light, <br />
Are my sad dayes unto eternall night.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Here all alone in silence might I mourne:<br />
        But how can silence be where sorrowes flow?<br />
        Sighs with complaints have poorer paines out-worne;<br />
        But broken hearts can only true griefe show. <br />
<br />
Drops of my dearest bloud shall let Love know <br />
        Such teares for her I shed, yet still do burne, <br />
        As no spring can quench least part of my woe, <br />
        Till this live earth, againe to earth doe turne.<br />
<br />
Hatefull all thought of comfort is to me, <br />
        Despised day, let me still night possesse;<br />
        Let me all torments feele in their excesse, <br />
        And but this light allow my state to see.<br />
<br />
Which still doth wast, and wasting as this light, <br />
Are my sad dayes unto eternall night.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Unseen, unknown]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=19947</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 18:47:52 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=19947</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Unseen, unknown, I here alone complain<br />
    To rocks, to hills, to meadows, and to springs,<br />
Which can no help return to ease my pain, <br />
    But back my sorrows the sad Echo brings.<br />
Thus still increasing are my woes to me, <br />
    Doubly resounded by that moanful voice,<br />
Which seems to second me in misery, <br />
    And answer gives like friend of mine own choice.<br />
Thus only she doth my companion prove, <br />
    The others silently do offer ease.<br />
But those that grieve, a grieving note do love; <br />
    Pleasures to dying eyes bring but disease:<br />
And such am I, who daily ending live, <br />
    Wailing a state which can no comfort give.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Unseen, unknown, I here alone complain<br />
    To rocks, to hills, to meadows, and to springs,<br />
Which can no help return to ease my pain, <br />
    But back my sorrows the sad Echo brings.<br />
Thus still increasing are my woes to me, <br />
    Doubly resounded by that moanful voice,<br />
Which seems to second me in misery, <br />
    And answer gives like friend of mine own choice.<br />
Thus only she doth my companion prove, <br />
    The others silently do offer ease.<br />
But those that grieve, a grieving note do love; <br />
    Pleasures to dying eyes bring but disease:<br />
And such am I, who daily ending live, <br />
    Wailing a state which can no comfort give.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[PAMPHILIA TO AMPHILANTHVS (83)]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14302</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 30 Sep 2007 09:32:50 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14302</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[PAMPHILIA TO AMPHILANTHVS<br />
<br />
I.<br />
When night's blacke Mantle could most darknesse proue,<br />
And sleepe (deaths Image) did my senses hyre,<br />
From Knowledge of my selfe, then thoughts did moue<br />
Swifter then those, most [swiftnesse] neede require.<br />
In sleepe, a Chariot drawne by wing'd Desire,<br />
I saw; where sate bright Venus Queene of Loue <br />
And at her feete her Sonne, still adding Fire<br />
To burning hearts, which she did hold aboue,<br />
But one heart flaming more then all the rest,<br />
The Goddesse held, and put it to my breast,<br />
Deare Sonne now [shoot] , said she: thus must we winne;<br />
He her obey'd, and martyr'd my poore heart.<br />
I waking hop'd as dreames it would depart,<br />
Yet since, O me, a Lover I haue beene. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
DEare eyes how well indeed, you doe adorne<br />
That blessed Sphere, which gazing soules hold deare?<br />
The loved place of sought for triumphs, neere<br />
The Court of Glory , where Loues force was borne.<br />
How may they terme you Aprills sweetest morne?<br />
When pleasing lookes, from those bright lights appeare<br />
A Sunne-shine day, from clowdes, and mists still cleare:<br />
Kinde nursing fires for wishes yet vnborne.<br />
Two Starres of Heauen sent downe to grace the Earth,<br />
Plac'd in that Throne which gives all ioyes their birthe,<br />
Shining, and burning; pleasing yet their Charmes:<br />
Which wounding, euen in hurts are deem'd delights; <br />
So pleasant is their force, so great their mights,<br />
As happy they can tryumph in their harmes. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
YEt is there hope, then Love but play thy part,<br />
Remember well thy selfe, and think on me;<br />
Shine in those eyes which conquer'd haue my heart,<br />
And see if mine, be slacke to answer thee.<br />
Lodge in that breast, and pitty moouing see,<br />
For flames which in mine burne in truest smart,<br />
Exciling thoughts, that touch Inconstancy,<br />
Or those which waste not in the constant Art,<br />
Watch but my sleepe, if I take any rest,<br />
For thought of you, my spirit so distrest,<br />
As, pale and famish'd, I for mercy cry.<br />
Will you your seruant leave: thinke but on this,<br />
Who weares Love's Crowne, must not doe so amisse<br />
But seeke their good, who on thy force do lye. <br />
<br />
4.<br />
FOrbeare darke night, my ioyes now budd againe,<br />
Lately growne dead, while cold aspects, did chill<br />
The roote at heart, and my chiefe hope quite kill,<br />
And thunders strooke me in my pleasures waine .<br />
Then I alas with bitter sobs, and paine,<br />
Priuately groan'd, my Fortunes present ill;<br />
All light of comfort dimb'd, woes in prides fill,<br />
With strange encrease of griefe, I grieu'd in vaine.<br />
And most, when as a memory to good<br />
Molested me, which still as witnes stood,<br />
Of those best dayes, in former time I knew:<br />
Late gone as wonders past, like the great [Snow],<br />
Melted and wasted, with what, change must know:<br />
Now backe the life comes where as once it grew. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
CAn pleasing sight, misfortune euer bring?<br />
Can firme desire a painefull torment trye?<br />
Can winning eyes proue to the heart a sting?<br />
Or can sweet lips in Treason hidden lye?<br />
The Sunne most pleasing, blindes the strongest eye,<br />
If two much look'd on, breaking the sights string ;<br />
Desires still crost must unto mischiefe hie,<br />
And as Despaire, a lucklesse chance may fling.<br />
Eyes hauing [won], reiecting proues a sting<br />
Killing the budd before the tree doth spring;<br />
Sweet lipps, not louing, doe as poyson proue:<br />
Desire, sight, Eyes, lipps; seeke, see, proue, and finde,<br />
You loue may winn, but curses if vnkinde,<br />
Then show you harmes dislike, and ioy in loue. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
O Striue not still to heape disdaine on me,<br />
Nor pleasure take, your cruelty to show<br />
On haplesse me, on whom all sorrowes flow,<br />
And byding make: as giuen, and lost by thee.<br />
Alas; eu'ne griefe is growne to pitty me,<br />
Scorne cryes out 'gainst it selfe such ill to show,<br />
And would giue place for ioyes delights to flow;<br />
Yet wretched I, all [tortures] beare from thee.<br />
Long haue I suffer'd, and esteem'd it deare,<br />
Since such thy will, yet grew my paine more neere:<br />
Wish you [my] end, say so, you shall it haue;<br />
For all the deapth of my heart-held despaire,<br />
Is that for you, I feele not Death for care,<br />
But now Ile seeke it, since you will not saue. <br />
<br />
7.<br />
LOue leaue to vrge, thou knowest thou hast the hand<br />
'Tis Cowardize to striue where none resist,<br />
Pray thee leaue off, I yeeld vnto thy band,<br />
Doe not thus, still in thine owne power persist.<br />
Behold, I yeeld; let forces be dismist,<br />
I am thy Subiect conquer'd bound to stand<br />
Neuer thy foe, but did thy claime assist,<br />
Seeking thy due of those who did withstand.<br />
But now it seemes thou would'st I should thee loue,<br />
I doe confesse, t'was thy will made mee choose,<br />
And thy faire shewes made me a Louer proue,<br />
When I my freedome did for paine refuse.<br />
Yet this Sir god, your Boy-ship I despise,<br />
Your charmes I obey, but loue not want of eyes. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
LEdd by the power of griefe to wailings brought,<br />
By false conceit of change fallen on my part;<br />
I seeke for some smale ease by lines which bought,<br />
Increase the paine; griefe is not cur'd by Art.<br />
Ah! how vnkindnesse moues within the heart,<br />
Which still is true and free from changing thought:<br />
What vnknowne woe it breeds, what endlesse smart,<br />
With ceaslesse teares which causelessly are wrought.<br />
It makes me now to shun all shining light,<br />
And seeke for blackest clouds me light to giue:<br />
Which to all others only darkness driue;<br />
They on me shine, for Sunne disdaines my sight.<br />
Yet though I darke do liue, I triumph may,<br />
Vnkindnes, nor this wrong shall loue allay. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
BEe you all pleas'd, your pleasures grieue not me;<br />
Doe you delight? I enuy not your ioy:<br />
Haue you content? contentment with you be;<br />
Hope you for blisse? Hope still, and still enioy.<br />
Let sad misfortune, haplesse me destroy,<br />
Leaue crosses to rule me, and still rule free:<br />
While all delights their contraries imploy,<br />
To keepe good backe, and I but torments see.<br />
Ioyes are bereau'd me, harmes doe only tarry,<br />
Despaire takes place, disdaine hath gott the hand:<br />
Yet firme loue holds my senses in such band,<br />
As (since dispis'ed) I with sorrow marry.<br />
Then if with griefe I now must coupled bee,<br />
Sorrow Ile wed; Despaire thus gouernes mee. <br />
<br />
10.<br />
THe weary Traueller, who tyred, sought<br />
In places distant farre, yet found no end<br />
Of paine or labour, nor his state to mend:<br />
At last with ioy is to his home backe brought.<br />
Findes not more ease though he with ioy be fraught,<br />
When past is feare content like soules ascend:<br />
Then I, on whom new pleasures doe descend,<br />
Which now as high as first-borne blisse is wrought.<br />
He tyred with his paines, I with my minde; <br />
He all content receiues by ease of lymbs:<br />
I, greatest happinessse that I doe finde,<br />
Beliefe for faith, while hope in pleasure swimmes.<br />
Truth saith 'twas wrong conceit bred my despigt,<br />
Which once acknowledg'd, brings my hearts delight. <br />
<br />
11.<br />
YOu endlesse torments that my rest opresse,<br />
How long will you delight in my sad paine?<br />
Will neuer Loue your fauour more expresse?<br />
Shall I still liue, and euer feele disdaine?<br />
Alasse now stay, and let my griefe [obtaine] <br />
Some end; feede not my heart with sharpe distresse:<br />
Let me once see my cruell fortunes gaine,<br />
At least release, and long-felt woes redresse.<br />
Let not the blame of cruelty disgrace<br />
The honor'd title of your god-head Loue;<br />
Giue not iust cause for me [to] say, a place<br />
Is found for rage alone on me to moue.<br />
O quickly end, and doe not long debate<br />
My needful ayd, lest helpe doe come too late. <br />
<br />
12.<br />
CLoy'd with the torments of a tedious night,<br />
I wish for day; which come, I hope for ioy:<br />
When crosse I finde, new tortures to destroy,<br />
My woe-kil'd heart, first hurt by mischiefs might.<br />
Then crye for night, and once more day takes flight.<br />
And brightnesse gone; what rest should heere inioy<br />
Vsurped is: Hate will her force imploy;<br />
Night cannot Griefe intombe though blacke as spite.<br />
My thoughts are sad, her face as sad doth seeme;<br />
My paines are long, Her howers tedious are;<br />
My griefe is great, and endlesse is my care;<br />
Her face, her force, and all of woes esteeme.<br />
Then welcome Night, and farwell flattering Day,<br />
Which all hopes breed, and yet our ioyes delay. <br />
<br />
<br />
13.<br />
DEare famish not what you your selfe gaue food,<br />
Destroy not what your glory is to saue:<br />
Kill not that soule to which you spirit gaue,<br />
In pitty, not disdaine, your triumph stood.<br />
An easie thing it is to shed the bloud<br />
Of one who at your will yeelds to the graue:<br />
But more you may true worth by mercy craue,<br />
When you preserue, not spoyle, but nourish good.<br />
Your sight is all the food I doe desire,<br />
Then sacrifice me not in hidden fire,<br />
Or stop the breath which did your praises moue.<br />
Think but how easie 'tis a sight to giue,<br />
Nay euen desert, since by it I doe liue,<br />
I but Camelion-like, would liue, and loue. <br />
<br />
14.<br />
AM I thus conquer'd? haue I lost the powers,<br />
That to withstand, which ioyes to ruine me?<br />
Must I bee still, while it my strength deuoures,<br />
And captiue leads me prisoner bound, vnfree?<br />
Loue first shall [leaue] mens phant'sies to them free, <br />
Desire shall quench loues flames, Spring, hate sweet showres;<br />
Loue shall loose all his Darts, haue sight, and see<br />
His shame and wishings, hinder happy houres.<br />
Why should we not loues purblinde charmes resist? <br />
Must we be seruile, doing what he list?<br />
No, seeke some hoste too harbour thee: I flye<br />
Thy babish tricks, and freedome doe professe;<br />
But O my hurt makes my lost heart confesse:<br />
I loue, and must; so farewell liberty. <br />
<br />
15.<br />
TRuly (poore night) thou welcome art to me,<br />
I loue thee better in this sad attire<br />
Then that which rayseth some mens fant'sies higher,<br />
Like painted outsides, which foule inward be.<br />
I loue thy graue and saddest lookes to see,<br />
Which seems my soule and dying heart entire,<br />
Like to the ashes of some happy fire,<br />
That flam'd in ioy, but quench'd in misery.<br />
I loue thy count'nance, and thy sober pace,<br />
Which euenly goes, and as of louing grace<br />
To vs, and mee among the rest opprest,<br />
Giues quiet peace to my poore selfe alone,<br />
And freely grants day leaue; when thou art gone,<br />
To giue cleare light, to see all ill redrest. <br />
<br />
16.<br />
SLeepe fye possesse me not, nor doe not fright<br />
Me with thy heauy, and thy deathlike might:<br />
For counterfetting's vilder then death's sight;<br />
And such deluding more my thoughts doe spight.<br />
Thou suffer'st falsest shapes my soule t'affright,<br />
Sometimes in likenesse [of] a hopefull spright;<br />
And oft times like my Loue, as in despight;<br />
Ioying, thou canst with malice kill delight.<br />
When I (a poore foole made by thee) thinke ioy<br />
Doth flow, when thy fond shadowes doe destroy<br />
My that while sencelesse selfe, left free to thee.<br />
But now doe well, let me for euer sleepe,<br />
And so for euer that deere Image keepe<br />
Or still wake that my senses may be free. <br />
<br />
17. <br />
SWeet shades, why doe you seeke to giue delight<br />
To me, who deeme delight in this vilde place:<br />
But torment, sorrow, and mine owne disgrace,<br />
To taste of ioy, or your vaine pleasing sight?<br />
Show them your pleasures who saw neuer night<br />
Of griefe, where ioyings fawning smiling face<br />
Appears as day, where griefe found neuer space:<br />
Yet for a sigh, a groane, or enuies spite.<br />
But O: on me a world of woes doe lye,<br />
Or els on me all harmes striue to relye,<br />
And to attend like seruants bound to me.<br />
Heate in desire, while frosts of care I proue,<br />
Wanting my loue, yet surfet doe with loue,<br />
Burne, and yet freeze, better in Hell to be. <br />
<br />
18.<br />
WHich should I better like of, day or night?<br />
Since all the day, I liue in bitter woe:<br />
Inioying light more cleere my wrongs to know,<br />
And yet most sad, feeling in it all spite;<br />
In night when darknesse doth forbid all light;<br />
Yet see I griefe apparant to the show,<br />
Follow'd by iealousie, whose fond tricks flow,<br />
And on vnconstant waues of doubt alight.<br />
I can behold rage cowardly to feede<br />
Vpon foule error, which these humors breede,<br />
Shame doubt and feare, yet boldly will thinke ill.<br />
All those in both I feele, then which is best<br />
Darke to ioy by day, light in night opprest?<br />
Leaue both and end, these but each other spill. <br />
 <br />
19.<br />
COme darkest Night, becomming sorrow best,<br />
Light leaue thy light, fit for a lightsome soule:<br />
Darknesse doth truely sute with me opprest,<br />
Whom absence power doth from mirthe controule.<br />
The very trees with hanging heads condole<br />
Sweet Summers parting, and of leaues distrest,<br />
In dying colours make a grief-full role;<br />
So much (alas) to sorrow are they prest.<br />
Thus of dead leaues, her farewell carpets made,<br />
Their fall, their branches, all their mournings proue,<br />
With leaulesse naked bodies, whose hues vade <br />
From hopefull greene to wither in their loue.<br />
If trees, and leaues for absence mourners be,<br />
No maruell that I grieue, who like want see. <br />
<br />
20.<br />
THe Sunne which glads, the earth at his bright sight,<br />
When in the morne he showes his golden face,<br />
And takes the place from tedious drowsie Night.<br />
Making the world still happy in his grace.<br />
Shewes happinesse remaines not in one place,<br />
Nor may the Heauens alone to vs giue light,<br />
But hide that cheerfull face, though noe long space,<br />
Yet long enough for tryall of their might.<br />
But neuer Sun-set could be so obscure,<br />
No Desart euer had a shade so sad:<br />
Nor could black darknesse euer proue so bad,<br />
As paines which absence makes me now indure.<br />
The missing of the Sunne [awhile] makes Night,<br />
But absence of my ioy sees neuer light. <br />
<br />
21.<br />
WHen last I saw thee, I did not thee see,<br />
It was thine Image which in my thoughts lay<br />
So liuely figur'd, as no times delay<br />
Could suffer me in heart to parted be.<br />
And sleepe so fauourable is to me,<br />
As not to let thy lou'd remembrance stray:<br />
Lest that I waking might haue cause to say,<br />
there was one minute found to forgett thee.<br />
Then, since my faith is such, so kinde my sleepe,<br />
That gladly thee presents into my thought,<br />
And still true Louer-like thy face doth keepe,<br />
So as some pleasure shadow-like is wrought.<br />
Pitty my louing, nay of consience giue<br />
Reward to me in whom thy self doth liue. <br />
<br />
22. <br />
LIke to the Indians scorched with the Sunne,<br />
The Sunne which they doe as their God adore:<br />
So am I vs'd by Loue, for euermore<br />
I worship him, lesse fauors haue I wonne.<br />
Better are they who thus to blacknesse run,<br />
And so can onely whitenesse want deplore:<br />
[Then] I who pale and white am with griefes store,<br />
Nor can haue hope, but to see hopes vndone.<br />
Beesides their sacrifice receiu'd in sight,<br />
Of their chose Saint, mine hid as worthlesse rite,<br />
Grant me to see where I my offerings giue.<br />
Then let me weare the marke of Cupids might,<br />
In heart, as they in skin of Phoebus  light,<br />
Not ceasing offerings to Loue while I Liue. <br />
<br />
23.<br />
WHen euery one to pleasing pastime hies<br />
Some hunt, some hauke, some play, while some delight<br />
In sweet discourse, and musicke shewes ioys might:<br />
Yet I my thoughts doe farr aboue these prize.<br />
The ioy which I take is, that free from eyes<br />
I sit and wonder at this day-like night,<br />
So to dispose themselues as voyd of right,<br />
And leaue true pleasure for poore vanities.<br />
When others hunt, my thoughts I haue in chase;<br />
If hauke, my minde at wished end doth flye:<br />
Discourse, I with my spirit talke and cry;<br />
While others musicke choose as greatest grace.<br />
O God say I, can thes fond pleasures moue,<br />
Or musicke bee but in sweet thoughts of Loue? <br />
<br />
24.<br />
ONce did I heare an aged father say<br />
Vnto his sonne, who with attention heares<br />
What Age and wise experience euer cleares<br />
From doubts of feare, or reason to betray.<br />
My Sonn (said hee) behold thy father gray,<br />
I once had as thou hast, fresh tender yeares,<br />
And like thee sported destitute of feares;<br />
But my young faults made me too soone decay.<br />
Loue once I did, and like thee, fear'd my Loue,<br />
Led by the hatefull [thread] of Ielousie,<br />
Striuing to keepe, I lost my liberty,<br />
And gain'd my griefe, which still my sorrowes moue.<br />
In time shun this, to loue is no offence,<br />
But doubt in Youth, in Age, breeds penitence. <br />
 <br />
<br />
<br />
25.<br />
POore eyes bee blinde, the light behold noe more,<br />
Since that is gon which is your deare delight:<br />
Rauish'd from you by greater powre, and might,<br />
Making your losse a gaine to others store.<br />
Oerflow and drowne, till sight to you restore<br />
That blessed Starre, and as in hatefull spight,<br />
Send forth your teares in flouds to kill all sight,<br />
And looks, that lost wherin you ioy'd before.<br />
Bury these beames which in some kindled fires,<br />
And conquer'd haue their loue-burnt hearts desires,<br />
Losing, and yet no gaine by you esteem'd;<br />
Till that bright Starre doe once againe appeare,<br />
Brighter then Mars when hee doth shine most cleare;<br />
See not then by his might be you redeem'd. <br />
<br />
26.<br />
DEare cherish this, and with it my soules will,<br />
Nor for it ran away doe it abuse:<br />
Alas it left (poore me) your brest to choose,<br />
As the [blest] shrine, where it would harbour still.<br />
Then fauour shew, and not vnkindly kill<br />
The heart which fled to you, but doe excuse<br />
That which for better did the wurse refuse;<br />
And pleas'd Ile be, though heartlesse my lyfe spill.<br />
But if you will bee kinde, and iust indeed,<br />
Send me your heart, which in mine's place shall feede<br />
On faithfull loue to your deuotion bound,<br />
There shall it see the sacrifices made<br />
Of pure and spottlesse Loue, which shall not vade,<br />
While soule, and body are together found. <br />
<br />
27.<br />
FIe tedious Hope, why doe you still rebell?<br />
Is it not yet enough you flatter'd me,<br />
But cuningly you seeke to vse a Spell<br />
How to betray; must these your Trophies bee?<br />
I look'd from you farre sweeter fruite to see,<br />
But blasted were your blossomes when they fell:<br />
And those delights expected from hands free,<br />
Wither'd and dead, and what seemd blisse proues hell.<br />
No Towne was won by a more plotted slight<br />
Then I by you, who may my fortune write,<br />
In embers of that fire which ruin'd me:<br />
Thus Hope your falshood calls you to be tryde,<br />
You'r loth, I see, the tryall to abide;<br />
Proue true at last, and gaine your liberty. <br />
<br />
28.<br />
GRiefe, killing griefe, haue not my torments beene<br />
Already great and strong enough? but still<br />
Thou dost increase, nay glory in mine il,<br />
And woes new past, afresh new woes begin?<br />
Am I the onely purchase thou canst win?<br />
Was I ordain'd to giue despaire her fill,<br />
Or fittest I should mount misfortunes hill,<br />
Who in the plaine of ioy cannot liue in?<br />
If it be so, Griefe come as welcome guest,<br />
Since I must suffer for anothers rest;<br />
Yet this (good Griefe) let me intreat of thee,<br />
Vse still thy force, but not from those I loue<br />
Let me all paines and lasting torments proue;<br />
So I misse these, lay all thy waights on me. <br />
<br />
29.<br />
FLy hence O! Ioy, noe longer heere abide,<br />
Too great thy pleasures are for my despaire<br />
To looke on, losses now must proue my fare;<br />
Who not long since on better foode relide.<br />
But foole, how oft had I Heau'ns changing spi'de<br />
Before of mine owne fate I could haue care:<br />
Yet now past time, I can too late beware,<br />
When nothings left but sorrowes faster ty'de.<br />
While I inioyd that Sunne, whose sight did lend <br />
Me ioy, I thought that day could haue no end:<br />
But soon a night came cloath'd in absence darke;<br />
Absence more sad, more bitter then is gall,<br />
Or death, when on true Louers it doth fall;<br />
Whose fires of loue, disdaine reasts poorer sparke. <br />
<br />
30.<br />
YOu blessed shades, which giue me silent rest,<br />
Witnes but this when death hath clos'd mine eyes,<br />
And separated me from earthly tyes;<br />
Being from hence to higher places adrest.<br />
How oft in you I haue laine heere opprest?<br />
And haue my miseries in wofull cryes<br />
Deliuer'd forth, mounting vp to the Skyes?<br />
Yet helplesse, backe return'd to wound my brest,<br />
Which wounds did but striue how to breed more harm<br />
To me, who can be cur'd by no one charme<br />
But that of Loue, which yet may me releeue;<br />
If not, let Death my former paines redeeme,<br />
My trusty friends, my faith vntouch'd, esteeme,<br />
And witnesse I could loue, who so could grieue. <br />
 <br />
<br />
31.<br />
AFter long trouble in a tedious way,<br />
Of Loues vnrest, laid downe to ease my paine,<br />
Hoping for rest, new torments I did gaine<br />
Possessing me, as if I ought t'obey.<br />
When Fortune came, though blinded, yet did stay,<br />
And in her blessed armes did me inchaine:<br />
I, cold with griefe, thought noe warmth to obtaine,<br />
Or to dissolue that yce of ioyes decay.<br />
Till rise (said she) Reward to thee doth send<br />
By me the seruant of true Louers, ioy:<br />
Bannish all clouds of doubt, all feares destroy;<br />
And now on Fortune, and on Loue depend.<br />
I her obey'd, and rising felt that Loue<br />
Indeed was best, when I did least it moue. <br />
<br />
32.<br />
HOw fast thou fliest, O time, on loues swift wings,<br />
To hopes of ioy, that flatters our desire:<br />
Which to a Louer still contentment brings;<br />
Yet when we should inioy, thou dost retire.<br />
Thou stay'st thy pace (faulse Time) from our desire<br />
When to our ill thou hast'st with Eagles wings:<br />
Slow only to make vs see thy retire<br />
Was for Despaire, and harme, which sorrowe brings.<br />
O! slake thy pace, and milder passe to Loue,<br />
Be like the Bee, whose wings she doth but vse<br />
To bring home profit; masters good to proue,<br />
Laden, and weary, yet againe pursues.<br />
So lade thy selfe with hony of sweet ioy,<br />
And do not me the Hiue of Loue destroy. <br />
<br />
33.<br />
HOw many eyes (poore Loue) hast thou to guard<br />
Thee from thy most desired wish, and end?<br />
Is it because some say thou'rt blinde, that barr'd<br />
From sight, thou should'st noe happinesse attend?<br />
Who blame thee soe, smale iustice can pretend, <br />
Since twixt thee and the Sunne no question hard<br />
Can be, his sight but outward, thou canst bend<br />
The heart, and guide it freely thus vnbar'd.<br />
Art thou, while we both blinde and bold, oft dare<br />
Accuse the of the harmes, our selues should finde:<br />
Who led with folly, and by rashnesse blinde<br />
Thy sacred power doe with a child's compare.<br />
Yet Loue, this boldnesse pardon; for admire<br />
Thee sure we must, or be borne without fire. <br />
<br />
34.<br />
TAke heed mine eyes, how you your looks doe cast,<br />
Lest they betray my hearts most secret thought:<br />
Be true vnto your selues; for nothing's bought<br />
More deare then Doubt, which brings a Louers fast.<br />
Catch you al watching eyes ere they be past,<br />
Or take yours fix't, where your best Loue hath sought<br />
The pride of your desires; let them be taught<br />
Their faults for shame they could no truer last.<br />
Then looke, and looke with ioy, for conquest won,<br />
Of those that search'd your hurt in double kinde:<br />
So you kept safe, let them themselues looke blinde,<br />
Watch, gaze, and marke till they to madnesse run.<br />
While you mine eyes enioye full sight of Loue,<br />
Contented that such happinesses moue. <br />
<br />
35.<br />
FAlse hope which feeds but to destroy, and spill <br />
What it first breeds, vnnaturall to the [birth]<br />
Of thine owne wombe, conceiuing but to kill<br />
And plenty giues to make the greater dearth.<br />
So Tyrants doe, who falsly ruling Earth,<br />
Outwardly grace them, and with profits fill,<br />
Aduance those who appointed are to death;<br />
To make their greater fall to please their will.<br />
Thus shadow they their wicked vile intent, <br />
Colouring euill with a show of good:<br />
While in faire showes their malice so is spent;<br />
Hope kill's the heart, and Tyrants shed the blood.<br />
For [Hope]  deluding brings vs to the pride<br />
Of our desires the farther downe to slide. <br />
<br />
36.<br />
HOw well (poore heart) thou witnesse canst, I loue,<br />
How oft my grief hath made thee shed forth teares,<br />
Drops of thy dearest blood; and how oft feares<br />
Borne testimony of the paines I proue?<br />
What torments hast thou suffer'd, while aboue<br />
Ioy thou tortur'd wert with racks, which longing beares:<br />
Pinch'd with desires, which yet but wishing reares<br />
Firme in my faith, in constancie, to moue.<br />
Yet is it said, that sure loue cannot be,<br />
Where so small shew of passion is descri'd:<br />
When thy chiefe paine is, that I must it hide<br />
From all, saue onely one, who should it see.<br />
For know, more passion in my heart doth moue,<br />
Then in a million that make shew of loue. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
37.<br />
NIght, welcome art thou to my minde distrest,<br />
Darke, heauy, sad, yet not more sad then I:<br />
Neuer could'st thou find fitter company<br />
For thine owne humour, then I thus opprest.<br />
If thou beest darke, my wrongs still vnredrest<br />
Saw neuer light, nor smallest blisse can spye:<br />
If heauy ioy from me too fast doth hie,<br />
And care out-goes my hope of quiet rest.<br />
Then now in friendship ioyne with haplesse me,<br />
Who am as sad and darke as thou canst be,<br />
Hating all pleasure or delight of lyfe,<br />
Silence, and griefe, with thee I best doe loue.<br />
And from you three I know I can not moue,<br />
Then let vs liue companions without strife. <br />
<br />
38.<br />
WHat pleasure can a banish'd creature haue<br />
In all the pastimes that inuented are<br />
By wit or learning? Absence making warre<br />
Against all peace that may a biding craue.<br />
Can wee delight but in a welcome graue,<br />
Where we may bury paines? and so be fare<br />
From loathed company, who alwaies iarre<br />
Vpon the string of mirth that pastime gaue.<br />
The knowing part of ioye is deem'd the heart,<br />
If that be gone what ioy can ioy impart<br />
When senceless is the feeler of our mirth?<br />
Noe, I am banish'd, and no good shall finde,<br />
But all my fortunes must with mischiefe binde;<br />
Who but for miserie did gaine a birth. <br />
<br />
39.<br />
IF I were giuen to mirth, 'twould be more crosse,<br />
Thus to be robbed of my chiefest ioy:<br />
But silently I beare my greatest losse<br />
Who's vs'd to sorrow, griefe will not destroy.<br />
Nor can I as those pleasant wits inioy<br />
Mine owne fram'd wordes, which I account the drosse<br />
Of purer thoughts, or reckon them as mosse,<br />
While they (wit-sick) themselues to breath imploy.<br />
Alas, thinke I, your plenty shewes your want;<br />
For where most feeling is, wordes are more scant,<br />
Yet pardon mee, liue, and your pleasure take.<br />
Grudge not if I (neglected) enuy show,<br />
'Tis not to you that I dislike doe owe;<br />
But (crost my self) wish some like me to make. <br />
<br />
40.<br />
IT is not Loue which you poore fooles do deeme,<br />
That doth appeare by fond and outward showes<br />
Of kissing, toying, or by swearings gloze:<br />
O no, these are farre off from loues esteeme.<br />
Alas, they are not such that can redeeme<br />
Loue lost, or wining keepe those chosen blowes:<br />
Though oft with face, and lookes loue ouerthrowes;<br />
Yet so slight conquest doth not him beseeme.<br />
'Tis not a shew of sighes or teares can proue<br />
Who loues indeed, which blasts of fained loue,<br />
Increase or dye, as fauors from them slide.<br />
But in the soule true loue in safety lies<br />
Guarded by faith, which to desert still hies:<br />
And yet kinde lookes doe many blessings hide. <br />
<br />
41.<br />
YOu blessed Starres, which doe Heauen's glory show,<br />
And at your brightnesse make our eyes admire:<br />
Yet enuy not, though I on earth below,<br />
Inioy a sight which moues in me more fire.<br />
I doe confesse such beauty breeds desire<br />
You shine, and clearest light on vs bestow:<br />
Yet doth a sight on Earth more warmth inspire<br />
Into my louing soule, his grace to know.<br />
Cleare, bright, and shining, as you are, is this<br />
Light of my ioy: fix't stedfast, nor will moue<br />
His light from me, nor I chang from his loue;<br />
But still increase as [th'eith] of all my blisse.<br />
His sight giues life vnto my loue-rould [eyes],<br />
My loue content, because in his loue lies.<br />
<br />
42.<br />
IF euer loue had force in humane brest,<br />
If euer he could moue in pensiue heart:<br />
Or if that he such powre could but impart<br />
To breed those flames, whose heat brings ioys vnrest.<br />
Then looke on me; I am to these adrest,<br />
I am the soule that feeles the greatest smart:<br />
I am that heartlesse Trunck of hearts depart;<br />
And I that One, by loue, and griefe opprest<br />
Non euer felt the truth of loues great misse<br />
Of eyes till I depriued was of blisse;<br />
For had he seene, he must haue pitty show'd.<br />
I should not haue beene made this Stage of woe,<br />
Where sad Disasters haue their open show:<br />
O no, more pitty he had sure bestow'd. <br />
 <br />
<br />
43.<br />
O dearest eyes, the lights, and guides of Loue,<br />
The ioyes of Cupid, who himselfe borne blinde,<br />
To your bright shining, doth his tryumphs binde;<br />
For, in your seeing doth his glory moue.<br />
How happy are those places where you prooue<br />
Your heauenly beames, which make the Sun to finde<br />
Enuy and grudging, he so long hath shin'd<br />
For your cleare lights, to match his beames aboue.<br />
But now alas, your sight is heere forbid,<br />
And darkenes must these poore lost roomes possesse,<br />
So be all blessed lights from henceforth hid,<br />
That this blacke deede of darknesse haue excesse.<br />
For why showld Heauen affoord least light to those, <br />
Who for my misery such darkenesse chose. <br />
<br />
44.<br />
HOw fast thou hast'st O Spring with sweetest speede<br />
To catch thy [waters] which before are runne,<br />
And of the greater Riuers welcome woone,<br />
Ere these thy new-borne streames these places feed.<br />
Yet you doe well, lest staying here might breede<br />
Dangerous flouds, your sweetest bankes t'orerunn,<br />
And yet much better my distresse to shunn,<br />
Which maks my tears your swiftest course succeed.<br />
But best you doe when with so hasty flight<br />
You fly my ills, which now my selfe outgoe,<br />
Whose broken heart can testifie such woe,<br />
That so orecharg'd, my life-bloud, wasteth quite.<br />
Sweet Spring then keepe your way be neuer spent,<br />
And my ill dayes, or griefes, assunder rent. <br />
<br />
45.<br />
GOod now be still, and doe not me torment,<br />
With [multituds] of questions, be at rest,<br />
And onely let me quarrell with my breast,<br />
Which stil lets in new stormes my soule to rent.<br />
Fye, will you still my mischiefes more augment?<br />
You saye, I answere crosse, I that confest<br />
Long since, yet must I euer be opprest,<br />
With your tongue torture which will ne're be spent?<br />
Well then I see no way but this will fright,<br />
That Deuill speech; alas, I am possest,<br />
And madd folks senseles are of wisdomes right,<br />
The hellish spirit, Absence, doth arrest.<br />
All my poore senses to his cruell might,<br />
Spare me then till I am my selfe, and blest. <br />
<br />
46.<br />
LOue thou hast all, for now thou hast me made<br />
So thine, as if for thee I were ordain'd,<br />
Then take thy conquest, nor let me be pain'd<br />
More in thy Sunne, when I doe seeke thy shade.<br />
No place for helpe haue I left to inuade,<br />
That shew'd a face where least ease might be gain'd;<br />
Yet found I paine increase, and but obtain'd,<br />
That this no way was to haue loue allay'd<br />
When hott, and thirsty, to a Well I came,<br />
Trusting by that to quench part of my [flame],<br />
But there I was by Loue afresh imbrac'd<br />
Drinke I could not, but in it I did see<br />
My selfe a liuing glasse as well as shee;<br />
For loue to see himselfe in, truely plac'd. <br />
<br />
47.<br />
O stay mine eyes shed not these fruitlesse teares,<br />
Since hope is past to win you back againe,<br />
That treasure which being lost breeds all your paine;<br />
Cease from this poore betraying of your feares.<br />
Thinke this too childish is, for where griefe reares <br />
So high a powre for such a wretched gaine:<br />
Sighes nor laments should thus be spent in vaine,<br />
True sorrow neuer outward wailing beares.<br />
Be rul'd by me, keepe all the rest in store,<br />
Till no roome is that may containe one more;<br />
Then in that Sea of teares, drowne haplesse me,<br />
And Ile prouide such store of sighes, as part<br />
Shall be enough to breake the strongest heart,<br />
This done, we shall from torments freed be. <br />
<br />
48.<br />
HOw like a fire doth loue increase in me[!]<br />
The longer that it lasts the stronger still;<br />
The greater, purer, brighter; and doth fill<br />
No eye with wonder more then hopes still bee.<br />
Bred in my breast, when fires of Loue are free<br />
To vse that part to their best pleasing will,<br />
And now vnpossible it is to kill<br />
The heate so great where Loue his strength doth see.<br />
Mine eyes can scarce sustaine the flames, my heart<br />
Doth trust in them my passions to impart,<br />
And languishingly striue to shew my loue.<br />
My breath not able is to [breathe] least part<br />
Of that increasing fuell of my smart;<br />
Yet loue I will, till I but ashes proue. <br />
<br />
Pamphilia. <br />
<br />
Sonnet.<br />
LEt griefe as farre be from your dearest breast<br />
As I doe wish, or in my hands to ease;<br />
Then should it banish'd be, and sweetest rest<br />
Be plac'd to giue content by Loue to please.<br />
Let those disdaines which on your heart do [seaze],<br />
Doubly returne to bring her soules vnrest: <br />
Since true loue will not that belou'd displease;<br />
Or let least smart to their minds be addrest.<br />
But oftentimes mistakings be in loue.<br />
Be they as farre from false accusing right,<br />
And still truth gouerne with a constant might<br />
So shall you only wished pleasures proue.<br />
And as for mee she that shewes you least scorne,<br />
With all despite and hate, be her heart torne. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Sonnet. I.<br />
IN night yet may we see some kinde of light,<br />
When as the Moone doth please to shew her face,<br />
And in the Sunns roome yeelds her light, and grace,<br />
Which otherwise must suffer dullest night:<br />
So are my fortunes barrd from true delight,<br />
Cold, and vncertaine, like to this strange place,<br />
Decreasing, changing in an instant space,<br />
And euen at full of ioy turnd to despight.<br />
Iustly on Fortune was bestowd the Wheele{32},<br />
Whose fauours fickle, and vnconstant reele,<br />
Drunke with delight of change and sudden paine;<br />
Where pleasure hath no setled place of stay,<br />
But turning still, for our best hopes decay,<br />
And this (alas) we louers often gaine. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
LOue like a Iugler, comes to play his prize,<br />
And all mindes draw his wonders to admire,<br />
To see how cunningly he (wanting eyes)<br />
Can yet deseiue the best sight of desire.<br />
The wanton Childe, how he can faine his fire<br />
So prettily, as none sees his disguise,<br />
How finely doe his trickes; while we fooles hire<br />
The badge, and office of his tyrannies.<br />
For in the ende such Iugling he doth make,<br />
As he our hearts instead of eyes doth take;<br />
For men can onely by their slights abuse,<br />
The sight with nimble, and delightfull skill,<br />
But if he play, his gaine is our lost will,<br />
Yet Child-like we cannot his sports refuse. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
MOst blessed night, the happy time for Loue,<br />
The shade for Louers, and their Loues delight,<br />
The raigne of Loue for seruants free from spight,<br />
The hopefull seasons, for ioyes sports to mooue.<br />
Now hast thou made thy glory higher prooue,<br />
Then did the God, whose pleasant Reede did smite<br />
All Argus eyes into a death-like night,<br />
Till they were safe, that none could Loue reprooue.<br />
Now thou hast cloas'd those eyes from prying sight<br />
That nourish Iealousie, more than ioyes right,<br />
While vaine Suspition fosters their mistrust,<br />
Making sweet sleepe to master all suspect,<br />
Which els their priuat feares would not neglect,<br />
But would embrace both blinded, and vniust. <br />
<br />
4.<br />
CRuell suspition, O! be now at rest,<br />
Let daily torments bring to thee some stay,<br />
Alas, make not my ill thy ease-full pray,<br />
Nor giue loose raines to Rage, when Loue's opprest.<br />
I am by care sufficiently distrest,<br />
No Racke can stretch my heart more, nor a way<br />
Can I find out, for least content to lay <br />
One happy foot of ioy, one step that's blest.<br />
But to my end thou fly'st with greedy eye,<br />
Seeking to bring griefe by bace Iealousie;<br />
O, in how strange a Cage am I kept in?<br />
No little signe of fauour can I prooue,<br />
But must be way'd, and turn'd to wronging loue,<br />
And with each humour must my state begin. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
HOw many nights haue I with paine endurd?<br />
Which as so many Ages I esteem'd,<br />
Since my misfortune, yet noe whit redeem'd<br />
But rather faster ty'de, to griefe assur'd.<br />
How many houres haue my sad thoughts endur'd<br />
Of killing paines? yet is it not esteem'd<br />
By cruell Loue, who might haue these redeemd,<br />
And all these yeeres of houres to ioy assur'd.<br />
But fond Childe, had he had a care to saue,<br />
As first to conquer, this my pleasures graue,<br />
Had not beene now to testifie my woe.<br />
I might haue beene an Image of delight,<br />
As now a Tombe for sad misfortunes spight,<br />
Which Loue vnkindly, for reward doth show. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
MY paine still smother'd in my grieued brest,<br />
Seekes for some ease, yet cannot passage finde,<br />
To be discharg'd of this vnwellcome guest,<br />
When most I striue, more fast his burthens binde.<br />
Like to a Ship on Goodwins cast by winde, <br />
The more she striues, more deepe in Sand is prest,<br />
Till she be lost: so am I in this kind<br />
Sunck, and deuour'd, and swallow'ed by vnrest.<br />
Lost, shipwrackt, spoyl'd, debar'd of smallest hope,<br />
Nothing of pleasure left, saue thoughts haue scope,<br />
Which wander may; goe then my thoughts and cry:<br />
Hope's perish'd, Loue tempest-beaten, Ioy lost,<br />
Killing Despaire hath all these blessings crost;<br />
Yet Faith still cries, Loue will not falsifie. <br />
<br />
7.<br />
AN end fond Ielousie, alas I know<br />
Thy hiddenest, and thy most secret Art,<br />
Thou canst no new inuention frame but part,<br />
I haue already seene, and felt with woe.<br />
All thy dissemblings, which by faigned showe,<br />
Wonne my beliefe, while truth did rule my heart,<br />
I with glad minde embrac'd, and deemd my smart<br />
The spring of ioy, whose streames with blisse should flow.<br />
I thought excuses had beene reasons true,<br />
And that no falshood could of thee ensue,<br />
So soone beliefe in honest mindes is wrought;<br />
But now I finde thy flattery, and skill,<br />
Which idely made me to obserue thy will,<br />
Thus is my learning by my bondage bought. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
POore Loue in chaines, and fetters like a thiefe<br />
I mett ledd forth, as chast Diana's gaine<br />
Vowing the vntaught Lad should no reliefe<br />
From her receiue, who gloried in fond paine.<br />
She call'd him theife; with vowes he did mainetaine<br />
He neuer stole, but some sadd slight of griefe<br />
Had giuen to those who did his power disdaine,<br />
In which reuenge, his honour was the chiefe.<br />
Shee say'd he murther'd and therefor must dye,<br />
He that he caus'd but Loue, did harmes deny,<br />
But, while she thus discoursing with him stood;<br />
The Nymphes vnti'de him, and his chaines tooke off,<br />
Thinking him safe; but he (loose) made a scoffe,<br />
Smiling and scorning them; flew to the wood. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
PRay doe not vse these words, I must be gone;<br />
Alasse doe not foretell mine ills to come:<br />
Let not my care be to my ioyes a Tombe;<br />
But rather finde my losse with losse alone.<br />
Cause me not thus a more distressed one,<br />
Not feeling blisse, because of this sad doome<br />
Of present crosse; for thinking will orecome<br />
And loose all pleasure, since griefe breedeth none.<br />
Let the misfortune come at once to me,<br />
Nor suffer me with griefe to punish'd be;<br />
Let mee be ignorant of mine owne ill:<br />
Then now with the fore-knowledge quite to lose<br />
That which with so much care and paines Loue chose<br />
For his reward, but ioye now, then mirth kill. <br />
<br />
10.<br />
FOlly would needs make me a Louer be,<br />
When I did litle thinke of louing thought;<br />
Or euer to be tyde, while shee told me<br />
That none can liue, but to these bands are brought.<br />
I (ignorant) did grant, and so was bought,<br />
And sold againe to Louers slauery:<br />
The duty to that vanity once taught,<br />
Such band is, as wee will not seeke to free.<br />
Yet when I well did vnderstand his might,<br />
How he inflam'd, and forc'd one to affect:<br />
I loud and smarted, counting it delight<br />
So still to waste, which Reason did reiect.<br />
When Loue came blind-fold, and did challenge me.<br />
Indeed I lou'd, but wanton Boy not hee, <br />
 <br />
<br />
<br />
O pardon Cupid, I confesse my fault,<br />
Then mercy grant me in so iust a kinde:<br />
For treason neuer lodged in my minde<br />
Against thy might, so much as in a thought.<br />
And now my folly I haue dearely bought,<br />
Nor could my soule least rest or quiett finde;<br />
Since Rashnes did my thoughts to Error binde,<br />
Which now thy fury, and my harme hath wrought.<br />
I curse that thought, and hand which that first fram'd,<br />
For which by thee I am most iustly blam'd:<br />
But now that hand shall guided be aright,<br />
And giue a Crowne vnto thy endlesse praise,<br />
Which shall thy glory, and thy greatnesse raise,<br />
More then these poore things could thy honor spight. <br />
<br />
<br />
A Crowne of Sonnets dedicated<br />
to L O V E.<br />
<br />
<br />
IN this strange Labyrinth how shall I turne,<br />
Wayes are on all sids while the way I misse:<br />
If to the right hand, there, in loue I burne,<br />
Let mee goe forward, therein danger is.<br />
If to the left, suspition hinders blisse;<br />
Let mee turne back, shame cryes I ought returne:<br />
Nor faint, though crosses [with] my fortunes kiss,<br />
Stand still is harder, allthough sure to mourne.<br />
Thus let mee take the right, or left hand way,<br />
Goe forward, or stand still, or back retire:<br />
I must these doubts indure without allay<br />
Or helpe, but trauell finde for my best hire.<br />
Yet that which most my troubled sense doth moue,<br />
Is to leaue all, and take the threed of Loue. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
IS to leaue all, and take the threed of Loue,<br />
Which line straite leades vnto the soules content,<br />
Where choice delights with pleasures wings doe moue,<br />
And idle fant'sie neuer roome had lent.<br />
When chaste thoughts guide vs, then our minds are bent<br />
To take that good which ills from vs remoue:<br />
Light of true loue brings fruite which none repent;<br />
But constant Louers seeke and wish to proue.<br />
Loue is the shining Starre of blessings light,<br />
The feruent fire of zeale, the roote of peace,<br />
The lasting lampe, fed with the oyle of right,<br />
Image of Faith, and wombe for ioyes increase.<br />
Loue is true Vertue, and his ends delight,<br />
His flames are ioyes, his bands true Louers might. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
HIs flames are ioyes, his bandes true Louers might,<br />
No stain is there, but pure, as purest white,<br />
Where no cloud can appaere to dimme his light,<br />
Nor spot defile, but shame will soon requite.<br />
Heere are affections, tryde by Loues iust might<br />
As Gold by fire, and black discern'd by white;<br />
Error by truth, and darknes knowne by light,<br />
Where Faith is vallu'd, for Loue to requite.<br />
Please him, and serue him, glory in his might<br />
And firme hee'le be, as Innocency white,<br />
Cleere as th'ayre, warme as Sun's beames, as day light<br />
Iust as Truth, constant as Fate, ioy'd to requite.<br />
Then loue obey, striue to obserue his might<br />
And be in his braue Court a glorious light. <br />
<br />
4.<br />
ANd be in his braue Court a glorious light<br />
Shine in the eyes of Faith, and Constancy<br />
Maintaine the fires of Loue, still burning bright,<br />
Not slightly sparkling, but light flaming be.<br />
Neuer to slake till earth no Starres can see,<br />
Till Sun, and Moone doe leaue to vs darke night,<br />
And secound Chaos once againe doe free<br />
Vs, and the World from all deuisions spight,<br />
Till then affections which his followers are,<br />
Gouerne our hearts, and prooue his powers gaine,<br />
To taste this pleasing sting, seeke with all care<br />
For happy smarting is it with small paine.<br />
Such as although it pierce your tender heart,<br />
And burne, yet burning you will loue the smart. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
ANd burne, yet burning you will loue the smart,<br />
When you shall feele the waight of true desire,<br />
So pleasing, as you would not wish your part<br />
Of burthen showld be missing from that fire.<br />
But faithfull and vnfaigned heate aspire<br />
Which sinne abollisheth, and doth impart<br />
Salues to all feare, with vertues which inspire<br />
Soules with diuine loue; which showes his chast art.<br />
And guide he is to ioyings, open eyes<br />
He hath to happinesse, and best can learne<br />
Vs, meanes how to deserue, this he descries,<br />
Who blinde, yet doth our hiden'st thoughts discerne.<br />
Thus we may gaine since liuing in blest Loue, <br />
He may our [profitt], and our Tutor prooue. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
HE may our Prophett, and our Tutor prooue,<br />
In whom alone we doe this power finde,<br />
To ioine two hearts as in one frame to mooue<br />
Two bodies, but one soule to rule the minde<br />
Eyes which must care to one deare Obiect binde,<br />
Eares to each others speach as if aboue<br />
All else, they sweete, and learned were; this kind<br />
Content of Louers witnesseth true loue.<br />
It doth inrich the wits, and make you see<br />
That in your selfe which you knew not before,<br />
Forceing you to admire such guifts showld be<br />
Hid from your knowledge, yet in you the store.<br />
Millions of these adorne the throane of Loue,<br />
How blest [bee] they then, who his fauours proue? <br />
<br />
7.<br />
HOw bless'd be they, then, who his fauors proue,<br />
A life whereof the birth is iust desire?<br />
Breeding sweete flame, which harts inuite to moue,<br />
In these lou'd eyes which kindle Cupids fire,<br />
And nurse his longings with his thoughts intire,<br />
Fix't on the heat of wishes form'd by Loue,<br />
Yet whereas fire destroyes, this doth aspire,<br />
Increase, and foster all delights aboue.<br />
Loue will a Painter make you, such, as you<br />
Shall able be to draw, your onely deare,<br />
More liuely, perfect, lasting, and more true<br />
Then rarest Workeman, and to you more neere.<br />
These be the least, then all must needs confesse,<br />
He that shuns Loue, doth loue himselfe the lesse. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
HE that shuns Loue, doth loue himselfe the lesse,<br />
And cursed he whose spirit, not admires<br />
The worth of Loue, where endlesse blessednes<br />
Raignes, &amp; commands, maintain'd by heau'nly fires.<br />
Made of Vertue, ioyn'd by Truth, blowne by Desires,<br />
Strengthned by Worth, renew'd by carefulnesse,<br />
Flaming in neuer changing thoughts: bryers<br />
Of Iealousie shall heere misse welcomnesse.<br />
Nor coldly passe in the pursutes of Loue<br />
Like one long frozen in a Sea of yce:<br />
And yet but chastly let your passions [mooue],<br />
No thought from vertuous Loue your minds intice.<br />
Neuer to other ends your Phant'sies place,<br />
But where they may returne with honor's grace. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
BVt where they may returne with Honor's grace,<br />
Where Venus follies can no harbour winne,<br />
But chased are, as worthlesse of the face,<br />
Or stile of Loue, who hath lasciuious beene.<br />
Our hearts are subiect to her Sonne; where sinne<br />
Neuer did dwell, or rest one minutes space;<br />
What faults he hath in her did still beginne,<br />
And from her breast he suck'd his fleeting pace.<br />
If Lust be counted Loue 'tis falsely nam'd,<br />
By wickednesse, a fairer glosse to set<br />
Vpon that Vice, which else makes men asham'd<br />
In the owne Phrase to warrant, but beget<br />
This Childe for Loue, who ought like Monster borne<br />
Be from the Court of Loue, and Reason torne. <br />
<br />
10.<br />
BEe from the Court of Loue, and Reason torne,<br />
For Loue in Reason now doth put his trust,<br />
Desert, and liking are together borne<br />
Children of Loue, and Reason, Parents iust,<br />
Reason aduiser is, Loue ruler must<br />
Be of the State, which Crowne he long hath worne;<br />
Yet so, as neither will in least mistrust<br />
The gouernment where no feare is of scorn.<br />
Then reuerence both their mights thus made of one,<br />
But wantonesse, and all those errors shun,<br />
Which wrongers be, Impostures, and alone<br />
Maintainers of all follies ill begunne.<br />
Fruit of a [sowre], and vnwholsome grownd <br />
Vnprofitably pleasing, and vnsound. <br />
<br />
11.<br />
VNprofitably pleasing, and vnsound.<br />
When Heauen gaue liberty to fraile dull earth,<br />
To bringe foorth plenty that in ills abound,<br />
Which ripest, yet doe bring a certaine dearth.<br />
A timelesse, and vnseasonable birth,<br />
Planted in ill, in worse time springing found,<br />
Which Hemlocke like might feed a sicke-wits mirth<br />
Where vnrul'd vapours swimme in endlesse round.<br />
Then ioy we not in what we ought to shunne,<br />
Where shady pleasures shew, but true borne fires<br />
Are quite quench'd out, or by poore ashes won,<br />
Awhile to keepe those coole, and wann desires.<br />
O no, let Loue his glory haue, and might <br />
Be giu'n to him, who triumphs in his right. <br />
<br />
12.<br />
BE giu'n to him who triumphs in his right;<br />
Nor fading be, but like those blossomes faire,<br />
Which fall for good, and lose their colours bright,<br />
Yet dye not, but with fruit their losse repaire:<br />
So may Loue make you pale with louing care,<br />
When sweet enioying shall restore that light,<br />
More cleere in beauty, then we can compare,<br />
If not to Venus in her chosen [night]. <br />
And who so giue themselues in this deare kinde,<br />
These happinesses shall attend them still,<br />
To be supplide with ioyes enrich'd in minde,<br />
With treasures of content, and pleasures fill.<br />
Thus loue to be deuine, doth here appeare,<br />
Free from all foggs, but shining faire, and cleare. <br />
<br />
13.<br />
FRee from all foggs, but shining faire, and cleare,<br />
Wise in all good, and innocent in ill,<br />
Where holly friendship is esteemed deare,<br />
With Truth in loue, and Iustice in our Will.<br />
In Loue these titles onely haue their fill<br />
Of happy life-maintainer, and the meere<br />
Defence of right, the punisher of skill,<br />
And fraude, from whence directions doth appeare.<br />
To thee then, Lord commander of all hearts,<br />
Ruler of our affections, kinde, and iust,<br />
Great King of Loue, my soule from faigned smarts,<br />
Or thought of change, I offer to your trust,<br />
This Crowne, my selfe, and all that I haue more,<br />
Except my heart, which you bestow'd before. <br />
<br />
14.<br />
EXcept my heart, which you bestow'd before,<br />
And for a signe of Conquest gaue away <br />
As worthlesse to be kept in your choice store;<br />
Yet one more spotlesse with you doth not stay.<br />
The tribute which my heart doth truely pay,<br />
Is faith vntouch'd, pure thoughts discharge the score<br />
Of debts for me, where Constancy beares sway,<br />
And rules as Lord, vnharm'd by Enuies sore,<br />
Yet other mischiefes faile not to attend,<br />
As enimies to you, my foes must be,<br />
Curst Iealousie doth all her forces bend<br />
To my vndoing, thus my harmes I see.<br />
So though in Loue I feruently doe burne,<br />
In this strange Labyrinth how shall I turne?<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
I.<br />
MY heart is lost, what can I now expect,<br />
An euening faire after a drowsie day?<br />
Alas, fond Phant'sie, this is not the way,<br />
To cure a mourning heart, or salue neglect:<br />
They who should helpe, doe me, and helpe reiect,<br />
Embracing loose desires, and wanton play,<br />
While wanton base delights doe beare the sway,<br />
[And] impudency raignes without respect.<br />
O Cupid let [thy] Mother know her shame,<br />
'T'is time for her to leaue this youthfull flame,<br />
Which doth dishonor her, is ages blame,<br />
And takes away the greatnes of thy name.<br />
Thou God of Loue, she only Queene of lust,<br />
Yet striues by weakning thee, to be vniust. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
LAte in the Forrest I did Cupid see<br />
Cold, wett, and crying, he had lost his way,<br />
And being blinde was farther like to stray;<br />
Which sight, a kind compassion bred in me.<br />
I kindly tooke, and dry'd him, while that he,<br />
(Poore Child) complain'd, he sterued was with stay<br />
And pin'd for want of his accustom'd prey,<br />
For none in that wilde place his Host would be.<br />
I glad was of his finding, thinking sure,<br />
This seruice should my freedome still procure,<br />
And in my armes I tooke him then vnharm'd,<br />
Carrying him safe vnto a Myrtle bowre,<br />
But in the way he made me, feele his powre,<br />
Burning my heart, who had him kindly warm'd. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
IVno still iealous of her husband Ioue,<br />
Descended from aboue, on earth to try,<br />
Whether she there could find his chosen Loue,<br />
Which made him from the Heau'ns so often flye.<br />
Close by the place where I for shade did lye,<br />
She [chaseing] came, but when shee saw me moue,<br />
Haue you not seene this way (said she) to hye<br />
One, in whom vertue neuer grownde did proue?<br />
Hee, in whom Loue doth breed, to stirre more hate,<br />
Courting a wanton Nimph for his delight;<br />
His name is Iupiter, my Lord, by Fate,<br />
Who for her, leaues Me, Heauen, his Throne, and light,<br />
I saw him not (said I) although heere are<br />
Many, in whose hearts, Loue hath made like warre<br />
<br />
4.<br />
WHen I beheld the Image of my deare,<br />
With greedy lookes mine eies would that way bend,<br />
Feare, and Desire, did inwardly contend;<br />
Feare to be mark'd, Desire to drawe still neere.<br />
And in my soule a Spirit would appeare,<br />
Which boldnes waranted, and did pretend<br />
To be my Genius, yet I durst not lend,<br />
My eyes in trust, where others seem'd so cleare.<br />
Then did I search, from whence this danger rose,<br />
If such vnworthynesse in me did rest,<br />
As my steru'd eyes must not with sight be blest,<br />
When Iealousie her poyson did disclose.<br />
Yet in my heart vnseene of Iealous eye,<br />
The truer Image shall in tryumph lye. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
LIke to huge Clowdes of smoake which well may hide<br />
The face of fairest day, though for a while:<br />
So wrong may shaddow me, till truth doe smile,<br />
And Iustice Sunne-like hath those vapours tyde.<br />
O doating Time, canst thou for shame let slid,<br />
So many minutes, while ills doe beguile<br />
Thy age, and worth, and falshoods thus defile<br />
Thy auncient good, where now but crosses bide?<br />
Looke but once vp, and leaue thy toyling pace <br />
And on my miseries thy dimme eye place,<br />
Goe not so fast, but giue my care some ende,<br />
Turne not thy glasse{50} (alas) vnto my ill<br />
Since thou with sand it canst not so farre fill,<br />
But to each one my sorrowes will extend. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
O that no day would euer more appeare,<br />
But clowdy night to gouerne this sad place,<br />
Nor light from Heauen these haples roomes to grace<br />
Since that light's shadow'd which my Loue holds deare.<br />
Let thickest mists in enuy master here,<br />
And Sunne-borne day for malice show no face,<br />
Disdaining light, where Cupid, and the race<br />
Of Louers are dispisd, and shame shines cleere.<br />
Let me be darke, since barr'd of my chiefe light,<br />
And wounding Iealousie commands by might,<br />
But stage-play-like diguised pleasures giue:<br />
To me it seemes, as ancient fictions make<br />
The Starres, all [fashions], and all shapes partake,<br />
While in my thoughts true forme of Loue shall liue. <br />
<br />
7.<br />
NO time, no roome, no thought, or writing can<br />
Giue rest, or quiet to my louing heart,<br />
Or can my memory or Phant'sie scan,<br />
The measure of my still renewing smart.<br />
Yet whould I not (deare Loue) thou shouldst depart,<br />
But let my passions as they first began,<br />
Rule, wounde, and please, it is thy choysest Art,<br />
To giue disquiet, which seemes ease to man.<br />
When all alone, I thinke vpon thy paine,<br />
How thou doest trauell our best selues to gaine,<br />
Then houerly thy lessons I doe learne;<br />
Thinke on thy glory, which shall still ascend,<br />
Vntill the world come to a finall end,<br />
And then shall we thy lasting powre dicerne. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
HOw Glowworme-like the Sun doth now appeare,<br />
Cold beames doe from his glorious face descend<br />
Which shewes his daies, and force [draw] to an end,<br />
Or that to leaue taking, his time grows neere.<br />
[This] day his face did seeme but pale, though cleare,<br />
The reason is, he to the North must lend<br />
His light, and warmth must to that Climat bend,<br />
Whose frozen parts cowld not loues heat hold deare<br />
Alas, if thou bright Sunne to part from hence<br />
Grieue so, what must I haplesse who from thence,<br />
Where thou dost goe my blessing shall attend;<br />
Thou shalt enioy that sight for which I dye,<br />
And in my heart thy fortunes doe enuy,<br />
Yet grieue, I'le loue thee, for this state may mend. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
MY Muse now happy lay thy selfe to rest,<br />
Sleepe in the quiet of a faithfull loue,<br />
Write you no more, but let these Phant'sies mooue<br />
Some other hearts, wake not to new vnrest.<br />
But if you Study be those thoughts adrest<br />
To truth, which shall eternall goodnes prooue;<br />
Enioying of true ioy the most, and best<br />
The endles gaine which neuer will remoue.<br />
Leaue the discourse of Venus, and her sonne<br />
To young beginners, and their braines inspire<br />
With storyes of great Loue, and from that fire,<br />
Get heat to write the fortunes they haue wonne.<br />
And thus leaue off; what's past shewes you can loue,<br />
Now let your Constancy your Honor proue.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[PAMPHILIA TO AMPHILANTHVS<br />
<br />
I.<br />
When night's blacke Mantle could most darknesse proue,<br />
And sleepe (deaths Image) did my senses hyre,<br />
From Knowledge of my selfe, then thoughts did moue<br />
Swifter then those, most [swiftnesse] neede require.<br />
In sleepe, a Chariot drawne by wing'd Desire,<br />
I saw; where sate bright Venus Queene of Loue <br />
And at her feete her Sonne, still adding Fire<br />
To burning hearts, which she did hold aboue,<br />
But one heart flaming more then all the rest,<br />
The Goddesse held, and put it to my breast,<br />
Deare Sonne now [shoot] , said she: thus must we winne;<br />
He her obey'd, and martyr'd my poore heart.<br />
I waking hop'd as dreames it would depart,<br />
Yet since, O me, a Lover I haue beene. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
DEare eyes how well indeed, you doe adorne<br />
That blessed Sphere, which gazing soules hold deare?<br />
The loved place of sought for triumphs, neere<br />
The Court of Glory , where Loues force was borne.<br />
How may they terme you Aprills sweetest morne?<br />
When pleasing lookes, from those bright lights appeare<br />
A Sunne-shine day, from clowdes, and mists still cleare:<br />
Kinde nursing fires for wishes yet vnborne.<br />
Two Starres of Heauen sent downe to grace the Earth,<br />
Plac'd in that Throne which gives all ioyes their birthe,<br />
Shining, and burning; pleasing yet their Charmes:<br />
Which wounding, euen in hurts are deem'd delights; <br />
So pleasant is their force, so great their mights,<br />
As happy they can tryumph in their harmes. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
YEt is there hope, then Love but play thy part,<br />
Remember well thy selfe, and think on me;<br />
Shine in those eyes which conquer'd haue my heart,<br />
And see if mine, be slacke to answer thee.<br />
Lodge in that breast, and pitty moouing see,<br />
For flames which in mine burne in truest smart,<br />
Exciling thoughts, that touch Inconstancy,<br />
Or those which waste not in the constant Art,<br />
Watch but my sleepe, if I take any rest,<br />
For thought of you, my spirit so distrest,<br />
As, pale and famish'd, I for mercy cry.<br />
Will you your seruant leave: thinke but on this,<br />
Who weares Love's Crowne, must not doe so amisse<br />
But seeke their good, who on thy force do lye. <br />
<br />
4.<br />
FOrbeare darke night, my ioyes now budd againe,<br />
Lately growne dead, while cold aspects, did chill<br />
The roote at heart, and my chiefe hope quite kill,<br />
And thunders strooke me in my pleasures waine .<br />
Then I alas with bitter sobs, and paine,<br />
Priuately groan'd, my Fortunes present ill;<br />
All light of comfort dimb'd, woes in prides fill,<br />
With strange encrease of griefe, I grieu'd in vaine.<br />
And most, when as a memory to good<br />
Molested me, which still as witnes stood,<br />
Of those best dayes, in former time I knew:<br />
Late gone as wonders past, like the great [Snow],<br />
Melted and wasted, with what, change must know:<br />
Now backe the life comes where as once it grew. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
CAn pleasing sight, misfortune euer bring?<br />
Can firme desire a painefull torment trye?<br />
Can winning eyes proue to the heart a sting?<br />
Or can sweet lips in Treason hidden lye?<br />
The Sunne most pleasing, blindes the strongest eye,<br />
If two much look'd on, breaking the sights string ;<br />
Desires still crost must unto mischiefe hie,<br />
And as Despaire, a lucklesse chance may fling.<br />
Eyes hauing [won], reiecting proues a sting<br />
Killing the budd before the tree doth spring;<br />
Sweet lipps, not louing, doe as poyson proue:<br />
Desire, sight, Eyes, lipps; seeke, see, proue, and finde,<br />
You loue may winn, but curses if vnkinde,<br />
Then show you harmes dislike, and ioy in loue. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
O Striue not still to heape disdaine on me,<br />
Nor pleasure take, your cruelty to show<br />
On haplesse me, on whom all sorrowes flow,<br />
And byding make: as giuen, and lost by thee.<br />
Alas; eu'ne griefe is growne to pitty me,<br />
Scorne cryes out 'gainst it selfe such ill to show,<br />
And would giue place for ioyes delights to flow;<br />
Yet wretched I, all [tortures] beare from thee.<br />
Long haue I suffer'd, and esteem'd it deare,<br />
Since such thy will, yet grew my paine more neere:<br />
Wish you [my] end, say so, you shall it haue;<br />
For all the deapth of my heart-held despaire,<br />
Is that for you, I feele not Death for care,<br />
But now Ile seeke it, since you will not saue. <br />
<br />
7.<br />
LOue leaue to vrge, thou knowest thou hast the hand<br />
'Tis Cowardize to striue where none resist,<br />
Pray thee leaue off, I yeeld vnto thy band,<br />
Doe not thus, still in thine owne power persist.<br />
Behold, I yeeld; let forces be dismist,<br />
I am thy Subiect conquer'd bound to stand<br />
Neuer thy foe, but did thy claime assist,<br />
Seeking thy due of those who did withstand.<br />
But now it seemes thou would'st I should thee loue,<br />
I doe confesse, t'was thy will made mee choose,<br />
And thy faire shewes made me a Louer proue,<br />
When I my freedome did for paine refuse.<br />
Yet this Sir god, your Boy-ship I despise,<br />
Your charmes I obey, but loue not want of eyes. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
LEdd by the power of griefe to wailings brought,<br />
By false conceit of change fallen on my part;<br />
I seeke for some smale ease by lines which bought,<br />
Increase the paine; griefe is not cur'd by Art.<br />
Ah! how vnkindnesse moues within the heart,<br />
Which still is true and free from changing thought:<br />
What vnknowne woe it breeds, what endlesse smart,<br />
With ceaslesse teares which causelessly are wrought.<br />
It makes me now to shun all shining light,<br />
And seeke for blackest clouds me light to giue:<br />
Which to all others only darkness driue;<br />
They on me shine, for Sunne disdaines my sight.<br />
Yet though I darke do liue, I triumph may,<br />
Vnkindnes, nor this wrong shall loue allay. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
BEe you all pleas'd, your pleasures grieue not me;<br />
Doe you delight? I enuy not your ioy:<br />
Haue you content? contentment with you be;<br />
Hope you for blisse? Hope still, and still enioy.<br />
Let sad misfortune, haplesse me destroy,<br />
Leaue crosses to rule me, and still rule free:<br />
While all delights their contraries imploy,<br />
To keepe good backe, and I but torments see.<br />
Ioyes are bereau'd me, harmes doe only tarry,<br />
Despaire takes place, disdaine hath gott the hand:<br />
Yet firme loue holds my senses in such band,<br />
As (since dispis'ed) I with sorrow marry.<br />
Then if with griefe I now must coupled bee,<br />
Sorrow Ile wed; Despaire thus gouernes mee. <br />
<br />
10.<br />
THe weary Traueller, who tyred, sought<br />
In places distant farre, yet found no end<br />
Of paine or labour, nor his state to mend:<br />
At last with ioy is to his home backe brought.<br />
Findes not more ease though he with ioy be fraught,<br />
When past is feare content like soules ascend:<br />
Then I, on whom new pleasures doe descend,<br />
Which now as high as first-borne blisse is wrought.<br />
He tyred with his paines, I with my minde; <br />
He all content receiues by ease of lymbs:<br />
I, greatest happinessse that I doe finde,<br />
Beliefe for faith, while hope in pleasure swimmes.<br />
Truth saith 'twas wrong conceit bred my despigt,<br />
Which once acknowledg'd, brings my hearts delight. <br />
<br />
11.<br />
YOu endlesse torments that my rest opresse,<br />
How long will you delight in my sad paine?<br />
Will neuer Loue your fauour more expresse?<br />
Shall I still liue, and euer feele disdaine?<br />
Alasse now stay, and let my griefe [obtaine] <br />
Some end; feede not my heart with sharpe distresse:<br />
Let me once see my cruell fortunes gaine,<br />
At least release, and long-felt woes redresse.<br />
Let not the blame of cruelty disgrace<br />
The honor'd title of your god-head Loue;<br />
Giue not iust cause for me [to] say, a place<br />
Is found for rage alone on me to moue.<br />
O quickly end, and doe not long debate<br />
My needful ayd, lest helpe doe come too late. <br />
<br />
12.<br />
CLoy'd with the torments of a tedious night,<br />
I wish for day; which come, I hope for ioy:<br />
When crosse I finde, new tortures to destroy,<br />
My woe-kil'd heart, first hurt by mischiefs might.<br />
Then crye for night, and once more day takes flight.<br />
And brightnesse gone; what rest should heere inioy<br />
Vsurped is: Hate will her force imploy;<br />
Night cannot Griefe intombe though blacke as spite.<br />
My thoughts are sad, her face as sad doth seeme;<br />
My paines are long, Her howers tedious are;<br />
My griefe is great, and endlesse is my care;<br />
Her face, her force, and all of woes esteeme.<br />
Then welcome Night, and farwell flattering Day,<br />
Which all hopes breed, and yet our ioyes delay. <br />
<br />
<br />
13.<br />
DEare famish not what you your selfe gaue food,<br />
Destroy not what your glory is to saue:<br />
Kill not that soule to which you spirit gaue,<br />
In pitty, not disdaine, your triumph stood.<br />
An easie thing it is to shed the bloud<br />
Of one who at your will yeelds to the graue:<br />
But more you may true worth by mercy craue,<br />
When you preserue, not spoyle, but nourish good.<br />
Your sight is all the food I doe desire,<br />
Then sacrifice me not in hidden fire,<br />
Or stop the breath which did your praises moue.<br />
Think but how easie 'tis a sight to giue,<br />
Nay euen desert, since by it I doe liue,<br />
I but Camelion-like, would liue, and loue. <br />
<br />
14.<br />
AM I thus conquer'd? haue I lost the powers,<br />
That to withstand, which ioyes to ruine me?<br />
Must I bee still, while it my strength deuoures,<br />
And captiue leads me prisoner bound, vnfree?<br />
Loue first shall [leaue] mens phant'sies to them free, <br />
Desire shall quench loues flames, Spring, hate sweet showres;<br />
Loue shall loose all his Darts, haue sight, and see<br />
His shame and wishings, hinder happy houres.<br />
Why should we not loues purblinde charmes resist? <br />
Must we be seruile, doing what he list?<br />
No, seeke some hoste too harbour thee: I flye<br />
Thy babish tricks, and freedome doe professe;<br />
But O my hurt makes my lost heart confesse:<br />
I loue, and must; so farewell liberty. <br />
<br />
15.<br />
TRuly (poore night) thou welcome art to me,<br />
I loue thee better in this sad attire<br />
Then that which rayseth some mens fant'sies higher,<br />
Like painted outsides, which foule inward be.<br />
I loue thy graue and saddest lookes to see,<br />
Which seems my soule and dying heart entire,<br />
Like to the ashes of some happy fire,<br />
That flam'd in ioy, but quench'd in misery.<br />
I loue thy count'nance, and thy sober pace,<br />
Which euenly goes, and as of louing grace<br />
To vs, and mee among the rest opprest,<br />
Giues quiet peace to my poore selfe alone,<br />
And freely grants day leaue; when thou art gone,<br />
To giue cleare light, to see all ill redrest. <br />
<br />
16.<br />
SLeepe fye possesse me not, nor doe not fright<br />
Me with thy heauy, and thy deathlike might:<br />
For counterfetting's vilder then death's sight;<br />
And such deluding more my thoughts doe spight.<br />
Thou suffer'st falsest shapes my soule t'affright,<br />
Sometimes in likenesse [of] a hopefull spright;<br />
And oft times like my Loue, as in despight;<br />
Ioying, thou canst with malice kill delight.<br />
When I (a poore foole made by thee) thinke ioy<br />
Doth flow, when thy fond shadowes doe destroy<br />
My that while sencelesse selfe, left free to thee.<br />
But now doe well, let me for euer sleepe,<br />
And so for euer that deere Image keepe<br />
Or still wake that my senses may be free. <br />
<br />
17. <br />
SWeet shades, why doe you seeke to giue delight<br />
To me, who deeme delight in this vilde place:<br />
But torment, sorrow, and mine owne disgrace,<br />
To taste of ioy, or your vaine pleasing sight?<br />
Show them your pleasures who saw neuer night<br />
Of griefe, where ioyings fawning smiling face<br />
Appears as day, where griefe found neuer space:<br />
Yet for a sigh, a groane, or enuies spite.<br />
But O: on me a world of woes doe lye,<br />
Or els on me all harmes striue to relye,<br />
And to attend like seruants bound to me.<br />
Heate in desire, while frosts of care I proue,<br />
Wanting my loue, yet surfet doe with loue,<br />
Burne, and yet freeze, better in Hell to be. <br />
<br />
18.<br />
WHich should I better like of, day or night?<br />
Since all the day, I liue in bitter woe:<br />
Inioying light more cleere my wrongs to know,<br />
And yet most sad, feeling in it all spite;<br />
In night when darknesse doth forbid all light;<br />
Yet see I griefe apparant to the show,<br />
Follow'd by iealousie, whose fond tricks flow,<br />
And on vnconstant waues of doubt alight.<br />
I can behold rage cowardly to feede<br />
Vpon foule error, which these humors breede,<br />
Shame doubt and feare, yet boldly will thinke ill.<br />
All those in both I feele, then which is best<br />
Darke to ioy by day, light in night opprest?<br />
Leaue both and end, these but each other spill. <br />
 <br />
19.<br />
COme darkest Night, becomming sorrow best,<br />
Light leaue thy light, fit for a lightsome soule:<br />
Darknesse doth truely sute with me opprest,<br />
Whom absence power doth from mirthe controule.<br />
The very trees with hanging heads condole<br />
Sweet Summers parting, and of leaues distrest,<br />
In dying colours make a grief-full role;<br />
So much (alas) to sorrow are they prest.<br />
Thus of dead leaues, her farewell carpets made,<br />
Their fall, their branches, all their mournings proue,<br />
With leaulesse naked bodies, whose hues vade <br />
From hopefull greene to wither in their loue.<br />
If trees, and leaues for absence mourners be,<br />
No maruell that I grieue, who like want see. <br />
<br />
20.<br />
THe Sunne which glads, the earth at his bright sight,<br />
When in the morne he showes his golden face,<br />
And takes the place from tedious drowsie Night.<br />
Making the world still happy in his grace.<br />
Shewes happinesse remaines not in one place,<br />
Nor may the Heauens alone to vs giue light,<br />
But hide that cheerfull face, though noe long space,<br />
Yet long enough for tryall of their might.<br />
But neuer Sun-set could be so obscure,<br />
No Desart euer had a shade so sad:<br />
Nor could black darknesse euer proue so bad,<br />
As paines which absence makes me now indure.<br />
The missing of the Sunne [awhile] makes Night,<br />
But absence of my ioy sees neuer light. <br />
<br />
21.<br />
WHen last I saw thee, I did not thee see,<br />
It was thine Image which in my thoughts lay<br />
So liuely figur'd, as no times delay<br />
Could suffer me in heart to parted be.<br />
And sleepe so fauourable is to me,<br />
As not to let thy lou'd remembrance stray:<br />
Lest that I waking might haue cause to say,<br />
there was one minute found to forgett thee.<br />
Then, since my faith is such, so kinde my sleepe,<br />
That gladly thee presents into my thought,<br />
And still true Louer-like thy face doth keepe,<br />
So as some pleasure shadow-like is wrought.<br />
Pitty my louing, nay of consience giue<br />
Reward to me in whom thy self doth liue. <br />
<br />
22. <br />
LIke to the Indians scorched with the Sunne,<br />
The Sunne which they doe as their God adore:<br />
So am I vs'd by Loue, for euermore<br />
I worship him, lesse fauors haue I wonne.<br />
Better are they who thus to blacknesse run,<br />
And so can onely whitenesse want deplore:<br />
[Then] I who pale and white am with griefes store,<br />
Nor can haue hope, but to see hopes vndone.<br />
Beesides their sacrifice receiu'd in sight,<br />
Of their chose Saint, mine hid as worthlesse rite,<br />
Grant me to see where I my offerings giue.<br />
Then let me weare the marke of Cupids might,<br />
In heart, as they in skin of Phoebus  light,<br />
Not ceasing offerings to Loue while I Liue. <br />
<br />
23.<br />
WHen euery one to pleasing pastime hies<br />
Some hunt, some hauke, some play, while some delight<br />
In sweet discourse, and musicke shewes ioys might:<br />
Yet I my thoughts doe farr aboue these prize.<br />
The ioy which I take is, that free from eyes<br />
I sit and wonder at this day-like night,<br />
So to dispose themselues as voyd of right,<br />
And leaue true pleasure for poore vanities.<br />
When others hunt, my thoughts I haue in chase;<br />
If hauke, my minde at wished end doth flye:<br />
Discourse, I with my spirit talke and cry;<br />
While others musicke choose as greatest grace.<br />
O God say I, can thes fond pleasures moue,<br />
Or musicke bee but in sweet thoughts of Loue? <br />
<br />
24.<br />
ONce did I heare an aged father say<br />
Vnto his sonne, who with attention heares<br />
What Age and wise experience euer cleares<br />
From doubts of feare, or reason to betray.<br />
My Sonn (said hee) behold thy father gray,<br />
I once had as thou hast, fresh tender yeares,<br />
And like thee sported destitute of feares;<br />
But my young faults made me too soone decay.<br />
Loue once I did, and like thee, fear'd my Loue,<br />
Led by the hatefull [thread] of Ielousie,<br />
Striuing to keepe, I lost my liberty,<br />
And gain'd my griefe, which still my sorrowes moue.<br />
In time shun this, to loue is no offence,<br />
But doubt in Youth, in Age, breeds penitence. <br />
 <br />
<br />
<br />
25.<br />
POore eyes bee blinde, the light behold noe more,<br />
Since that is gon which is your deare delight:<br />
Rauish'd from you by greater powre, and might,<br />
Making your losse a gaine to others store.<br />
Oerflow and drowne, till sight to you restore<br />
That blessed Starre, and as in hatefull spight,<br />
Send forth your teares in flouds to kill all sight,<br />
And looks, that lost wherin you ioy'd before.<br />
Bury these beames which in some kindled fires,<br />
And conquer'd haue their loue-burnt hearts desires,<br />
Losing, and yet no gaine by you esteem'd;<br />
Till that bright Starre doe once againe appeare,<br />
Brighter then Mars when hee doth shine most cleare;<br />
See not then by his might be you redeem'd. <br />
<br />
26.<br />
DEare cherish this, and with it my soules will,<br />
Nor for it ran away doe it abuse:<br />
Alas it left (poore me) your brest to choose,<br />
As the [blest] shrine, where it would harbour still.<br />
Then fauour shew, and not vnkindly kill<br />
The heart which fled to you, but doe excuse<br />
That which for better did the wurse refuse;<br />
And pleas'd Ile be, though heartlesse my lyfe spill.<br />
But if you will bee kinde, and iust indeed,<br />
Send me your heart, which in mine's place shall feede<br />
On faithfull loue to your deuotion bound,<br />
There shall it see the sacrifices made<br />
Of pure and spottlesse Loue, which shall not vade,<br />
While soule, and body are together found. <br />
<br />
27.<br />
FIe tedious Hope, why doe you still rebell?<br />
Is it not yet enough you flatter'd me,<br />
But cuningly you seeke to vse a Spell<br />
How to betray; must these your Trophies bee?<br />
I look'd from you farre sweeter fruite to see,<br />
But blasted were your blossomes when they fell:<br />
And those delights expected from hands free,<br />
Wither'd and dead, and what seemd blisse proues hell.<br />
No Towne was won by a more plotted slight<br />
Then I by you, who may my fortune write,<br />
In embers of that fire which ruin'd me:<br />
Thus Hope your falshood calls you to be tryde,<br />
You'r loth, I see, the tryall to abide;<br />
Proue true at last, and gaine your liberty. <br />
<br />
28.<br />
GRiefe, killing griefe, haue not my torments beene<br />
Already great and strong enough? but still<br />
Thou dost increase, nay glory in mine il,<br />
And woes new past, afresh new woes begin?<br />
Am I the onely purchase thou canst win?<br />
Was I ordain'd to giue despaire her fill,<br />
Or fittest I should mount misfortunes hill,<br />
Who in the plaine of ioy cannot liue in?<br />
If it be so, Griefe come as welcome guest,<br />
Since I must suffer for anothers rest;<br />
Yet this (good Griefe) let me intreat of thee,<br />
Vse still thy force, but not from those I loue<br />
Let me all paines and lasting torments proue;<br />
So I misse these, lay all thy waights on me. <br />
<br />
29.<br />
FLy hence O! Ioy, noe longer heere abide,<br />
Too great thy pleasures are for my despaire<br />
To looke on, losses now must proue my fare;<br />
Who not long since on better foode relide.<br />
But foole, how oft had I Heau'ns changing spi'de<br />
Before of mine owne fate I could haue care:<br />
Yet now past time, I can too late beware,<br />
When nothings left but sorrowes faster ty'de.<br />
While I inioyd that Sunne, whose sight did lend <br />
Me ioy, I thought that day could haue no end:<br />
But soon a night came cloath'd in absence darke;<br />
Absence more sad, more bitter then is gall,<br />
Or death, when on true Louers it doth fall;<br />
Whose fires of loue, disdaine reasts poorer sparke. <br />
<br />
30.<br />
YOu blessed shades, which giue me silent rest,<br />
Witnes but this when death hath clos'd mine eyes,<br />
And separated me from earthly tyes;<br />
Being from hence to higher places adrest.<br />
How oft in you I haue laine heere opprest?<br />
And haue my miseries in wofull cryes<br />
Deliuer'd forth, mounting vp to the Skyes?<br />
Yet helplesse, backe return'd to wound my brest,<br />
Which wounds did but striue how to breed more harm<br />
To me, who can be cur'd by no one charme<br />
But that of Loue, which yet may me releeue;<br />
If not, let Death my former paines redeeme,<br />
My trusty friends, my faith vntouch'd, esteeme,<br />
And witnesse I could loue, who so could grieue. <br />
 <br />
<br />
31.<br />
AFter long trouble in a tedious way,<br />
Of Loues vnrest, laid downe to ease my paine,<br />
Hoping for rest, new torments I did gaine<br />
Possessing me, as if I ought t'obey.<br />
When Fortune came, though blinded, yet did stay,<br />
And in her blessed armes did me inchaine:<br />
I, cold with griefe, thought noe warmth to obtaine,<br />
Or to dissolue that yce of ioyes decay.<br />
Till rise (said she) Reward to thee doth send<br />
By me the seruant of true Louers, ioy:<br />
Bannish all clouds of doubt, all feares destroy;<br />
And now on Fortune, and on Loue depend.<br />
I her obey'd, and rising felt that Loue<br />
Indeed was best, when I did least it moue. <br />
<br />
32.<br />
HOw fast thou fliest, O time, on loues swift wings,<br />
To hopes of ioy, that flatters our desire:<br />
Which to a Louer still contentment brings;<br />
Yet when we should inioy, thou dost retire.<br />
Thou stay'st thy pace (faulse Time) from our desire<br />
When to our ill thou hast'st with Eagles wings:<br />
Slow only to make vs see thy retire<br />
Was for Despaire, and harme, which sorrowe brings.<br />
O! slake thy pace, and milder passe to Loue,<br />
Be like the Bee, whose wings she doth but vse<br />
To bring home profit; masters good to proue,<br />
Laden, and weary, yet againe pursues.<br />
So lade thy selfe with hony of sweet ioy,<br />
And do not me the Hiue of Loue destroy. <br />
<br />
33.<br />
HOw many eyes (poore Loue) hast thou to guard<br />
Thee from thy most desired wish, and end?<br />
Is it because some say thou'rt blinde, that barr'd<br />
From sight, thou should'st noe happinesse attend?<br />
Who blame thee soe, smale iustice can pretend, <br />
Since twixt thee and the Sunne no question hard<br />
Can be, his sight but outward, thou canst bend<br />
The heart, and guide it freely thus vnbar'd.<br />
Art thou, while we both blinde and bold, oft dare<br />
Accuse the of the harmes, our selues should finde:<br />
Who led with folly, and by rashnesse blinde<br />
Thy sacred power doe with a child's compare.<br />
Yet Loue, this boldnesse pardon; for admire<br />
Thee sure we must, or be borne without fire. <br />
<br />
34.<br />
TAke heed mine eyes, how you your looks doe cast,<br />
Lest they betray my hearts most secret thought:<br />
Be true vnto your selues; for nothing's bought<br />
More deare then Doubt, which brings a Louers fast.<br />
Catch you al watching eyes ere they be past,<br />
Or take yours fix't, where your best Loue hath sought<br />
The pride of your desires; let them be taught<br />
Their faults for shame they could no truer last.<br />
Then looke, and looke with ioy, for conquest won,<br />
Of those that search'd your hurt in double kinde:<br />
So you kept safe, let them themselues looke blinde,<br />
Watch, gaze, and marke till they to madnesse run.<br />
While you mine eyes enioye full sight of Loue,<br />
Contented that such happinesses moue. <br />
<br />
35.<br />
FAlse hope which feeds but to destroy, and spill <br />
What it first breeds, vnnaturall to the [birth]<br />
Of thine owne wombe, conceiuing but to kill<br />
And plenty giues to make the greater dearth.<br />
So Tyrants doe, who falsly ruling Earth,<br />
Outwardly grace them, and with profits fill,<br />
Aduance those who appointed are to death;<br />
To make their greater fall to please their will.<br />
Thus shadow they their wicked vile intent, <br />
Colouring euill with a show of good:<br />
While in faire showes their malice so is spent;<br />
Hope kill's the heart, and Tyrants shed the blood.<br />
For [Hope]  deluding brings vs to the pride<br />
Of our desires the farther downe to slide. <br />
<br />
36.<br />
HOw well (poore heart) thou witnesse canst, I loue,<br />
How oft my grief hath made thee shed forth teares,<br />
Drops of thy dearest blood; and how oft feares<br />
Borne testimony of the paines I proue?<br />
What torments hast thou suffer'd, while aboue<br />
Ioy thou tortur'd wert with racks, which longing beares:<br />
Pinch'd with desires, which yet but wishing reares<br />
Firme in my faith, in constancie, to moue.<br />
Yet is it said, that sure loue cannot be,<br />
Where so small shew of passion is descri'd:<br />
When thy chiefe paine is, that I must it hide<br />
From all, saue onely one, who should it see.<br />
For know, more passion in my heart doth moue,<br />
Then in a million that make shew of loue. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
37.<br />
NIght, welcome art thou to my minde distrest,<br />
Darke, heauy, sad, yet not more sad then I:<br />
Neuer could'st thou find fitter company<br />
For thine owne humour, then I thus opprest.<br />
If thou beest darke, my wrongs still vnredrest<br />
Saw neuer light, nor smallest blisse can spye:<br />
If heauy ioy from me too fast doth hie,<br />
And care out-goes my hope of quiet rest.<br />
Then now in friendship ioyne with haplesse me,<br />
Who am as sad and darke as thou canst be,<br />
Hating all pleasure or delight of lyfe,<br />
Silence, and griefe, with thee I best doe loue.<br />
And from you three I know I can not moue,<br />
Then let vs liue companions without strife. <br />
<br />
38.<br />
WHat pleasure can a banish'd creature haue<br />
In all the pastimes that inuented are<br />
By wit or learning? Absence making warre<br />
Against all peace that may a biding craue.<br />
Can wee delight but in a welcome graue,<br />
Where we may bury paines? and so be fare<br />
From loathed company, who alwaies iarre<br />
Vpon the string of mirth that pastime gaue.<br />
The knowing part of ioye is deem'd the heart,<br />
If that be gone what ioy can ioy impart<br />
When senceless is the feeler of our mirth?<br />
Noe, I am banish'd, and no good shall finde,<br />
But all my fortunes must with mischiefe binde;<br />
Who but for miserie did gaine a birth. <br />
<br />
39.<br />
IF I were giuen to mirth, 'twould be more crosse,<br />
Thus to be robbed of my chiefest ioy:<br />
But silently I beare my greatest losse<br />
Who's vs'd to sorrow, griefe will not destroy.<br />
Nor can I as those pleasant wits inioy<br />
Mine owne fram'd wordes, which I account the drosse<br />
Of purer thoughts, or reckon them as mosse,<br />
While they (wit-sick) themselues to breath imploy.<br />
Alas, thinke I, your plenty shewes your want;<br />
For where most feeling is, wordes are more scant,<br />
Yet pardon mee, liue, and your pleasure take.<br />
Grudge not if I (neglected) enuy show,<br />
'Tis not to you that I dislike doe owe;<br />
But (crost my self) wish some like me to make. <br />
<br />
40.<br />
IT is not Loue which you poore fooles do deeme,<br />
That doth appeare by fond and outward showes<br />
Of kissing, toying, or by swearings gloze:<br />
O no, these are farre off from loues esteeme.<br />
Alas, they are not such that can redeeme<br />
Loue lost, or wining keepe those chosen blowes:<br />
Though oft with face, and lookes loue ouerthrowes;<br />
Yet so slight conquest doth not him beseeme.<br />
'Tis not a shew of sighes or teares can proue<br />
Who loues indeed, which blasts of fained loue,<br />
Increase or dye, as fauors from them slide.<br />
But in the soule true loue in safety lies<br />
Guarded by faith, which to desert still hies:<br />
And yet kinde lookes doe many blessings hide. <br />
<br />
41.<br />
YOu blessed Starres, which doe Heauen's glory show,<br />
And at your brightnesse make our eyes admire:<br />
Yet enuy not, though I on earth below,<br />
Inioy a sight which moues in me more fire.<br />
I doe confesse such beauty breeds desire<br />
You shine, and clearest light on vs bestow:<br />
Yet doth a sight on Earth more warmth inspire<br />
Into my louing soule, his grace to know.<br />
Cleare, bright, and shining, as you are, is this<br />
Light of my ioy: fix't stedfast, nor will moue<br />
His light from me, nor I chang from his loue;<br />
But still increase as [th'eith] of all my blisse.<br />
His sight giues life vnto my loue-rould [eyes],<br />
My loue content, because in his loue lies.<br />
<br />
42.<br />
IF euer loue had force in humane brest,<br />
If euer he could moue in pensiue heart:<br />
Or if that he such powre could but impart<br />
To breed those flames, whose heat brings ioys vnrest.<br />
Then looke on me; I am to these adrest,<br />
I am the soule that feeles the greatest smart:<br />
I am that heartlesse Trunck of hearts depart;<br />
And I that One, by loue, and griefe opprest<br />
Non euer felt the truth of loues great misse<br />
Of eyes till I depriued was of blisse;<br />
For had he seene, he must haue pitty show'd.<br />
I should not haue beene made this Stage of woe,<br />
Where sad Disasters haue their open show:<br />
O no, more pitty he had sure bestow'd. <br />
 <br />
<br />
43.<br />
O dearest eyes, the lights, and guides of Loue,<br />
The ioyes of Cupid, who himselfe borne blinde,<br />
To your bright shining, doth his tryumphs binde;<br />
For, in your seeing doth his glory moue.<br />
How happy are those places where you prooue<br />
Your heauenly beames, which make the Sun to finde<br />
Enuy and grudging, he so long hath shin'd<br />
For your cleare lights, to match his beames aboue.<br />
But now alas, your sight is heere forbid,<br />
And darkenes must these poore lost roomes possesse,<br />
So be all blessed lights from henceforth hid,<br />
That this blacke deede of darknesse haue excesse.<br />
For why showld Heauen affoord least light to those, <br />
Who for my misery such darkenesse chose. <br />
<br />
44.<br />
HOw fast thou hast'st O Spring with sweetest speede<br />
To catch thy [waters] which before are runne,<br />
And of the greater Riuers welcome woone,<br />
Ere these thy new-borne streames these places feed.<br />
Yet you doe well, lest staying here might breede<br />
Dangerous flouds, your sweetest bankes t'orerunn,<br />
And yet much better my distresse to shunn,<br />
Which maks my tears your swiftest course succeed.<br />
But best you doe when with so hasty flight<br />
You fly my ills, which now my selfe outgoe,<br />
Whose broken heart can testifie such woe,<br />
That so orecharg'd, my life-bloud, wasteth quite.<br />
Sweet Spring then keepe your way be neuer spent,<br />
And my ill dayes, or griefes, assunder rent. <br />
<br />
45.<br />
GOod now be still, and doe not me torment,<br />
With [multituds] of questions, be at rest,<br />
And onely let me quarrell with my breast,<br />
Which stil lets in new stormes my soule to rent.<br />
Fye, will you still my mischiefes more augment?<br />
You saye, I answere crosse, I that confest<br />
Long since, yet must I euer be opprest,<br />
With your tongue torture which will ne're be spent?<br />
Well then I see no way but this will fright,<br />
That Deuill speech; alas, I am possest,<br />
And madd folks senseles are of wisdomes right,<br />
The hellish spirit, Absence, doth arrest.<br />
All my poore senses to his cruell might,<br />
Spare me then till I am my selfe, and blest. <br />
<br />
46.<br />
LOue thou hast all, for now thou hast me made<br />
So thine, as if for thee I were ordain'd,<br />
Then take thy conquest, nor let me be pain'd<br />
More in thy Sunne, when I doe seeke thy shade.<br />
No place for helpe haue I left to inuade,<br />
That shew'd a face where least ease might be gain'd;<br />
Yet found I paine increase, and but obtain'd,<br />
That this no way was to haue loue allay'd<br />
When hott, and thirsty, to a Well I came,<br />
Trusting by that to quench part of my [flame],<br />
But there I was by Loue afresh imbrac'd<br />
Drinke I could not, but in it I did see<br />
My selfe a liuing glasse as well as shee;<br />
For loue to see himselfe in, truely plac'd. <br />
<br />
47.<br />
O stay mine eyes shed not these fruitlesse teares,<br />
Since hope is past to win you back againe,<br />
That treasure which being lost breeds all your paine;<br />
Cease from this poore betraying of your feares.<br />
Thinke this too childish is, for where griefe reares <br />
So high a powre for such a wretched gaine:<br />
Sighes nor laments should thus be spent in vaine,<br />
True sorrow neuer outward wailing beares.<br />
Be rul'd by me, keepe all the rest in store,<br />
Till no roome is that may containe one more;<br />
Then in that Sea of teares, drowne haplesse me,<br />
And Ile prouide such store of sighes, as part<br />
Shall be enough to breake the strongest heart,<br />
This done, we shall from torments freed be. <br />
<br />
48.<br />
HOw like a fire doth loue increase in me[!]<br />
The longer that it lasts the stronger still;<br />
The greater, purer, brighter; and doth fill<br />
No eye with wonder more then hopes still bee.<br />
Bred in my breast, when fires of Loue are free<br />
To vse that part to their best pleasing will,<br />
And now vnpossible it is to kill<br />
The heate so great where Loue his strength doth see.<br />
Mine eyes can scarce sustaine the flames, my heart<br />
Doth trust in them my passions to impart,<br />
And languishingly striue to shew my loue.<br />
My breath not able is to [breathe] least part<br />
Of that increasing fuell of my smart;<br />
Yet loue I will, till I but ashes proue. <br />
<br />
Pamphilia. <br />
<br />
Sonnet.<br />
LEt griefe as farre be from your dearest breast<br />
As I doe wish, or in my hands to ease;<br />
Then should it banish'd be, and sweetest rest<br />
Be plac'd to giue content by Loue to please.<br />
Let those disdaines which on your heart do [seaze],<br />
Doubly returne to bring her soules vnrest: <br />
Since true loue will not that belou'd displease;<br />
Or let least smart to their minds be addrest.<br />
But oftentimes mistakings be in loue.<br />
Be they as farre from false accusing right,<br />
And still truth gouerne with a constant might<br />
So shall you only wished pleasures proue.<br />
And as for mee she that shewes you least scorne,<br />
With all despite and hate, be her heart torne. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Sonnet. I.<br />
IN night yet may we see some kinde of light,<br />
When as the Moone doth please to shew her face,<br />
And in the Sunns roome yeelds her light, and grace,<br />
Which otherwise must suffer dullest night:<br />
So are my fortunes barrd from true delight,<br />
Cold, and vncertaine, like to this strange place,<br />
Decreasing, changing in an instant space,<br />
And euen at full of ioy turnd to despight.<br />
Iustly on Fortune was bestowd the Wheele{32},<br />
Whose fauours fickle, and vnconstant reele,<br />
Drunke with delight of change and sudden paine;<br />
Where pleasure hath no setled place of stay,<br />
But turning still, for our best hopes decay,<br />
And this (alas) we louers often gaine. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
LOue like a Iugler, comes to play his prize,<br />
And all mindes draw his wonders to admire,<br />
To see how cunningly he (wanting eyes)<br />
Can yet deseiue the best sight of desire.<br />
The wanton Childe, how he can faine his fire<br />
So prettily, as none sees his disguise,<br />
How finely doe his trickes; while we fooles hire<br />
The badge, and office of his tyrannies.<br />
For in the ende such Iugling he doth make,<br />
As he our hearts instead of eyes doth take;<br />
For men can onely by their slights abuse,<br />
The sight with nimble, and delightfull skill,<br />
But if he play, his gaine is our lost will,<br />
Yet Child-like we cannot his sports refuse. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
MOst blessed night, the happy time for Loue,<br />
The shade for Louers, and their Loues delight,<br />
The raigne of Loue for seruants free from spight,<br />
The hopefull seasons, for ioyes sports to mooue.<br />
Now hast thou made thy glory higher prooue,<br />
Then did the God, whose pleasant Reede did smite<br />
All Argus eyes into a death-like night,<br />
Till they were safe, that none could Loue reprooue.<br />
Now thou hast cloas'd those eyes from prying sight<br />
That nourish Iealousie, more than ioyes right,<br />
While vaine Suspition fosters their mistrust,<br />
Making sweet sleepe to master all suspect,<br />
Which els their priuat feares would not neglect,<br />
But would embrace both blinded, and vniust. <br />
<br />
4.<br />
CRuell suspition, O! be now at rest,<br />
Let daily torments bring to thee some stay,<br />
Alas, make not my ill thy ease-full pray,<br />
Nor giue loose raines to Rage, when Loue's opprest.<br />
I am by care sufficiently distrest,<br />
No Racke can stretch my heart more, nor a way<br />
Can I find out, for least content to lay <br />
One happy foot of ioy, one step that's blest.<br />
But to my end thou fly'st with greedy eye,<br />
Seeking to bring griefe by bace Iealousie;<br />
O, in how strange a Cage am I kept in?<br />
No little signe of fauour can I prooue,<br />
But must be way'd, and turn'd to wronging loue,<br />
And with each humour must my state begin. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
HOw many nights haue I with paine endurd?<br />
Which as so many Ages I esteem'd,<br />
Since my misfortune, yet noe whit redeem'd<br />
But rather faster ty'de, to griefe assur'd.<br />
How many houres haue my sad thoughts endur'd<br />
Of killing paines? yet is it not esteem'd<br />
By cruell Loue, who might haue these redeemd,<br />
And all these yeeres of houres to ioy assur'd.<br />
But fond Childe, had he had a care to saue,<br />
As first to conquer, this my pleasures graue,<br />
Had not beene now to testifie my woe.<br />
I might haue beene an Image of delight,<br />
As now a Tombe for sad misfortunes spight,<br />
Which Loue vnkindly, for reward doth show. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
MY paine still smother'd in my grieued brest,<br />
Seekes for some ease, yet cannot passage finde,<br />
To be discharg'd of this vnwellcome guest,<br />
When most I striue, more fast his burthens binde.<br />
Like to a Ship on Goodwins cast by winde, <br />
The more she striues, more deepe in Sand is prest,<br />
Till she be lost: so am I in this kind<br />
Sunck, and deuour'd, and swallow'ed by vnrest.<br />
Lost, shipwrackt, spoyl'd, debar'd of smallest hope,<br />
Nothing of pleasure left, saue thoughts haue scope,<br />
Which wander may; goe then my thoughts and cry:<br />
Hope's perish'd, Loue tempest-beaten, Ioy lost,<br />
Killing Despaire hath all these blessings crost;<br />
Yet Faith still cries, Loue will not falsifie. <br />
<br />
7.<br />
AN end fond Ielousie, alas I know<br />
Thy hiddenest, and thy most secret Art,<br />
Thou canst no new inuention frame but part,<br />
I haue already seene, and felt with woe.<br />
All thy dissemblings, which by faigned showe,<br />
Wonne my beliefe, while truth did rule my heart,<br />
I with glad minde embrac'd, and deemd my smart<br />
The spring of ioy, whose streames with blisse should flow.<br />
I thought excuses had beene reasons true,<br />
And that no falshood could of thee ensue,<br />
So soone beliefe in honest mindes is wrought;<br />
But now I finde thy flattery, and skill,<br />
Which idely made me to obserue thy will,<br />
Thus is my learning by my bondage bought. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
POore Loue in chaines, and fetters like a thiefe<br />
I mett ledd forth, as chast Diana's gaine<br />
Vowing the vntaught Lad should no reliefe<br />
From her receiue, who gloried in fond paine.<br />
She call'd him theife; with vowes he did mainetaine<br />
He neuer stole, but some sadd slight of griefe<br />
Had giuen to those who did his power disdaine,<br />
In which reuenge, his honour was the chiefe.<br />
Shee say'd he murther'd and therefor must dye,<br />
He that he caus'd but Loue, did harmes deny,<br />
But, while she thus discoursing with him stood;<br />
The Nymphes vnti'de him, and his chaines tooke off,<br />
Thinking him safe; but he (loose) made a scoffe,<br />
Smiling and scorning them; flew to the wood. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
PRay doe not vse these words, I must be gone;<br />
Alasse doe not foretell mine ills to come:<br />
Let not my care be to my ioyes a Tombe;<br />
But rather finde my losse with losse alone.<br />
Cause me not thus a more distressed one,<br />
Not feeling blisse, because of this sad doome<br />
Of present crosse; for thinking will orecome<br />
And loose all pleasure, since griefe breedeth none.<br />
Let the misfortune come at once to me,<br />
Nor suffer me with griefe to punish'd be;<br />
Let mee be ignorant of mine owne ill:<br />
Then now with the fore-knowledge quite to lose<br />
That which with so much care and paines Loue chose<br />
For his reward, but ioye now, then mirth kill. <br />
<br />
10.<br />
FOlly would needs make me a Louer be,<br />
When I did litle thinke of louing thought;<br />
Or euer to be tyde, while shee told me<br />
That none can liue, but to these bands are brought.<br />
I (ignorant) did grant, and so was bought,<br />
And sold againe to Louers slauery:<br />
The duty to that vanity once taught,<br />
Such band is, as wee will not seeke to free.<br />
Yet when I well did vnderstand his might,<br />
How he inflam'd, and forc'd one to affect:<br />
I loud and smarted, counting it delight<br />
So still to waste, which Reason did reiect.<br />
When Loue came blind-fold, and did challenge me.<br />
Indeed I lou'd, but wanton Boy not hee, <br />
 <br />
<br />
<br />
O pardon Cupid, I confesse my fault,<br />
Then mercy grant me in so iust a kinde:<br />
For treason neuer lodged in my minde<br />
Against thy might, so much as in a thought.<br />
And now my folly I haue dearely bought,<br />
Nor could my soule least rest or quiett finde;<br />
Since Rashnes did my thoughts to Error binde,<br />
Which now thy fury, and my harme hath wrought.<br />
I curse that thought, and hand which that first fram'd,<br />
For which by thee I am most iustly blam'd:<br />
But now that hand shall guided be aright,<br />
And giue a Crowne vnto thy endlesse praise,<br />
Which shall thy glory, and thy greatnesse raise,<br />
More then these poore things could thy honor spight. <br />
<br />
<br />
A Crowne of Sonnets dedicated<br />
to L O V E.<br />
<br />
<br />
IN this strange Labyrinth how shall I turne,<br />
Wayes are on all sids while the way I misse:<br />
If to the right hand, there, in loue I burne,<br />
Let mee goe forward, therein danger is.<br />
If to the left, suspition hinders blisse;<br />
Let mee turne back, shame cryes I ought returne:<br />
Nor faint, though crosses [with] my fortunes kiss,<br />
Stand still is harder, allthough sure to mourne.<br />
Thus let mee take the right, or left hand way,<br />
Goe forward, or stand still, or back retire:<br />
I must these doubts indure without allay<br />
Or helpe, but trauell finde for my best hire.<br />
Yet that which most my troubled sense doth moue,<br />
Is to leaue all, and take the threed of Loue. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
IS to leaue all, and take the threed of Loue,<br />
Which line straite leades vnto the soules content,<br />
Where choice delights with pleasures wings doe moue,<br />
And idle fant'sie neuer roome had lent.<br />
When chaste thoughts guide vs, then our minds are bent<br />
To take that good which ills from vs remoue:<br />
Light of true loue brings fruite which none repent;<br />
But constant Louers seeke and wish to proue.<br />
Loue is the shining Starre of blessings light,<br />
The feruent fire of zeale, the roote of peace,<br />
The lasting lampe, fed with the oyle of right,<br />
Image of Faith, and wombe for ioyes increase.<br />
Loue is true Vertue, and his ends delight,<br />
His flames are ioyes, his bands true Louers might. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
HIs flames are ioyes, his bandes true Louers might,<br />
No stain is there, but pure, as purest white,<br />
Where no cloud can appaere to dimme his light,<br />
Nor spot defile, but shame will soon requite.<br />
Heere are affections, tryde by Loues iust might<br />
As Gold by fire, and black discern'd by white;<br />
Error by truth, and darknes knowne by light,<br />
Where Faith is vallu'd, for Loue to requite.<br />
Please him, and serue him, glory in his might<br />
And firme hee'le be, as Innocency white,<br />
Cleere as th'ayre, warme as Sun's beames, as day light<br />
Iust as Truth, constant as Fate, ioy'd to requite.<br />
Then loue obey, striue to obserue his might<br />
And be in his braue Court a glorious light. <br />
<br />
4.<br />
ANd be in his braue Court a glorious light<br />
Shine in the eyes of Faith, and Constancy<br />
Maintaine the fires of Loue, still burning bright,<br />
Not slightly sparkling, but light flaming be.<br />
Neuer to slake till earth no Starres can see,<br />
Till Sun, and Moone doe leaue to vs darke night,<br />
And secound Chaos once againe doe free<br />
Vs, and the World from all deuisions spight,<br />
Till then affections which his followers are,<br />
Gouerne our hearts, and prooue his powers gaine,<br />
To taste this pleasing sting, seeke with all care<br />
For happy smarting is it with small paine.<br />
Such as although it pierce your tender heart,<br />
And burne, yet burning you will loue the smart. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
ANd burne, yet burning you will loue the smart,<br />
When you shall feele the waight of true desire,<br />
So pleasing, as you would not wish your part<br />
Of burthen showld be missing from that fire.<br />
But faithfull and vnfaigned heate aspire<br />
Which sinne abollisheth, and doth impart<br />
Salues to all feare, with vertues which inspire<br />
Soules with diuine loue; which showes his chast art.<br />
And guide he is to ioyings, open eyes<br />
He hath to happinesse, and best can learne<br />
Vs, meanes how to deserue, this he descries,<br />
Who blinde, yet doth our hiden'st thoughts discerne.<br />
Thus we may gaine since liuing in blest Loue, <br />
He may our [profitt], and our Tutor prooue. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
HE may our Prophett, and our Tutor prooue,<br />
In whom alone we doe this power finde,<br />
To ioine two hearts as in one frame to mooue<br />
Two bodies, but one soule to rule the minde<br />
Eyes which must care to one deare Obiect binde,<br />
Eares to each others speach as if aboue<br />
All else, they sweete, and learned were; this kind<br />
Content of Louers witnesseth true loue.<br />
It doth inrich the wits, and make you see<br />
That in your selfe which you knew not before,<br />
Forceing you to admire such guifts showld be<br />
Hid from your knowledge, yet in you the store.<br />
Millions of these adorne the throane of Loue,<br />
How blest [bee] they then, who his fauours proue? <br />
<br />
7.<br />
HOw bless'd be they, then, who his fauors proue,<br />
A life whereof the birth is iust desire?<br />
Breeding sweete flame, which harts inuite to moue,<br />
In these lou'd eyes which kindle Cupids fire,<br />
And nurse his longings with his thoughts intire,<br />
Fix't on the heat of wishes form'd by Loue,<br />
Yet whereas fire destroyes, this doth aspire,<br />
Increase, and foster all delights aboue.<br />
Loue will a Painter make you, such, as you<br />
Shall able be to draw, your onely deare,<br />
More liuely, perfect, lasting, and more true<br />
Then rarest Workeman, and to you more neere.<br />
These be the least, then all must needs confesse,<br />
He that shuns Loue, doth loue himselfe the lesse. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
HE that shuns Loue, doth loue himselfe the lesse,<br />
And cursed he whose spirit, not admires<br />
The worth of Loue, where endlesse blessednes<br />
Raignes, &amp; commands, maintain'd by heau'nly fires.<br />
Made of Vertue, ioyn'd by Truth, blowne by Desires,<br />
Strengthned by Worth, renew'd by carefulnesse,<br />
Flaming in neuer changing thoughts: bryers<br />
Of Iealousie shall heere misse welcomnesse.<br />
Nor coldly passe in the pursutes of Loue<br />
Like one long frozen in a Sea of yce:<br />
And yet but chastly let your passions [mooue],<br />
No thought from vertuous Loue your minds intice.<br />
Neuer to other ends your Phant'sies place,<br />
But where they may returne with honor's grace. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
BVt where they may returne with Honor's grace,<br />
Where Venus follies can no harbour winne,<br />
But chased are, as worthlesse of the face,<br />
Or stile of Loue, who hath lasciuious beene.<br />
Our hearts are subiect to her Sonne; where sinne<br />
Neuer did dwell, or rest one minutes space;<br />
What faults he hath in her did still beginne,<br />
And from her breast he suck'd his fleeting pace.<br />
If Lust be counted Loue 'tis falsely nam'd,<br />
By wickednesse, a fairer glosse to set<br />
Vpon that Vice, which else makes men asham'd<br />
In the owne Phrase to warrant, but beget<br />
This Childe for Loue, who ought like Monster borne<br />
Be from the Court of Loue, and Reason torne. <br />
<br />
10.<br />
BEe from the Court of Loue, and Reason torne,<br />
For Loue in Reason now doth put his trust,<br />
Desert, and liking are together borne<br />
Children of Loue, and Reason, Parents iust,<br />
Reason aduiser is, Loue ruler must<br />
Be of the State, which Crowne he long hath worne;<br />
Yet so, as neither will in least mistrust<br />
The gouernment where no feare is of scorn.<br />
Then reuerence both their mights thus made of one,<br />
But wantonesse, and all those errors shun,<br />
Which wrongers be, Impostures, and alone<br />
Maintainers of all follies ill begunne.<br />
Fruit of a [sowre], and vnwholsome grownd <br />
Vnprofitably pleasing, and vnsound. <br />
<br />
11.<br />
VNprofitably pleasing, and vnsound.<br />
When Heauen gaue liberty to fraile dull earth,<br />
To bringe foorth plenty that in ills abound,<br />
Which ripest, yet doe bring a certaine dearth.<br />
A timelesse, and vnseasonable birth,<br />
Planted in ill, in worse time springing found,<br />
Which Hemlocke like might feed a sicke-wits mirth<br />
Where vnrul'd vapours swimme in endlesse round.<br />
Then ioy we not in what we ought to shunne,<br />
Where shady pleasures shew, but true borne fires<br />
Are quite quench'd out, or by poore ashes won,<br />
Awhile to keepe those coole, and wann desires.<br />
O no, let Loue his glory haue, and might <br />
Be giu'n to him, who triumphs in his right. <br />
<br />
12.<br />
BE giu'n to him who triumphs in his right;<br />
Nor fading be, but like those blossomes faire,<br />
Which fall for good, and lose their colours bright,<br />
Yet dye not, but with fruit their losse repaire:<br />
So may Loue make you pale with louing care,<br />
When sweet enioying shall restore that light,<br />
More cleere in beauty, then we can compare,<br />
If not to Venus in her chosen [night]. <br />
And who so giue themselues in this deare kinde,<br />
These happinesses shall attend them still,<br />
To be supplide with ioyes enrich'd in minde,<br />
With treasures of content, and pleasures fill.<br />
Thus loue to be deuine, doth here appeare,<br />
Free from all foggs, but shining faire, and cleare. <br />
<br />
13.<br />
FRee from all foggs, but shining faire, and cleare,<br />
Wise in all good, and innocent in ill,<br />
Where holly friendship is esteemed deare,<br />
With Truth in loue, and Iustice in our Will.<br />
In Loue these titles onely haue their fill<br />
Of happy life-maintainer, and the meere<br />
Defence of right, the punisher of skill,<br />
And fraude, from whence directions doth appeare.<br />
To thee then, Lord commander of all hearts,<br />
Ruler of our affections, kinde, and iust,<br />
Great King of Loue, my soule from faigned smarts,<br />
Or thought of change, I offer to your trust,<br />
This Crowne, my selfe, and all that I haue more,<br />
Except my heart, which you bestow'd before. <br />
<br />
14.<br />
EXcept my heart, which you bestow'd before,<br />
And for a signe of Conquest gaue away <br />
As worthlesse to be kept in your choice store;<br />
Yet one more spotlesse with you doth not stay.<br />
The tribute which my heart doth truely pay,<br />
Is faith vntouch'd, pure thoughts discharge the score<br />
Of debts for me, where Constancy beares sway,<br />
And rules as Lord, vnharm'd by Enuies sore,<br />
Yet other mischiefes faile not to attend,<br />
As enimies to you, my foes must be,<br />
Curst Iealousie doth all her forces bend<br />
To my vndoing, thus my harmes I see.<br />
So though in Loue I feruently doe burne,<br />
In this strange Labyrinth how shall I turne?<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
I.<br />
MY heart is lost, what can I now expect,<br />
An euening faire after a drowsie day?<br />
Alas, fond Phant'sie, this is not the way,<br />
To cure a mourning heart, or salue neglect:<br />
They who should helpe, doe me, and helpe reiect,<br />
Embracing loose desires, and wanton play,<br />
While wanton base delights doe beare the sway,<br />
[And] impudency raignes without respect.<br />
O Cupid let [thy] Mother know her shame,<br />
'T'is time for her to leaue this youthfull flame,<br />
Which doth dishonor her, is ages blame,<br />
And takes away the greatnes of thy name.<br />
Thou God of Loue, she only Queene of lust,<br />
Yet striues by weakning thee, to be vniust. <br />
<br />
2.<br />
LAte in the Forrest I did Cupid see<br />
Cold, wett, and crying, he had lost his way,<br />
And being blinde was farther like to stray;<br />
Which sight, a kind compassion bred in me.<br />
I kindly tooke, and dry'd him, while that he,<br />
(Poore Child) complain'd, he sterued was with stay<br />
And pin'd for want of his accustom'd prey,<br />
For none in that wilde place his Host would be.<br />
I glad was of his finding, thinking sure,<br />
This seruice should my freedome still procure,<br />
And in my armes I tooke him then vnharm'd,<br />
Carrying him safe vnto a Myrtle bowre,<br />
But in the way he made me, feele his powre,<br />
Burning my heart, who had him kindly warm'd. <br />
<br />
3.<br />
IVno still iealous of her husband Ioue,<br />
Descended from aboue, on earth to try,<br />
Whether she there could find his chosen Loue,<br />
Which made him from the Heau'ns so often flye.<br />
Close by the place where I for shade did lye,<br />
She [chaseing] came, but when shee saw me moue,<br />
Haue you not seene this way (said she) to hye<br />
One, in whom vertue neuer grownde did proue?<br />
Hee, in whom Loue doth breed, to stirre more hate,<br />
Courting a wanton Nimph for his delight;<br />
His name is Iupiter, my Lord, by Fate,<br />
Who for her, leaues Me, Heauen, his Throne, and light,<br />
I saw him not (said I) although heere are<br />
Many, in whose hearts, Loue hath made like warre<br />
<br />
4.<br />
WHen I beheld the Image of my deare,<br />
With greedy lookes mine eies would that way bend,<br />
Feare, and Desire, did inwardly contend;<br />
Feare to be mark'd, Desire to drawe still neere.<br />
And in my soule a Spirit would appeare,<br />
Which boldnes waranted, and did pretend<br />
To be my Genius, yet I durst not lend,<br />
My eyes in trust, where others seem'd so cleare.<br />
Then did I search, from whence this danger rose,<br />
If such vnworthynesse in me did rest,<br />
As my steru'd eyes must not with sight be blest,<br />
When Iealousie her poyson did disclose.<br />
Yet in my heart vnseene of Iealous eye,<br />
The truer Image shall in tryumph lye. <br />
<br />
5.<br />
LIke to huge Clowdes of smoake which well may hide<br />
The face of fairest day, though for a while:<br />
So wrong may shaddow me, till truth doe smile,<br />
And Iustice Sunne-like hath those vapours tyde.<br />
O doating Time, canst thou for shame let slid,<br />
So many minutes, while ills doe beguile<br />
Thy age, and worth, and falshoods thus defile<br />
Thy auncient good, where now but crosses bide?<br />
Looke but once vp, and leaue thy toyling pace <br />
And on my miseries thy dimme eye place,<br />
Goe not so fast, but giue my care some ende,<br />
Turne not thy glasse{50} (alas) vnto my ill<br />
Since thou with sand it canst not so farre fill,<br />
But to each one my sorrowes will extend. <br />
<br />
6.<br />
O that no day would euer more appeare,<br />
But clowdy night to gouerne this sad place,<br />
Nor light from Heauen these haples roomes to grace<br />
Since that light's shadow'd which my Loue holds deare.<br />
Let thickest mists in enuy master here,<br />
And Sunne-borne day for malice show no face,<br />
Disdaining light, where Cupid, and the race<br />
Of Louers are dispisd, and shame shines cleere.<br />
Let me be darke, since barr'd of my chiefe light,<br />
And wounding Iealousie commands by might,<br />
But stage-play-like diguised pleasures giue:<br />
To me it seemes, as ancient fictions make<br />
The Starres, all [fashions], and all shapes partake,<br />
While in my thoughts true forme of Loue shall liue. <br />
<br />
7.<br />
NO time, no roome, no thought, or writing can<br />
Giue rest, or quiet to my louing heart,<br />
Or can my memory or Phant'sie scan,<br />
The measure of my still renewing smart.<br />
Yet whould I not (deare Loue) thou shouldst depart,<br />
But let my passions as they first began,<br />
Rule, wounde, and please, it is thy choysest Art,<br />
To giue disquiet, which seemes ease to man.<br />
When all alone, I thinke vpon thy paine,<br />
How thou doest trauell our best selues to gaine,<br />
Then houerly thy lessons I doe learne;<br />
Thinke on thy glory, which shall still ascend,<br />
Vntill the world come to a finall end,<br />
And then shall we thy lasting powre dicerne. <br />
<br />
8.<br />
HOw Glowworme-like the Sun doth now appeare,<br />
Cold beames doe from his glorious face descend<br />
Which shewes his daies, and force [draw] to an end,<br />
Or that to leaue taking, his time grows neere.<br />
[This] day his face did seeme but pale, though cleare,<br />
The reason is, he to the North must lend<br />
His light, and warmth must to that Climat bend,<br />
Whose frozen parts cowld not loues heat hold deare<br />
Alas, if thou bright Sunne to part from hence<br />
Grieue so, what must I haplesse who from thence,<br />
Where thou dost goe my blessing shall attend;<br />
Thou shalt enioy that sight for which I dye,<br />
And in my heart thy fortunes doe enuy,<br />
Yet grieue, I'le loue thee, for this state may mend. <br />
<br />
9.<br />
MY Muse now happy lay thy selfe to rest,<br />
Sleepe in the quiet of a faithfull loue,<br />
Write you no more, but let these Phant'sies mooue<br />
Some other hearts, wake not to new vnrest.<br />
But if you Study be those thoughts adrest<br />
To truth, which shall eternall goodnes prooue;<br />
Enioying of true ioy the most, and best<br />
The endles gaine which neuer will remoue.<br />
Leaue the discourse of Venus, and her sonne<br />
To young beginners, and their braines inspire<br />
With storyes of great Loue, and from that fire,<br />
Get heat to write the fortunes they haue wonne.<br />
And thus leaue off; what's past shewes you can loue,<br />
Now let your Constancy your Honor proue.]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Can pleasing sight misfortune ever bring?]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14321</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 06 May 2007 19:30:12 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14321</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Can pleasing sight misfortune ever bring? <br />
Can firm desire a painful torment try? <br />
Can winning eyes prove to the heart a sting? <br />
Or can sweet lips in treason hidden lie? <br />
The Sun most pleasing blinds the strongest eye <br />
If too much look'd on, breaking the sight's string; <br />
Desires still crossed must unto mischief hye, <br />
And as despair, a luckless chance may fling. <br />
Eyes, having won, rejecting proves a sting <br />
Killing the bud before the tree doth spring; <br />
Sweet lips not loving do as poison prove: <br />
Desire, sight, Eyes, lips, seek, see, prove, and find <br />
You love may win, but curses if unkind; <br />
Then show you harm's dislike, and joy in Love.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Can pleasing sight misfortune ever bring? <br />
Can firm desire a painful torment try? <br />
Can winning eyes prove to the heart a sting? <br />
Or can sweet lips in treason hidden lie? <br />
The Sun most pleasing blinds the strongest eye <br />
If too much look'd on, breaking the sight's string; <br />
Desires still crossed must unto mischief hye, <br />
And as despair, a luckless chance may fling. <br />
Eyes, having won, rejecting proves a sting <br />
Killing the bud before the tree doth spring; <br />
Sweet lips not loving do as poison prove: <br />
Desire, sight, Eyes, lips, seek, see, prove, and find <br />
You love may win, but curses if unkind; <br />
Then show you harm's dislike, and joy in Love.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Forbear dark night, my joys now bud again,]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14320</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 06 May 2007 19:29:44 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14320</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Forbear dark night, my joys now bud again, <br />
Lately grown dead, while cold aspects did chill <br />
The root at heart, and my chief hope quite kill, <br />
And thunders struck me in my pleasures' wane <br />
Then I alas with bitter sobs, and pain, <br />
Privately groan'd, my Fortunes present ill; <br />
All light of comfort dimm'd, woes in prides fill, <br />
With strange increase of grief, I griev'd in vain. <br />
And most, when as a memory too good <br />
Molested me, which still as witness stood, <br />
Of those best days, in former time I knew: <br />
Late gone as wonders past, like the great Snow, <br />
Melted and wasted, with what, change must know: <br />
Now back the life comes where as once it grew.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Forbear dark night, my joys now bud again, <br />
Lately grown dead, while cold aspects did chill <br />
The root at heart, and my chief hope quite kill, <br />
And thunders struck me in my pleasures' wane <br />
Then I alas with bitter sobs, and pain, <br />
Privately groan'd, my Fortunes present ill; <br />
All light of comfort dimm'd, woes in prides fill, <br />
With strange increase of grief, I griev'd in vain. <br />
And most, when as a memory too good <br />
Molested me, which still as witness stood, <br />
Of those best days, in former time I knew: <br />
Late gone as wonders past, like the great Snow, <br />
Melted and wasted, with what, change must know: <br />
Now back the life comes where as once it grew.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Yet is their hope: Then Love but play thy part]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14319</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 06 May 2007 19:29:17 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14319</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Yet is their hope: Then Love but play thy part <br />
Remember well thy self, and think on me; <br />
Shine in those eyes which conquer'd have my heart; <br />
And see if mine be slack to answer thee: <br />
Lodge in that breast, and pity moving see <br />
For flames which in mine burn in truest smart <br />
Exiling thoughts that touch inconstancy, <br />
Or those which waste not in the constant art, <br />
Watch but my sleep, if I take any rest <br />
For thought of you, my spiritt soe distressed <br />
As pale, and famish'd, I, for mercy cry; <br />
Will you your servant leave? Think but on this; <br />
Who wears love's crown, must not do so amiss, <br />
But seek their good, who on thy force do lie.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Yet is their hope: Then Love but play thy part <br />
Remember well thy self, and think on me; <br />
Shine in those eyes which conquer'd have my heart; <br />
And see if mine be slack to answer thee: <br />
Lodge in that breast, and pity moving see <br />
For flames which in mine burn in truest smart <br />
Exiling thoughts that touch inconstancy, <br />
Or those which waste not in the constant art, <br />
Watch but my sleep, if I take any rest <br />
For thought of you, my spiritt soe distressed <br />
As pale, and famish'd, I, for mercy cry; <br />
Will you your servant leave? Think but on this; <br />
Who wears love's crown, must not do so amiss, <br />
But seek their good, who on thy force do lie.]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Dear eyes how well (indeed) you do adorn]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14318</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 06 May 2007 19:28:38 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14318</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Dear eyes how well (indeed) you do adorn <br />
That blessed sphere, which gazing souls hold dear: <br />
The loved place of sought for triumphs near: <br />
The court of glory, where Love's force was born: <br />
How may they term you April's sweetest morn <br />
When pleasing looks from those bright lights appear: <br />
A sun-shine day; from clouds, and mists still clear <br />
Kind nursing fires for wishes yet unborn! <br />
Two stars of Heaven, sent down to grace the Earth, <br />
Plac'd in that throne which gives all joys their birth; <br />
Shining, and burning; pleasing yet their charms; <br />
Which wounding, even in hurts are deem'd delights, <br />
So pleasant is their force! So great their mights <br />
As, happy, they can triumph in their harms.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Dear eyes how well (indeed) you do adorn <br />
That blessed sphere, which gazing souls hold dear: <br />
The loved place of sought for triumphs near: <br />
The court of glory, where Love's force was born: <br />
How may they term you April's sweetest morn <br />
When pleasing looks from those bright lights appear: <br />
A sun-shine day; from clouds, and mists still clear <br />
Kind nursing fires for wishes yet unborn! <br />
Two stars of Heaven, sent down to grace the Earth, <br />
Plac'd in that throne which gives all joys their birth; <br />
Shining, and burning; pleasing yet their charms; <br />
Which wounding, even in hurts are deem'd delights, <br />
So pleasant is their force! So great their mights <br />
As, happy, they can triumph in their harms.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[When night's black mantle could most darkness prove,]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14317</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 06 May 2007 19:28:11 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=14317</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[When night's black mantle could most darkness prove, <br />
And sleep (death's image) did my senses hire <br />
From knowledge of myself, then thoughts did move <br />
Swifter than those, most switness need require. <br />
In sleep, a chariot drawn by wing'd Desire, <br />
I saw, where sate bright Venus, Queen of love, <br />
And at her feet her son, still adding fire <br />
To burning hearts, which she did hold above. <br />
But one heart flaming more than all the rest, <br />
The goddess held, and put it to my breast. <br />
Dear Son, now shoot, she said, this must we win. <br />
He her obeyed, and martyr'd my poor heart. <br />
I waking hop'd as dreams it would depart, <br />
Yet since, O me, a lover have I been.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[When night's black mantle could most darkness prove, <br />
And sleep (death's image) did my senses hire <br />
From knowledge of myself, then thoughts did move <br />
Swifter than those, most switness need require. <br />
In sleep, a chariot drawn by wing'd Desire, <br />
I saw, where sate bright Venus, Queen of love, <br />
And at her feet her son, still adding fire <br />
To burning hearts, which she did hold above. <br />
But one heart flaming more than all the rest, <br />
The goddess held, and put it to my breast. <br />
Dear Son, now shoot, she said, this must we win. <br />
He her obeyed, and martyr'd my poor heart. <br />
I waking hop'd as dreams it would depart, <br />
Yet since, O me, a lover have I been.]]></content:encoded>
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