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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 1
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




Edmund Spenser

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 383


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

Amoretti

I
Happy  ye  leaves  when  as  those  lily  hands,  
Which  hold  my  life  in  their  dead-doing  might,  
Shall  handle  you  and  hold  in  love's  soft  bands,  
Like  captives  trembling  at  the  victor's  sight.  
And  happy  lines,  on  which  with  starry  light,  
Those  lamping  eyes  will  deign  sometimes  to  look  
And  read  the  sorrows  of  my  dying  sprite,  
Written  with  tears  in  heart's  close-bleeding  book.  
And  happy  rhymes  bath'd  in  the  sacred  brook,  
Of  Helicon  whence  she  derived  is,  
When  ye  behold  that  Angel's  blessed  look,  
My  soul's  long-lacked  food,  my  heaven's  bliss.  
Leaves,  lines,  and  rhymes,  seek  her  to  please  alone,  
Whom  if  ye  please,  I  care  for  other  none.  
II
Unquiet  thought,  whom  at  the  first  I  bred,  
Of  th'  inward  bale  of  my  love-pined  heart:  
And  sithens  have  with  sighs  and  sorrows  fed,  
Till  greater  then  my  womb  thou  woxen  art.  
Break  forth  at  length  out  of  the  inner  part,  
In  which  thou  lurkest  like  to  viper's  brood:  
And  seek  some  succour  both  to  ease  my  smart  
And  also  to  sustain  thy  self  with  food.  
But  if  in  presence  of  that  fairest  proud  
Thou  chance  to  come,  fall  lowly  at  her  feet:  
And  with  meek  humbless  and  afflicted  mood,  
Pardon  for  thee,  and  grace  for  me  entreat.  
Which  if  she  grant,  then  live,  and  my  love  cherish,  
If  not,  die  soon,  and  I  with  thee  will  perish.  
III
Thou  sovereign  beauty  which  I  do  admire,  
Witness  the  world  how  worthy  to  be  praised:  
The  light  whereof  hath  kindled  heavenly  fire,  
In  my  frail  spirit  by  her  from  baseness  raised.  
That  being  now  with  her  huge  brightness  dazed,  
Base  things  I  can  no  more  endure  to  view;  
But  looking  still  on  her  I  stand  amazed,  
At  wondrous  sight  of  so  celestial  hew.  
So  when  my  tongue  would  speak  her  praises  due,  
It  stopped  is  with  thought's  astonishment:  
And  when  my  pen  would  write  her  titles  true,  
It  ravished  is  with  fancy's  wonderment:  
Yet  in  my  heart  I  then  both  speak  and  write  
The  wonder  that  my  wit  cannot  endite.  
IV
New  year  forth  looking  out  of  Janus'  gate,  
Doth  seem  to  promise  hope  of  new  delight:  
And  bidding  th'  old  Adieu,  his  passed  date  
Bids  all  old  thoughts  to  die  in  dumpish  sprite.  
And  calling  forth  out  of  sad  Winter's  night,  
Fresh  love,  that  long  hath  slept  in  cheerless  bower:  
Wills  him  awake,  and  soon  about  him  dight  
His  wanton  wings  and  darts  of  deadly  power.  
For  lusty  spring  now  in  his  timely  hour,  
Is  ready  to  come  forth  him  to  receive;  
And  warns  the  Earth  with  diverse  colored  flower,  
To  deck  herself,  and  her  fair  mantle  weave.  
Then  you  fair  flower,  in  whom  fresh  youth  doth  rain,  
Prepare  yourself  new  love  to  entertain.  
V
Rudely  thou  wrongest  my  dear  heart's  desire,  
In  finding  fault  with  her  too  portly  pride:  
The  thing  which  I  do  most  in  her  admire,  
Is  of  the  world  unworthy  most  envied.  
For  in  those  lofty  looks  is  close  implied,  
Scorn  of  base  things,  and  sdeigne  of  foul  dishonor:  
Threatening  rash  eyes  which  gaze  on  her  so  wide,  
That  loosely  they  ne  dare  to  look  upon  her.  
Such  pride  is  praise,  such  portliness  is  honor,  
That  boldened  innocence  bears  in  her  eyes:  
And  her  fair  countenance  like  a  goodly  banner,  
Spreads  in  defiance  of  all  enemies.  
Was  never  in  this  world  ought  worthy  tried,  
Without  some  spark  of  such  self-pleasing  pride.  
VI
Be  not  dismayed  that  her  unmoved  mind  
Doth  still  persist  in  her  rebellious  pride:  
And  love  not  like  to  lusts  of  baser  kind,  
The  harder  won,  the  firmer  will  abide.  
The  durefull  Oak,  whose  sap  is  not  yet  dried,  
Is  long  ere  it  conceive  the  kindling  fire;  
But  when  it  once  doth  burn,  it  doth  divide,  
Great  heat,  and  makes  his  flames  to  heaven  aspire.  
So  hard  it  is  to  kindle  new  desire,  
In  gentle  breast  that  shall  endure  for  ever:  
Deep  is  the  wound,  that  dints  the  parts  entire  
With  chaste  affects,  that  naught  but  death  can  sever.  
Then  think  not  long  in  taking  little  pain,  
To  knit  the  knot,  that  ever  shall  remain.  
VII
Fair  eyes,  the  mirror  of  my  mazed  heart,  
What  wondrous  virtue  is  contained  in  you,  
The  which  both  life  and  death  forth  from  you  dart  
Into  the  object  of  your  mighty  view?  
For  when  ye  mildly  look  with  lovely  hew,  
Then  is  my  soul  with  life  and  love  inspired  
But  when  ye  lour,  or  look  on  me  askew,  
Then  do  I  die,  as  one  with  lightning  fired.  
But  since  that  life  is  more  than  death  desired,  
Look  ever  lovely,  as  becomes  you  best,  
That  your  bright  beams  of  my  weak  eyes  admired,  
May  kindle  living  fire  within  my  breast.  
Such  life  should  be  the  honor  of  your  light,  
Such  death  the  sad  ensample  of  your  might.  
VIII
More  than  most  fair,  full  of  the  living  fire,  
Kindled  above  unto  the  maker  near:  
No  eyes  but  joys,  in  which  all  powers  conspire,  
That  to  the  world  naught  else  be  counted  dear.  
Through  your  bright  beams  doth  not  the  blinded  guest,  
Shoot  out  his  darts  to  base  affections  wound:  
But  Angels  come  to  lead  frail  minds  to  rest  
In  chaste  desires  on  heavenly  beauty  bound.  
You  frame  my  thoughts  and  fashion  me  within,  
You  stop  my  tongue,  and  teach  my  heart  to  speak,  
You  calm  the  storm  that  passion  did  begin,  
Strong  through  your  cause,  but  by  your  virtue  weak.  
Dark  is  the  world,  where  your  light  shined  never;  
Well  is  he  born,  that  may  behold  you  ever.  
IX
Long-while  I  sought  to  what  I  might  compare  
Those  powerful  eyes,  which  lighten  my  dark  sprite,  
Yet  find  I  nought  on  earth  to  which  I  dare  
Resemble  th'image  of  their  goodly  light.  
Not  to  the  sun:  for  they  do  shine  by  night;  
Nor  to  the  moon:  for  they  are  changed  never;  
Nor  to  the  stars:  for  they  have  purer  sight;  
Nor  to  the  fire:  for  they  consume  not  ever;  
Nor  to  the  lightening:  for  they  still  persever;  
Nor  to  the  diamond:  for  they  are  more  tender;  
Nor  unto  crystal:  for  nought  may  them  sever;  
Nor  unto  glass:  such  baseness  mought  offend  her;  
Then  to  the  Maker  self  they  likest  be,  
Whose  light  doth  lighten  all  that  here  we  see.  
X
Unrighteous  lord  of  love,  what  law  is  this,  
That  me  thou  makest  thus  tormented  be:  
The  whiles  she  lordeth  in  licentious  bliss  
Of  her  freewill,  scorning  both  thee  and  me.  
See  how  the  Tyraness  doth  joy  to  see  
The  huge  massacres  which  her  eyes  do  make:  
And  humbled  hearts  brings  captives  unto  thee,  
That  thou  of  them  mayst  mighty  vengeance  take.  
But  her  proud  heart  do  thou  a  little  shake  
And  that  high  look,  with  which  she  doth  comptroll  
All  this  world's  pride,  bow  to  a  baser  make,  
And  all  her  faults  in  thy  black  book  enroll.  
That  I  may  laugh  at  her  in  equal  sort,  
As  she  doth  laugh  at  me  and  makes  my  pain  her  sport.  
XI
Daily  when  I  do  seek  and  sew  for  peace,  
And  hostages  do  offer  for  my  truth:  
She  cruel  warrior  doth  herself  address  
To  battle,  and  the  weary  war  renew'th.  
Nor  will  be  moved  with  reason  or  with  ruth,  
To  grant  small  respite  to  my  restless  toil:  
But  greedily  her  fell  intent  persueth,  
Of  my  poor  life  to  make  unpityed  spoil.  
Yet  my  poor  life,  all  sorrows  to  assoyle,  
I  would  her  yield,  her  wrath  to  pacify:  
But  then  she  seeks  with  torment  and  turmoil,  
To  force  me  live,  and  will  not  let  me  die.  
All  pain  hath  end  and  every  war  hath  peace,  
But  mine  no  price  nor  prayer  may  surcease.  
XII
One  day  I  sought  with  her  heart-thrilling  eyes  
To  make  a  truce,  and  terms  to  entertain;  
All  fearless  then  of  so  false  enemies,  
Which  sought  me  to  entrap  in  treason's  train.  
So  as  I  then  disarmed  did  remain,  
A  wicked  ambush  which  lay  hidden  long  
In  the  close  court  of  her  guileful  eyen,  
Thence  breaking  forth  did  thick  about  me  throng.  
Too  feeble  I  t'abide  the  brunt  so  strong,  
Was  forced  to  yield  myself  into  their  hands:  
Who  me  captiving  straight  with  rigorous  wrong,  
Have  ever  since  me  kept  in  cruel  bands.  
So  Lady,  now  to  you  I  do  complain  
Against  your  eyes  that  justice  I  may  gain.  
XIII
In  that  proud  port,  which  her  so  goodly  graceth,  
Whiles  her  fair  face  she  rears  up  to  the  sky:  
And  to  the  ground  her  eyelids  low  embaseth,  
Most  goodly  temperature  ye  may  descry,  
Mild  humbless  mixed  with  awful  majesty.  
For  looking  on  the  earth  whence  she  was  born,  
Her  mind  remembreth  her  mortality,  
What  so  is  fairest  shall  to  earth  return.  
But  that  same  lofty  countenance  seems  to  scorn  
Base  thing,  and  think  how  she  to  heaven  may  climb:  
Treading  down  earth  as  lothsome  and  forlorn,  
That  hinders  heavenly  thoughts  with  drossy  slime.  
Yet  lowly  still  vouchsafe  to  look  on  me,  
Such  lowliness  shall  make  you  lofty  be.  
XIV
Return  again  my  forces  late  dismayed,  
Unto  the  siege  by  you  abondon'd  quite,  
Great  shame  it  is  to  leave  like  one  afraid,  
So  fair  a  peace  for  one  repulse  so  light.  
'Gainst  such  strong  castles  needeth  greater  might,  
Than  those  small  forts  which  ye  were  wont  belay:  
Such  haughty  minds  enur'd  to  hardy  fight  
Disdain  to  yield  unto  the  first  assay.  
Bring  therefore  all  the  forces  that  ye  may,  
And  lay  incessant  battery  to  her  heart,  
Plaints,  prayers,  vows,  ruth,  sorrow,  and  dismay,  
Those  engines  can  the  proudest  love  convert.  
And  if  those  fail,  fall  down  and  die  before  her,  
So  dying  live,  and  living  do  adore  her.  
XV
Ye  tradefull  Merchants,  that  with  weary  toil,  
Do  seek  most  precious  things  to  make  your  gain;  
And  both  the  Indias  of  their  treasures  spoil,  
What  needeth  you  to  seek  so  far  in  vain?  
For  lo  my  love  doth  in  her  self  contain  
All  this  world's  riches  that  may  far  be  found,  
If  saphires,  lo  her  eyes  be  saphires  plain,  
If  rubies,  lo  her  lips  be  rubies  sound:  
If  pearls,  her  teeth  be  pearls  both  pure  and  round;  
If  ivory,  her  forhead  ivory  weene;  
If  gold,  her  locks  are  finest  gold  on  ground;  
If  silver,  her  fair  hands  are  silver  sheen.  
But  that  which  fairest  is,  but  few  behold,  
Her  mind  adorned  with  virtues  manifold.  
XVI
One  day  as  I  unwarily  did  gaze  
On  those  fair  eyes  my  love's  immortal  light:  
The  whiles  my  'stonished  heart  stood  in  amaze,  
Through  sweet  illusion  of  her  look's  delight.  
I  mote  perceive  how  in  her  glancing  sight,  
Legions  of  loves  with  little  wings  did  fly:  
Darting  their  deadly  arrows  fiery  bright,  
At  every  rash  beholder  passing  by.  
One  of  those  archers  closely  I  did  spy,  
Aiming  his  arrow  at  my  very  heart:  
When  suddenly  with  twinkle  of  her  eye,  
The  Damsel  broke  his  misintended  dart.  
Had  she  not  so  done,  sure  I  had  been  slain,  
Yet  as  it  was,  I  hardly  'scaped  with  pain.  
XVII
The  glorious  portrait  of  that  Angel's  face,  
Made  to  amaze  weak  men's  confused  skill:  
And  this  world's  worthless  glory  to  embase,  
What  pen,  what  pencil  can  express  her  fill?  
For  though  he  colours  could  devise  at  will,  
And  eke  his  learned  hand  at  pleasure  guide,  
Least  trembling  it  his  workmanship  should  spill,  
Yet  many  wondrous  things  there  are  beside.  
The  sweet  eye-glances,  that  like  arrows  glide,  
The  charming  smiles,  that  rob  sense  from  the  heart:  
The  lovely  pleasance  and  the  lofty  pride,  
Cannot  expressed  be  by  any  art.  
A  greater  craftsman's  hand  thereto  doth  need,  
That  can  express  the  life  of  things  indeed.  
XVIII
The  rolling  wheel  that  runneth  often  round,  
The  hardest  steel  in  tract  of  time  doth  tear:  
And  drizling  drops  that  often  do  redound,  
The  firmest  flint  doth  in  continuance  wear.  
Yet  cannot  I,  with  many  a  dropping  tear,  
And  long  entreaty,  soften  her  hard  heart:  
That  she  will  once  vouchsafe  my  plaint  to  hear,  
Or  look  with  pity  on  my  painful  smart.  
But  when  I  plead,  she  bids  me  play  my  part,  
And  when  I  weep,  she  says  tears  are  but  water:  
And  when  I  sigh,  she  says  I  know  the  art,  
And  when  I  wail  she  turns  herself  to  laughter.  
So  do  I  weep,  and  wail,  and  plead  in  vain,  
Whiles  she  as  steel  and  flint  doth  still  remain.  
XIX
The  merry  cuckoo,  messenger  of  spring,  
His  trumpet  shrill  hath  thrice  already  sounded:  
That  warns  all  lovers  wait  upon  their  king,  
Who  now  is  coming  forth  with  garland  crowned.  
With  noise  whereof  the  choir  of  birds  resounded  
Their  anthems  sweet  devised  of  love's  praise,  
That  all  the  woods  their  echoes  back  rebounded,  
As  if  they  knew  the  meaning  of  their  lays.  
But  'mongst  them  all,  which  did  Love's  honor  raise  
No  word  was  heard  of  her  that  most  it  ought,  
But  she  his  precept  proudly  disobeys,  
And  doth  his  idle  message  set  at  nought.  
Therefore  O  love,  unless  she  turn  to  thee  
Ere  cuckoo  end,  let  her  a  rebel  be.  
XX
In  vain  I  seek  and  sue  to  her  for  grace,  
And  do  mine  humbled  heart  before  her  pour,  
The  whiles  her  foot  she  in  my  neck  doth  place,  
And  tread  my  life  down  in  the  lowly  floor.  
And  yet  the  lion  that  is  lord  of  power,  
And  reighneth  over  every  beast  in  field,  
In  his  most  pride  disdaineth  to  devour  
The  silly  lamb  that  to  his  might  doth  yield.  
But  she  more  cruel  and  more  savage  wild,  
Then  either  lion  or  lioness:  
Shames  not  to  be  with  guiltless  blood  defiled,  
But  taketh  glory  in  her  cruelness.  
Fairer  than  fairest,  let  none  ever  say,  
That  ye  were  blooded  in  a  yielded  prey.  
XXI
Was  it  the  work  of  nature  or  of  art,  
Which  tempered  so  the  feature  of  her  face,  
That  pride  and  meekness  mixed  by  equal  part,  
Do  both  appear  t'adorn  her  beauty's  grace?  
For  with  mild  pleasance,  which  doth  pride  displace,  
She  to  her  love  doth  lookers'  eyes  allure:  
And  with  stern  countenance  back  again  doth  chase  
Their  looser  looks  that  stir  up  lusts  impure.  
With  such  strange  terms  her  eyes  she  doth  inure,  
That  with  one  look  she  doth  my  life  dismay:  
And  with  another  doth  it  straight  recure,  
Her  smile  me  draws,  her  frown  me  drives  away.  
Thus  doth  she  train  and  teach  me  with  her  looks,  
Such  art  of  eyes  I  never  read  in  books.  
XXII
This  holy  season  fit  to  fast  and  pray,  
Men  to  devotion  ought  to  be  inclined:  
Therefore,  I  likewise  on  so  holy  day,  
For  my  sweet  Saint  some  service  fit  will  find.  
Her  temple  fair  is  built  within  my  mind,  
In  which  her  glorious  image  placed  is,  
On  which  my  thoughts  do  day  and  night  attend  
Like  sacred  priests  that  never  think  amiss.  
There  I  to  her  as  th'author  of  my  bliss  
Will  build  an  altar  to  appease  her  ire:  
And  on  the  same  my  heart  will  sacrifice,  
Burning  in  flames  of  pure  and  chaste  desire:  
The  which  vouchsafe  O  godess  to  accept  
Amongst  thy  dearest  relics  to  be  kept.  
XXIII
Penelope  for  her  Ulysses'  sake,  
Devised  a  web  her  wooers  to  deceive;  
In  which  the  work  that  she  all  day  did  make  
The  same  at  night  she  did  again  unreave.  
Such  subtle  craft  my  Damsel  doth  conceive,  
Th'importune  suit  of  my  desire  to  shun:  
For  all  that  I  in  many  days  do  weave,  
In  one  short  hour  I  find  by  her  undone.  
So  when  I  think  to  end  that  I  begun,  
I  must  begin  and  never  bring  to  end:  
For  with  one  look  she  spills  that  long  I  spun,  
And  with  one  word  my  whole  year's  work  doth  rend.  
Such  labour  like  the  spider's  web  I  find,  
Whose  fruitless  work  is  broken  with  least  wind.  
XXIV
When  I  behold  that  beauty's  wonderment,  
And  rare  perfection  of  each  goodly  part;  
Of  nature's  skill  the  only  complement,  
I  honor  and  admire  the  maker's  art.  
But  when  I  feel  the  bitter  baleful  smart,  
Which  her  fair  eyes  unwares  do  work  in  me:  
That  death  out  of  their  shiny  beams  do  dart,  
I  think  that  I  a  new  Pandora  see;  
Whom  all  the  Gods  in  council  did  agree,  
Into  this  sinful  world  from  heaven  to  send:  
That  she  to  wicked  men  a  scourge  should  be,  
For  all  their  faults  with  which  they  did  offend.  
But  since  ye  are  my  scourge  I  will  intreat,  
That  for  my  faults  ye  will  me  gently  beat.  
XXV
How  long  shall  this  like  dying  life  endure,  
And  know  no  end  of  her  own  mystery:  
But  waste  and  wear  away  in  terms  unsure,  
'Twixt  fear  and  hope  depending  doubtfully?  
Yet  better  were  at  once  to  let  me  die,  
And  show  the  last  ensample  of  your  pride:  
Than  to  torment  me  thus  with  cruelty,  
To  prove  your  power,  which  I  too  well  have  tried.  
But  yet  if  in  your  hardened  breast  ye  hide,  
A  close  intent  at  last  to  show  me  grace:  
Then  all  the  woes  and  wrecks  which  I  abide,  
As  means  of  bliss  I  gladly  will  embrace.  
And  wish  that  more  and  greater  they  might  be,  
That  greater  meede  at  last  may  turn  to  me.  
XXVI
Sweet  is  the  rose,  but  grows  upon  a  briar;  
Sweet  in  the  Juniper,  but  sharp  his  bough;  
Sweet  is  the  Eglantine,  but  pricketh  near;  
Sweet  is  the  firbloom,  but  his  branches  rough.  
Sweet  is  the  Cypress,  but  his  rind  is  tough,  
Sweet  is  the  nut,  but  bitter  is  his  pill;  
Sweet  is  the  broom-flower,  but  yet  sour  enough;  
And  sweet  is  Moly,  but  his  root  is  ill.  
So  every  sweet  with  sour  is  tempered  still  
That  maketh  it  be  coveted  the  more:  
For  easy  things  that  may  be  got  at  will,  
Most  sorts  of  men  do  set  but  little  store.  
Why  then  should  I  account  of  little  pain,  
That  endless  pleasure  shall  unto  me  gain.  
XXVII
Fair  proud  now  tell  me  why  should  fair  be  proud,  
Sith  all  world's  glory  is  but  dross  unclean:  
And  in  the  shade  of  death  itself  shall  shroud,  
But  ever  now  thereof  ye  little  weene.  
That  goodly  idol  now  so  gay  beseen,  
Shall  doff  her  flesh's  borrowed  fair  attire:  
And  be  forgot  as  it  had  never  been,  
That  many  now  much  worship  and  admire.  
Ne  any  then  shall  after  it  inquire,  
Ne  any  mention  shall  thereof  remain:  
But  what  this  verse,  that  never  shall  expire,  
Shall  to  you  purchase  with  her  thankless  pain.  
Fair  be  no  longer  proud  of  that  shall  perish,  
But  that  which  shall  you  make  immortal,  cherish.  
XXVIII
The  laurel  leaf,  which  you  this  day  do  wear,  
Gives  me  great  hope  of  your  relenting  mind:  
For  since  it  is  the  badge  which  I  do  bear,  
Ye  wearing  it  do  seem  to  me  inclined:  
The  power  thereof,  which  of  in  me  I  find,  
Let  in  likewise  your  gentle  breast  inspire  
With  sweet  infusion,  and  put  you  in  mind  
Of  that  proud  maid,  whom  now  those  leave  attire:  
Proud  Daphne  scorning  Phoebus'  lovely  fire,  
On  the  Thessalian  shore  from  him  did  fly:  
For  which  the  gods  in  their  revengeful  ire  
Did  her  transform  into  a  laurel  tree.  
Then  fly  no  more  fair  love  from  Phoebus'  chace,  
But  in  your  breast  his  leaf  and  love  embrace.  
XXIX
See  how  the  stubborn  damsel  doth  deprave  
My  simple  meaning  with  disdainful  scorn:  
And  by  the  bay  which  I  unto  her  gave,  
Accounts  myself  her  captive  quite  forlorn.  
The  bay  (quoth  she)  is  of  the  victors  borne,  
Yielded  them  by  the  vanquished  as  their  meeds,  
And  they  therewith  do  poets'  heads  adorn,  
To  sing  the  glory  of  their  famous  deeds.  
But  sith  she  will  the  conquest  challenge  needs,  
Let  her  accept  me  as  her  faithful  thrall,  
That  her  great  triumph  which  my  skill  exceeds,  
I  may  in  trump  of  fame  blaze  over  all.  
Then  would  I  deck  her  head  with  glorious  bays,  
And  fill  the  world  with  her  victorious  praise.  
XXX
My  love  is  like  to  ice,  and  I  to  fire;  
How  comes  it  then  that  this  her  cold  so  great  
Is  not  dissolved  through  my  so-hot  desire,  
But  harder  grows  the  more  I  her  intreat?  
Or  how  comes  it  that  my  exceeding  heat  
Is  not  delayed  by  her  heart  frozen  cold;  
But  that  I  burn  much  more  in  boiling  sweat,  
And  feel  my  flames  augmented  manifold?  
What  more  miraculous  thing  may  be  told  
That  fire  which  all  things  melts,  should  harden  ice:  
And  ice  which  is  congealed  with  senseless  cold,  
Should  kindle  fire  by  wonderful  device?  
Such  is  the  power  of  love  in  gentle  mind,  
That  it  can  alter  all  the  course  of  kind.  


XXXI
Ah  why  hath  nature  to  so  hard  a  heart  
Given  so  goodly  gifts  of  beauty's  grace?  
Whose  pride  depraves  each  other  better  part,  
And  all  those  pretty  ornaments  deface.  
Sith  to  all  other  beasts  of  bloody  race,  
A  dreadful  countenance  she  given  hath,  
That  with  their  terror  all  the  rest  may  chase,  
And  warn  to  shun  the  danger  of  their  wrath.  
But  my  proud  one  doth  work  the  greater  scath,  
Through  sweet  allurement  of  her  lovely  hue:  
That  she  the  better  may  in  bloody  bath  
Of  such  poor  thralls  her  cruel  hands  embrew.  
But  did  she  know  how  ill  these  two  accord,  
Such  cruelty  she  would  have  soon  abhored.  
XXXII
The  painful  smith  with  force  of  fervent  heat,  
The  hardest  iron  soon  doth  mollify:  
That  with  his  heavy  sledge  he  can  it  beat,  
And  fashion  to  what  he  it  list  apply.  
Yet  cannot  all  these  flames  in  which  I  fry,  
Her  heart  more  hard  than  iron  soft  a  whit:  
Ne  all  the  plaints  and  prayers  with  which  I  
Do  beat  on  th'anvil  of  her  stubborn  wit;  
But  still  the  more  she  fervent  sees  my  fit,  
The  more  she  frieseth  in  her  willful  pride:  
And  harder  grows  the  harder  she  is  smit,  
With  all  the  plaints  which  to  her  be  applied.  
What  then  remains  but  I  to  ashes  burn,  
And  she  to  stones  at  length  all  frozen  turn?  
XXXIII
Great  wrong  I  do,  I  can  it  not  deny,  
To  that  most  sacred  empress  my  dear  dread,  
Not  finishing  her  Queen  of  Fa&ed.ry,  
That  mote  enlarge  her  living  praises  dead;  
But  lodwick,  this  of  grace  to  me  aread:  
Do  ye  not  think  the'accomplishment  of  it,  
Sufficient  work  for  one  man's  simple  head,  
All  were  it  as  the  rest  but  rudely  writ.  
How  then  should  I  without  another  wit,  
Think  ever  to  endure  so  tedious  toil,  
Sins  that  this  one  is  tossed  with  troublous  fit,  
Of  a  proud  love,  that  both  my  spirit  spoil.  
Cease  then,  till  she  vouchsafe  to  grant  me  rest,  
Or  lend  you  me  another  loving  breast.  
XXXIV
Like  a  ship  that  through  the  Ocean  wide,  
By  conduct  of  some  star  doth  make  her  way,  
Whenas  a  storm  hath  dimmed  her  trusty  guide,  
Out  of  her  course  doth  wander  far  astray.  
So  I  whose  star,  that  wont  with  her  bright  ray,  
Me  to  direct,  with  clouds  is  overcast,  
Do  wander  now  in  darkness  and  dismay,  
Through  hidden  perils  round  about  me  plast.  
Yet  hope  I  well,  that  when  this  storm  is  past  
My  Helice  the  lodestar  of  my  life  
Will  shine  again,  and  look  on  me  at  last,  
With  lovely  light  to  clear  my  cloudy  grief.  
Till  then  I  wander  carefull  comfortless,  
In  secret  sorrow  and  sad  pensiveness.  
XXXV
My  hungry  eyes  through  greedy  covetize,  
Still  to  behold  the  object  of  their  pain,  
With  no  contentment  can  themselves  suffice:  
But  having  pine  and  having  not  complain.  
For  lacking  it  they  cannot  life  sustain,  
And  having  it  they  gaze  on  it  the  more:  
In  their  amazement  like  Narcissus  vain  
Whose  eyes  him  starv'd:  so  plenty  makes  me  poor.  
Yet  are  mine  eyes  so  filled  with  the  store  
Of  that  fair  sight,  that  nothing  else  they  brook,  
But  loath  the  things  which  they  did  like  before,  
And  can  no  more  endure  on  them  to  look.  
All  this  world's  glory  seemeth  vain  to  me,  
And  all  their  shows  but  shadows,  saving  she.  
XXXVI
Tell  me  when  shall  these  weary  woes  have  end,  
Or  shall  their  ruthless  torment  never  cease:  
But  all  my  days  in  pining  langor  spend,  
Without  hope  of  aswagement  or  release.  
Is  there  no  means  for  me  to  purchase  peace,  
Or  make  agreement  with  her  thrilling  eyes:  
But  that  their  cruelty  doth  still  increase,  
And  daily  more  augment  my  miseries.  
But  when  ye  have  shewed  all  extermities,  
Then  think  how  little  glory  ye  have  gained:  
By  slaying  him,  whose  life  though  ye  dispise,  
Mote  have  your  life  in  honour  long  maintained.  
But  by  his  death  which  some  perhaps  will  moan,  
Ye  shall  condemned  be  of  many  a  one.  
XXXVII
What  guile  is  this,  that  those  her  golden  tresses,  
She  doth  attire  under  a  net  of  gold:  
And  with  sly  skill  so  cunningly  them  dresses,  
That  which  is  gold  or  hair,  may  scarce  be  told?  
Is  it  that  men's  frail  eyes,  which  gaze  too  bold,  
She  may  entangle  in  that  golden  snare:  
And  being  caught  may  craftily  enfold,  
Their  weaker  hearts,  which  are  not  well  aware?  
Take  heed  therefore,  mine  eyes,  how  ye  do  stare  
Henceforth  too  rashly  on  that  guileful  net,  
In  which  if  ever  ye  entrapped  are,  
Out  of  her  bands  ye  by  no  means  shall  get.  
Fondness  it  were  for  any  being  free,  
To  covet  fetters,  though  they  golden  be.  
XXXVIII
Arion,  when  through  tempests'  cruel  wrack,  
He  forth  was  thrown  into  the  greedy  seas:  
Through  the  sweet  music  which  his  harp  did  make  
Allured  a  dolphin  him  from  death  to  ease.  
But  my  rude  music,  which  was  wont  to  please  
Some  dainty  ears,  cannot  with  any  skill,  
The  dreadful  tempest  of  her  wrath  appease,  
Nor  move  the  dolphin  from  her  stubborn  will.  
But  in  her  pride  she  doth  persever  still,  
All  careless  how  my  life  for  her  decays:  
Yet  with  one  word  she  can  in  save  or  spill,  
To  spill  were  pitty,  but  to  save  were  praise.  
Choose  rather  to  be  praised  for  doing  good,  
Than  to  be  blam'd  for  spilling  guiltless  blood.  
XXXIX
Sweet  smile,  the  daughter  of  the  queen  of  love,  
Expressing  all  thy  mother's  powerful  art:  
With  which  she  wonts  to  temper  angry  Jove,  
When  all  the  gods  he  threats  with  thund'ring  dart.  
Sweet  is  thy  virtue  as  thy  self  sweet  art,  
For  when  on  me  thou  shinedst  late  in  sadness,  
A  melting  pleasance  ran  through  every  part,  
And  me  revived  with  heart  robbing  gladness.  
Whylest  rapt  with  joy  resembling  heavenly  madness,  
My  soul  was  ravished  quite  as  in  a  trance:  
And  feeling  thence  no  more  her  sorrow's  sadness,  
Fed  on  the  fullness  of  that  cheerful  glance,  
More  sweet  than  nectar  or  ambrosial  meat,  
Seemed  every  bit,  which  thenceforth  I  did  eat.  
XL
Mark  when  she  smiles  with  amiable  cheer,  
And  tell  me  whereto  can  ye  liken  it:  
When  on  each  eyelid  sweetly  do  appear  
An  hundred  Graces  as  in  shade  to  sit.  
Likest  it  seemeth  in  my  simple  wit  
Unto  the  fair  sunshine  in  summer's  day:  
That  when  a  dreadful  storm  away  is  flit,  
Through  the  broad  world  doth  spread  his  goodly  ray:  
At  sight  whereof  each  bird  that  sits  on  spray,  
And  every  beast  that  to  his  den  was  fled  
Comes  forth  afresh  out  of  their  late  dismay,  
And  to  the  light  lift  up  their  drooping  head.  
So  my  storm-beaten  heart  likewise  is  cheered,  
With  that  sunshine  when  cloudy  looks  are  cleared.  
XLI
Is  it  her  nature  or  is  it  her  will,  
To  be  so  cruel  to  an  humbled  foe?  
If  nature,  then  she  may  it  mend  with  skill,  
If  will,  then  she  at  will  may  will  forgo.  
But  if  her  nature  and  her  will  be  so,  
that  she  will  plague  the  man  that  loves  her  most:  
And  take  delight  t'increase  a  wretch's  woe,  
Then  all  her  nature's  goodly  gifts  are  lost.  
And  that  same  glorious  beauty's  idle  boast,  
Is  but  a  bait  such  wretches  to  beguile:  
As  being  long  in  her  love's  tempest  tossed,  
She  means  at  last  to  make  her  piteous  spoil.  
Of  fairest  fair  let  never  it  be  named,  
That  so  fair  beauty  was  so  foully  shamed.  
XLII
The  love  which  me  so  cruelly  tormenteth,  
So  pleasing  is  in  my  extremest  pain:  
That  all  the  more  my  sorrow  it  augmenteth,  
The  more  I  love  and  do  embrace  my  bane.  
Ne  do  I  wish  (for  wishing  were  but  vain)  
To  be  acquit  from  my  continual  smart:  
But  joy  her  thrall  for  ever  to  remain,  
And  yield  for  pledge  my  poor  captived  heart;  
The  which  that  it  from  her  may  never  start,  
Let  her,  if  please  her,  bind  with  adamant  chain:  
And  from  all  wandering  loves  which  mote  pervert,  
His  safe  assurance  strongly  it  restrain.  
Only  let  her  abstain  from  cruelty,  
And  do  me  not  before  my  time  to  die.  
XLIII
Shall  I  then  silent  be  or  shall  I  speak?  
And  if  I  speak,  her  wrath  renew  I  shall:  
And  if  I  silent  be,  my  heart  will  break,  
Or  choked  be  with  overflowing  gall.  
What  tyranny  is  this  both  my  heart  to  thrall,  
And  eke  my  tongue  with  proud  restraint  to  tie?  
That  neither  I  may  speak  nor  think  at  all,  
But  like  a  stupid  stock  in  silence  die.  
Yet  I  my  heart  with  silence  secretly  
Will  teach  to  speak,  and  my  just  cause  to  plead:  
And  eke  mine  eyes  with  meek  humility,  
Love-learned  letters  to  her  eyes  to  read.  
Which  her  deep  wit,  that  true  hearts'  thought  can  spell,  
Will  soon  conceive,  and  learn  to  construe  well.  
XLIV
When  those  renowned  noble  peers  of  Greece,  
Through  stubborn  pride  amongst  themselves  did  war,  
Forgetful  of  the  famous  golden  fleece,  
Then  Orpheus  with  his  harp  their  strife  did  bar.  
But  this  continual  cruel  civil  war  
The  which  myself  against  myself  do  make:  
Whilest  my  weak  powers  of  passions  warried  are,  
No  skill  can  stint  nor  reason  can  aslake.  
But  when  in  hand  my  tuneless  harp  I  take,  
Then  do  I  more  augment  my  foes'  despight:  
And  grief  renew,  and  passions  do  awake  
To  battle,  fresh  against  myself  to  fight.  
'Mongst  whom  the  more  I  seek  to  settle  peace,  
The  more  I  find  their  malice  to  increase.  
XLV
Leave,  lady,  in  your  glass  of  crystal  clean,  
Your  goodly  self  for  evermore  to  view:  
And  in  myself,  my  inward  self  I  mean,  
Most  lively  like  behold  your  semblance  true.  
Within  my  heart,  though  hardly  it  can  shew  
Thing  so  divine  to  view  of  earthly  eye,  
The  fair  Idea  of  your  celestial  hue,  
And  every  part  remains  immortally:  
And  were  it  not  that  through  your  cruelty,  
With  sorrow  dimmed  and  deformed  it  were:  
The  goodly  image  of  your  visnomy,  
Dearer  than  crystal  would  therein  appear.  
But  if  yourself  in  me  ye  plain  will  see,  
Remove  the  cause  by  which  your  fair  beams  darkened  be.  
XLVI
When  my  abode's  prefixed  time  is  spent,  
My  cruel  fair  straight  bids  me  wend  my  way:  
But  then  from  heaven  most  hideous  storms  are  sent  
As  willing  me  against  her  will  to  stay.  
Whom  then  shall  I  or  heaven  or  her  obey?  
The  heavens  know  best  what  is  the  best  form:  
But  as  she  will,  whose  will  my  life  doth  sway,  
My  lower  heaven,  so  it  perforce  must  be.  
But  ye  high  heavens,  that  all  this  sorrow  see,  
Sith  all  your  tempests  cannot  hold  me  back:  
Aswage  your  storms,  or  else  both  you  and  she,  
Will  both  together  me  too  sorely  wrack.  
Enough  it  is  for  one  man  to  sustain  
The  storms,  which  she  alone  on  me  doth  rain.  
XLVII
Trust  not  the  treason  of  those  smiling  looks,  
Until  ye  have  their  guilefull  trains  well  tried;  
For  they  are  like  but  unto  golden  hooks,  
That  from  the  foolish  fish  their  baits  do  hide:  
So  she  with  flattering  smiles  weak  hearts  doth  guide  
Unto  her  love,  and  tempt  to  their  decay,  
Whom  being  caught  she  kills  with  cruel  pride,  
And  feeds  at  pleasure  on  the  wretched  pray:  
Yet  even  whilst  her  bloody  hands  them  slay,  
Her  eyes  look  lovely  and  upon  them  smile:  
That  they  take  pleasure  in  her  cruel  play,  
And  dying  do  themselves  of  pain  beguile.  
O  mighty  charm  which  makes  men  love  their  bane,  
And  think  they  die  with  pleasure,  live  with  pain.  
XLVIII
Innocent  paper,  whom  too  cruel  hand  
Did  make  the  matter  to  avenge  her  ire:  
And  ere  she  could  thy  cause  well  understand,  
Did  sacrifice  unto  the  greedy  fire.  
Well  worthy  thou  to  have  found  better  hire,  
Then  so  bad  end  for  heretics  ordained;  
Yet  heresy  nor  treason  didst  conspire,  
But  plead  thy  master's  cause  unjustly  pained.  
Whom  she  all  careless  of  his  grief  contrained  
To  utter  forth  the  anguish  of  his  heart;  
And  would  not  hear,  when  he  to  her  complained,  
The  piteous  passion  of  his  dying  smart.  
Yet  live  for  ever,  though  against  her  will,  
And  speak  her  good,  though  she  requite  it  ill.  
XLIX
Fair  cruel,  why  are  you  so  fierce  and  cruel?  
Is  it  because  your  eyes  have  power  to  kill?  
Then  know,  that  mercy  is  the  mightiest  jewel,  
And  greater  glory  think  to  save,  than  spill.  
But  if  it  be  your  pleasure  and  proud  will,  
To  show  the  power  of  your  imperious  eyes:  
Then  not  on  him  that  never  thought  you  ill,  
But  bend  your  force  against  your  enemies.  
Let  them  feel  th'utmost  of  your  cruelties,  
And  kill  with  looks,  as  Cockatrices  do:  
But  him  that  at  your  footstool  humbled  lies,  
With  merciful  regard,  give  mercy  to.  
Such  mercy  shall  you  make  admired  to  be,  
So  shall  you  live  by  giving  life  to  me.  
L
Long  languishing  in  double  malady,  
Of  my  heart's  wound  and  of  my  body's  grief,  
There  came  to  me  a  leach  that  would  apply  
Fit  medicines  for  my  body's  best  relief.  
Vain  man  (quoth  I)  that  hast  but  little  priefe  
In  deep  discovery  of  the  mind's  disease,  
Is  not  the  heart  of  all  the  body  chief?  
And  rules  the  members  as  itself  doth  please.  
Then  with  some  cordials  seek  first  to  appease  
The  inward  langour  of  my  wounded  heart,  
And  then  my  body  shall  have  shortly  ease:  
But  such  sweet  cordials  pass  physicians'  art,  
Then  my  life's  Leach  do  you  your  skill  reveal,  
And  with  one  salve  both  heart  and  body  heal.  
LI
Do  I  not  see  that  fairest  images  
Of  hardest  marble  are  of  purpose  made?  
For  that  they  should  endure  through  many  ages,  
Ne  let  their  famous  monuments  to  fade.  
Why  then  do  I,  untrained  in  lovers'  trade,  
Her  hardness  blame  which  I  should  more  commend?  
Sith  never  aught  was  excellect  assayed,  
Which  was  not  hard  t'achieve  and  bring  to  end.  
Ne  aught  so  hard,  but  he  that  would  attend,  
Mote  soften  it  and  to  his  will  allure:  
So  do  I  hope  her  stubborn  heart  to  bend,  
And  that  it  then  more  steadfast  will  endure.  
Only  my  pains  will  be  the  more  to  get  her,  
But  having  her,  my  joy  will  be  the  greater.  
LII
So  oft  as  homeward  I  from  her  depart,  
I  go  like  one  that  having  lost  the  field,  
Is  prisoner  led  away  with  heavy  heart,  
Despoiled  of  warlike  arms  and  knowen  shield.  
So  do  I  now  myself  a  prisoner  yield,  
To  sorrow  and  to  solitary  pain:  
From  presence  of  my  dearest  dear  exiled,  
Longwhile  alone  in  languor  to  remain.  
There  let  no  thought  of  joy  or  pleasure  vain,  
Dare  to  approach,  that  may  my  solace  breed:  
But  sudden  dumps  and  dreary  sad  disdain,  
Of  all  worlds  gladness  more  my  torment  feed.  
So  I  her  absence  will  my  penance  make,  
That  of  her  presence  I  my  mead  may  take.  
LIII
The  panther  knowing  that  his  spotted  hide  
Doth  please  all  beasts,  but  that  his  looks  them  fray,  
Within  a  bush  his  dreadful  head  doth  hide,  
To  let  thm  gaze  whilst  he  on  them  may  prey.  
Right  so  my  cruel  fair  with  me  doth  play,  
For  with  the  goodly  semblance  of  her  hue  
She  doth  allure  me  to  mine  own  decay,  
And  then  no  mercy  will  unto  me  shew.  
Great  shame  it  is,  thing  so  divine  in  view,  
Made  for  to  be  the  world's  most  ornament,  
To  make  the  bait  her  gazers  to  enbrew,  
Good  shames  to  be  too  ill  an  instrument.  
But  mercy  doth  with  beauty  best  agree,  
As  in  their  maker  ye  them  best  may  see.  
LIV
Of  this  world's  theatre  in  which  we  stay,  
My  love  like  the  spectator  idly  sits  
Beholding  me  that  all  the  pageants  play,  
Disguising  diversely  my  troubled  wits.  
Sometimes  I  joy  when  glad  occasion  fits,  
And  mask  in  mirth  like  to  a  comedy:  
Soon  after  when  my  joy  to  sorrow  flits,  
I  wail  and  make  my  woes  a  tragedy.  
Yet  she  beholding  me  with  constant  eye,  
Delights  not  in  my  mirth  nor  rues  my  smart:  
But  when  I  laugh  she  mocks,  and  when  I  cry  
She  laughs,  and  hardens  evermore  her  heart.  
What  then  can  move  her?  if  not  mirth  nor  moan,  
She  is  no  woman,  but  senseless  stone.  
LV
So  oft  as  I  her  beauty  do  behold,  
And  therewith  do  her  cruelty  compare,  
I  marvel  of  what  substance  was  the  mould  
The  which  her  made  at  once  so  cruel  fair.  
Not  earth;  for  her  high  thoughts  more  heavenly  are,  
Not  water;  for  her  love  doth  burn  like  fire:  
Not  air;  for  she  is  not  so  light  or  rare,  
Not  fire;  for  she  doth  freeze  with  faint  desire.  
Then  needs  another  element  inquire  
Whereof  she  mote  be  made;  that  is  the  sky.  
For  to  the  heaven  her  haughty  looks  aspire:  
And  eke  her  mind  is  pure  immortal  high.  
Then  sith  to  heaven  ye  likened  are  the  best,  
Be  like  in  mercy  as  in  all  the  rest.  
LVI
Fair  ye  be  sure,  but  cruel  and  unkind,  
As  is  the  tiger  that  with  greediness  
Hunts  after  blood,  when  he  by  chance  doth  find  
A  feeble  beast,  doth  felly  him  oppress.  
Fair  be  ye  sure,  but  proud  and  pityless,  
As  is  a  storm,  that  all  things  doth  prostrate:  
Finding  a  tree  alone  all  comfortless,  
Beats  on  it  strongly  it  to  ruinate.  
Fair  be  ye  sure,  but  hard  and  obstinate,  
As  is  a  rock  amidst  the  raging  floods:  
'Gainst  which  a  ship  of  succour  desolate,  
Doth  suffer  wreck  both  of  herself  and  goods.  
That  ship,  that  tree,  and  that  same  beast  am  I,  
Whom  ye  do  wreck,  do  ruin,  and  destroy.  
LVII
Sweet  warrior,  when  shall  I  have  peace  with  you?  
High  time  it  is,  this  war  now  ended  were:  
Which  I  no  longer  can  endure  to  sue,  
Ne  your  incessant  battery  more  to  bear:  
So  weak  my  powers,  so  sore  my  wounds  appear  
That  wonder  is  how  I  should  live  a  jot,  
Seeing  my  heart  through  launched  everywhere  
With  thousand  arrows,  which  your  eyes  have  shot:  
Yet  shoot  ye  sharply  still,  and  spare  me  not,  
But  glory  think  to  make  these  cruel  stoures.  
Ye  cruel  one,  what  glory  can  be  got,  
In  slaying  him  that  would  live  gladly  yours?  
Make  peace  therefore,  and  grant  me  timely  grace,  
That  all  my  wouds  will  heal  in  little  space.  
LVIII.  By  her  that  is  most  assured  to  herself.
Weak  is  th'assurance  that  weak  flesh  reposeth  
In  her  own  power,  and  scorneth  others'  aid:  
That  soonest  falls  when  as  she  most  supposeth  
Herself  assured,  and  is  of  nought  afraid.  
All  flesh  is  frail,  and  all  her  strength  unstayed,  
Like  a  vain  bubble  blown  up  with  air:  
Devouring  time  and  changeful  chance  have  preyed  
Her  glory's  pride  that  none  may  it  repair.  
Ne  none  so  rich  or  wise,  so  strong  or  fair,  
But  faileth  trusting  on  his  own  assurance:  
And  he  that  standeth  on  the  highest  stair  
Falls  lowest:  for  on  earth  nought  hath  endurence.  
Why  then  do  ye  proud  fair,  misdeem  so  far,  
That  to  yourself  ye  most  assured  are.  
LIX
Thrice  happy  she,  that  is  so  well  assured  
Unto  herself  and  settled  so  in  heart:  
That  neither  will  for  better  be  allured,  
Ne  feared  with  worse  to  any  chance  start:  
But  like  a  steady  ship  doth  strongly  part  
The  raging  waves  and  keeps  her  course  aright:  
Ne  aught  for  tempest  doth  from  it  depart,  
Ne  aught  for  fairer  weather  false  delight.  
Such  self  assurance  need  not  fear  the  spite  
Of  grudging  foes,  ne  favor  seek  of  friends:  
But  in  the  stay  of  her  own  steadfast  might,  
Neither  to  one  herself  nor  another  bends.  
Most  happy  she  that  most  assured  doth  rest,  
But  he  most  happy  who  such  one  loves  best.  
LX
They  that  in  course  of  heavenly  spheres  are  skilled,  
To  every  planet  point  his  sundry  year:  
In  which  her  circle's  voyage  is  fulfilled,  
As  Mars  in  three-score  years  doth  run  his  sphere.  
So  since  the  winged  God  his  planet  clear,  
Began  in  me  to  move,  one  year  is  spent:  
The  which  doth  longer  unto  me  appear,  
Than  all  those  forty  which  my  life  outwent.  
Then  by  that  count,  which  lovers'  books  invent,  
The  sphere  of  Cupid  forty  years  contains:  
Which  I  have  wasted  in  long  languishment,  
That  seemed  the  longer  for  my  greater  pains.  
But  let  my  love's  fair  planet  short  her  ways  
This  year  ensuing,  or  else  short  my  days.  


LXI
The  glorious  image  of  the  maker's  beauty,  
My  sovereign  saint,  the  idol  of  my  thought,  
Dare  not  henceforth  above  the  bounds  of  duty  
T'accuse  of  pride,  or  rashly  blame  for  aught.  
For  being  as  she  is  divinely  wrought,  
And  of  the  brood  of  angels  heavenly  born;  
And  with  the  crew  of  blessed  saints  upbrought,  
Each  of  which  did  her  with  their  gifts  adorn;  
The  bud  of  joy,  the  blossom  of  the  morn,  
The  beam  of  light,  whom  mortal  eyes  admire:  
What  reason  is  it  then  but  she  should  scorn  
Base  things,  that  to  her  love  too  bold  aspire?  
Such  heavenly  forms  ought  rather  worshipped  be,  
Than  dare  be  lov'd  by  men  of  mean  degree.  
LXII
The  weary  year  his  race  now  having  run,  
The  new  begins  his  compassed  course  anew:  
With  shew  of  morning  mild  he  hath  begun,  
Betokening  peace  and  plenty  to  ensue.  
So  let  us,  which  this  change  of  weather  view,  
Change  each  our  minds  and  former  lives  amend,  
The  old  year's  sins  forepast  let  us  eschew,  
And  fly  the  faults  with  which  we  did  offend.  
Then  shall  the  new  year's  joy  forth  freshly  send,  
Into  the  glooming  world  his  gladsome  ray:  
And  all  these  storms  which  now  his  beauty  blend,  
Shall  turn  to  calms  and  timely  clear  away.  
So  likewise  love  cheer  you  and  your  heavy  sprite,  
And  change  old  year's  annoy  to  new  delight.  
:poem  
LXIII
After  long  storms  and  tempests'  sad  assay,  
Which  hardly  I  endured  heretofore:  
In  dread  of  death  and  dangerous  dismay,  
With  which  my  silly  bark  was  tossed  sore:  
I  do  at  length  descry  the  happy  shore,  
In  which  I  hope  ere  long  for  to  arrive;  
Fair  soil  it  seems  from  far  and  fraught  with  store  
Of  all  that  dear  and  dainty  is  alive.  
Most  happy  he  that  can  at  last  achieve  
The  joyous  safety  of  so  sweet  a  rest:  
Whose  least  delight  sufficeth  to  deprive  
Remembrance  of  all  pains  which  him  oppressed.  
All  pains  are  nothing  in  respect  to  this,  
All  sorrows  short  that  gain  eternal  bliss.  
LXIV
Coming  to  kiss  her  lips,  (such  grace  I  found)  
Me  seemed  I  smelled  a  garden  of  sweet  flowers,  
That  dainty  odors  from  them  threw  around  
For  damsels  fit  to  deck  their  lovers'  bowers.  
Her  lips  did  smell  like  unto  Gillyflowers,  
Her  ruddy  cheeks  like  unto  Roses  red:  
Her  snowy  brows  like  budded  Bellamores,  
Her  lovely  eyes  like  Pinks  but  newly  spread.  
Her  goodly  bosom  like  a  strawberry  bed,  
Her  neck  like  to  a  bunch  of  Columbines:  
Her  breast  like  Lillies,  ere  their  leaves  be  shed,  
Her  nipples  like  young  blossomed  Jasmines.  
Such  fragrant  flowers  do  give  most  odorous  smell,  
But  her  sweet  odor  did  them  all  excel.  
LXV
The  doubt  which  you  misdeem,  fair  love,  is  vain,  
That  fondly  fear  to  lose  your  liberty,  
When  losing  one,  two  liberties  you  gain,  
And  make  him  bond  that  bondage  erst  did  fly.  
Sweet  be  the  bands,  the  which  true  love  doth  tie,  
Without  constraint  or  dread  of  any  ill:  
The  gentle  bird  feels  no  captivity  
Within  her  cage,  but  sings  and  feeds  her  fill.  
There  pride  dare  not  approach,  nor  discord  spill  
The  league  'twixt  them,  that  loyal  love  hath  bound:  
But  simple  truth  and  mutual  good  will,  
Seeks  with  sweet  peace  to  salve  each  others'  wound:  
There  faith  doth  fearless  dwell  in  brazen  tower,  
And  spotless  pleasure  builds  her  sacred  bower.  
LXVI
To  all  those  happy  blissing  which  ye  have,  
With  plenteous  hand  by  heaven  upon  you  thrown,  
This  one  disparagement  they  to  you  gave,  
That  ye  your  love  lent  to  so  mean  a  one.  
Yet  whose  high  worths  surpassing  paragon,  
Could  not  on  earth  have  found  one  fit  for  mate,  
Ne  but  in  heaven  matchable  to  none,  
Why  did  ye  stoop  unto  so  lowly  state?  
But  ye  thereby  much  greater  glory  gate,  
Than  had  ye  sorted  with  a  prince's  peer:  
For  now  your  light  doth  more  itself  dilate,  
And  in  my  darkness  greater  doth  appear.  
Yet  since  your  light  hath  once  enlumined  me,  
With  my  reflex  yours  shall  increased  be.  
LXVII
Like  as  a  huntsman  after  weary  chase,  
Seeing  the  game  from  him  escaped  away,  
Sits  down  to  rest  him  in  some  shady  place,  
With  panting  hounds  beguiled  of  their  pray:  
So  after  long  pursuit  and  vain  assay,  
When  I  all  weary  had  the  chase  forsook,  
The  gentle  deer  returned  the  self-same  way,  
Thinking  to  quench  her  thirst  at  the  next  brook.  
There  she  beholding  me  with  milder  look,  
Sought  not  to  fly,  but  fearless  still  did  bide:  
Till  I  in  hand  her  yet  half-trembling  took,  
And  with  her  own  goodwill  here  firmly  tied.  
Strange  thing  me  seemed  to  see  a  beast  so  wild,  
So  goodly  won  with  her  own  will  beguiled.  
LXVIII
Most  glorious  Lord  of  life,  that  on  this  day,  
Didst  make  thy  triumph  over  death  and  sin:  
And  having  harrowed  hell,  didst  bring  away  
Captivity  thence  captive  us  to  win:  
This  joyous  day,  dear  Lord,  with  joy  begin,  
And  grant  that  we  for  whom  thou  didst  die  
Being  with  thy  dear  blood  clean  washed  from  sin,  
May  live  for  ever  in  felicity.  
And  that  thy  love  we  weighing  worthily,  
May  likewise  love  thee  for  the  same  again:  
And  for  thy  sake  that  all  like  dear  didst  buy,  
With  love  may  one  another  entertain.  
So  let  us  love,  like  as  we  ought,  
Love  is  the  lesson  which  the  Lord  us  taught.  
LXIX
The  famous  warriors  of  the  antick  world,  
Used  trophies  to  erect  in  stately  wise:  
In  which  they  would  the  records  have  enrolled,  
Of  their  great  deeds  and  valorous  emprize.  
What  trophy  then  shall  I  most  fit  devise,  
In  which  I  may  record  the  memory  
Of  my  love's  conquest,  peerless  beauty's  prize,  
Adorn'd  with  honour,  love,  and  chastity.  
Even  this  verse  vowed  to  eternity,  
Shall  be  thereof  immortal  monument:  
And  tell  her  praise  to  all  posterity,  
That  may  admire  such  world's  rare  wonderment.  
The  happy  purchase  of  my  glorious  spoil,  
Gotten  at  last  with  labour  and  long  toil.  
LXX
Fresh  spring  the  herald  of  love's  might  king,  
In  whose  coat-armor  richly  are  displayed  
All  sorts  of  flowers  the  which  on  earth  do  spring  
In  goodly  colors  gloriously  displayed.  
Go  to  my  love,  where  she  is  careless  laid,  
Yet  in  her  winter's  bower  not  well  awake:  
Tell  her  the  joyous  time  will  not  be  staid  
Unless  she  do  him  by  the  forelock  take.  
Bid  her  therefore  herself  soon  ready  make,  
To  wait  on  love  amongst  his  lovely  crew:  
Where  every  one  that  misseth  than  her  make,  
Shall  be  by  him  amearst  with  penance  due.  
Make  haste  therefore  sweet  love,  whilst  it  is  prime,  
For  none  can  call  again  the  passed  time.  
LXXI
I  joy  to  see  how  in  your  drawen  work,  
Yourself  unto  the  bee  ye  do  compare:  
And  me  unto  the  Spider  that  doth  lurk,  
In  close  await  to  catch  her  unaware.  
Right  so  youself  were  caught  in  cunning  snare  
Of  a  dear  foe,  and  thralled  to  his  love:  
In  whose  straight  bands  ye  now  captived  are  
So  firmly,  that  ye  never  may  remove.  
But  as  your  work  is  woven  all  above,  
With  woodbine  flowers  and  fragrant  Eglantine;  
So  sweet  your  prison  you  in  time  shall  prove,  
With  many  dear  delights  bedecked  fine.  
And  all  thenceforth  eternal  peace  shall  see,  
Between  the  spider  and  the  gentle  bee.  
LXXII
Oft  when  my  spirit  doth  spread  her  bolder  wings,  
In  mind  to  mount  up  to  the  purest  sky:  
It  down  is  weighed  with  thought  of  earthly  things  
And  clogged  with  burden  of  mortality.  
Where  when  that  sovereign  beauty  it  doth  spy,  
Resembling  heaven's  glory  in  her  light:  
Drawn  with  sweet  pleasure's  bait,  it  back  doth  fly,  
And  unto  heaven  forgets  her  former  flight.  
There  my  frail  fancy  fed  with  full  delight,  
Doth  bathe  in  bliss  and  mantleth  most  at  ease:  
Ne  thinks  of  other  heaven,  but  how  it  might  
Her  heart's  desire  with  most  contentment  please.  
Heart  need  not  with  none  other  happiness,  
But  here  on  earth  to  have  such  heaven's  bliss.  
LXXIII
Being  myself  captured  here  in  care,  
My  heart,  whom  none  with  servile  bands  can  tie,  
But  the  fair  tresses  of  your  golden  hair,  
Breaking  his  prison  forth  to  you  doth  fly.  
Like  as  a  bird  that  in  one's  hand  doth  spy  
Desired  food,  to  it  doth  make  his  flight:  
Even  so  my  heart,  that  wont  on  your  fair  eye  
To  feed  his  fill,  flys  back  unto  your  sight.  
Do  you  him  take,  and  in  your  bosom  bright,  
Gently  encage,  that  he  may  be  your  thrall:  
Perhaps  he  there  may  learn  with  rare  delight,  
To  sing  your  name  and  praises  over  all.  
That  it  hereafter  may  you  not  repent,  
Him  lodging  in  your  bosom  to  have  lent.  
LXXIV
Most  happy  letters  fram'd  by  skillful  trade,  
With  which  that  happy  name  was  first  designed:  
The  which  three  times  thrice  happy  hath  me  made,  
With  gifts  of  body,  fortune  and  of  mind.  
The  first  my  being  to  me  gave  by  kind,  
From  mother's  womb  deriv'd  by  due  descent,  
The  second  is  my  sovereign  Queen  most  kind,  
That  honour  and  large  riches  to  me  lent.  
The  third  my  love,  my  life's  last  ornament,  
By  whom  my  spirit  out  of  dust  was  raised:  
To  speak  her  praise  and  glory  excellent,  
Of  all  alive  most  worthy  to  be  praised.  
Ye  three  Elizabeths  forever  live,  
That  three  such  graces  did  unto  me  give.  
LXXV
One  day  I  wrote  her  name  upon  the  strand,  
But  came  the  waves  and  washed  it  away:  
Again  I  wrote  it  with  a  second  hand,  
But  came  the  tide,  and  made  my  pains  his  prey.  
Vain  man,  said  she,  that  doest  in  vain  assay,  
A  mortal  thing  so  to  immortalize,  
For  I  myself  shall  like  to  this  decay,  
And  eek  my  name  be  wiped  out  likewise.  
No  so,  (quod  I)  let  baser  things  devise  
To  die  in  dust,  but  you  shall  live  by  fame:  
My  verse,  your  virtues  rare  shall  eternize,  
And  in  the  heavens  write  your  glorious  name.  
Where  whenas  death  shall  all  the  world  subdue,  
Out  love  shall  live,  and  later  life  renew.  
LXXVI
Fair  bosom  fraught  with  virtue's  riches  treasure,  
The  nest  of  love,  the  lodging  of  delight:  
The  bower  of  bliss,  the  paradise  of  pleasure,  
The  sacred  harbour  of  that  heavenly  sprite.  
How  was  I  ravished  with  your  lovely  sight,  
And  my  frail  thoughts  too  rashly  led  astray?  
Whiles  diving  deep  through  amorous  insight,  
On  the  sweet  spoil  of  beauty  they  did  prey.  
And  twixt  her  paps  like  early  fruit  in  May,  
Whose  harvest  seemed  to  hasten  now  apace:  
They  loosly  did  their  wanton  wings  display,  
And  there  to  rest  themselves  did  boldly  place.  
Sweet  thoughts  I  envy  your  so  happy  rest,  
Which  oft  I  wished,  yet  never  was  so  blest.  
LXXVII
Was  it  a  dream,  or  did  I  see  it  plain,  
A  goodly  table  of  pure  ivory:  
All  spread  with  juncats,  fit  to  entertain  
The  greatest  prince  with  pompous  royalty.  
'Mongst  which  there  in  a  silver  dish  did  lie  
Two  golden  apples  of  unvalued  price:  
Far  passing  those  which  Hercules  came  by,  
Or  those  which  Atalanta  did  entice.  
Exceeding  sweet,  yet  void  of  sinful  vice,  
That  many  sought  yet  none  could  ever  taste,  
Sweet  fruit  of  pleasure  brought  from  paradise  
By  love  himself,  and  in  his  garden  placed.  
Her  breast  that  table  was  so  richly  spread,  
My  thoughts  the  guests,  which  would  thereon  have  fed.  
LXXVIII
Lacking  my  love  I  go  from  place  to  place,  
Like  a  young  fawn  that  late  hath  lost  the  hind:  
And  seek  each  where,  where  last  I  saw  her  face,  
Whose  image  yet  I  carry  fresh  in  mind.  
I  seek  the  fields  with  her  late  footing  signed,  
I  seek  her  bower  with  her  late  presence  decked,  
Yet  nor  in  field  nor  bower  I  her  can  find:  
Yet  field  and  bower  are  full  of  her  aspect.  
But  when  mine  eyes  I  thereunto  direct,  
They  idly  back  return  to  me  again,  
And  when  I  hope  to  see  their  true  object,  
I  find  myself  but  fed  with  fancies  vain.  
Cease  then  mine  eyes,  to  seek  herself  to  see,  
And  let  my  thoughts  behold  herself  in  me.  
LXXIX
Men  call  you  fair,  and  you  do  credit  it,  
For  that  yourself  ye  daily  such  do  see:  
But  the  true  fair,  that  is  the  gentle  wit,  
And  virtuous  mind,  is  much  more  prayed  of  me.  
For  all  the  rest,  how  ever  fair  it  be,  
Shall  turn  to  naught  and  loose  that  glorious  hue:  
But  only  that  is  permanent  and  free  
From  frail  corruption,  that  doth  flesh  ensue.  
That  is  true  beauty:  that  doth  argue  you  
To  be  divine  and  born  of  heavenly  seed:  
Deriv'd  from  that  fair  spirit,  from  whom  all  true  
And  perfect  beauty  did  at  first  proceed.  
He  only  fair,  and  what  he  fair  hath  made,  
All  other  fair  like  flowers  untimely  fade.  
LXXX
After  so  long  a  race  as  I  have  run  
Through  Faery  land,  which  those  six  books  compile,  
Give  leave  to  rest  me  being  half  fordone,  
And  gather  to  myself  new  breath  awhile.  
Then  as  a  steed  refreshed  after  toil,  
Out  of  my  prison  I  will  break  anew:  
And  stoutly  will  that  second  work  assoyle,  
With  strong  endeavor  and  attention  due.  
Till  then  give  leave  to  me  in  pleasant  mew,  
To  sport  my  muse  and  sing  my  love's  sweet  praise:  
The  contemplation  of  whose  heavenly  hue,  
My  spirit  to  an  higher  pitch  will  raise.  
But  let  her  praises  yet  be  low  and  mean,  
Fit  for  the  handmaid  of  the  Faery  Queene.  
LXXXI
Fair  is  my  love,  when  her  fair  golden  heares,  
With  the  loose  wind  ye  waving  chance  to  mark:  
Fair  when  the  rose  in  her  red  cheeks  appears,  
Or  in  her  eyes  the  fire  of  love  does  spark.  
Fair  when  her  breast  like  a  rich-laden  bark,  
With  precious  merchandise  she  forth  doth  lay:  
Fair  when  that  cloud  of  pride,  which  oft  doth  dark  
Her  goodly  light  with  smiles  she  drives  away.  
But  fairest  she,  when  so  she  doth  display,  
The  gate  with  pearls  and  rubies  richly  dight:  
Through  which  her  words  so  wise  do  make  their  way  
To  bear  the  message  of  her  gentle  sprite.  
The  rest  be  works  of  nature's  wonderment,  
But  this  the  work  of  heart's  astonishment.  
LXXXII
Joy  of  my  life,  full  oft  for  loving  you  
I  bless  my  lot,  that  was  so  lucky  placed:  
But  then  the  more  your  own  mishap  I  rue,  
That  are  so  much  by  so  mean  love  debased.  
For  had  the  equal  heavens  so  much  you  graced  
In  this  as  in  the  rest,  ye  mote  invent  
Soom  heavenly  wit,  whose  verse  could  have  enchased  
Your  glorious  name  in  golden  monument.  
But  since  ye  deigned  so  goodly  to  relent  
To  me  your  thrall,  in  whom  is  little  worth,  
That  little  that  I  am,  shall  all  be  spent,  
In  setting  your  immoral  praises  forth.  
Whose  lofty  argument  uplifting  me,  
Shall  lift  you  up  unto  an  high  degree.  
LXXXIII
My  hungry  eyes,  through  greedy  covetize,  
Still  to  behold  the  object  of  their  pain:  
With  no  contentment  can  themselves  suffice.  
But  having  pine,  and  having  not  complain.  
For  lacking  it,  they  cannot  life  sustain,  
And  seeing  it,  they  gaze  on  it  the  more:  
In  their  amazement  like  Narcissus  vain  
Whose  eyes  him  starv'd:  so  plenty  makes  me  poor.  
Yet  are  mine  eyes  so  filled  with  the  store  
Of  that  fair  sight,  that  nothing  else  they  brook:  
But  loath  the  things  which  they  did  like  before,  
And  can  no  more  endure  on  them  to  look.  
All  this  world's  glory  seemeth  vain  to  me,  
And  all  their  shows  but  shadows,  saving  she.  
LXXXIV
Let  not  one  spark  of  filthy  lustfull  fire  
Ne  one  light  glance  of  sensual  desire  
Attempt  to  work  her  gentle  mind's  unrest.  
But  pure  affections  bred  in  spotless  breast,  
And  modest  thoughts  breathed  from  well  tempered  sprites  
Go  visit  her  in  her  chaste  bower  of  rest,  
Accompanied  with  angelic  delights.  
There  fill  yourself  with  those  most  joyous  sights,  
The  which  myself  could  never  yet  attain:  
But  speak  no  word  to  her  of  these  sad  plights,  
Which  her  too  constant  stiffness  doth  constrain.  
Only  behold  her  rare  perfection,  
And  bless  your  fortune's  fair  election.  
LXXXV
The  world  that  cannot  deem  of  worthy  things,  
When  I  do  praise  her,  say  I  do  but  flatter:  
So  does  the  cuckoo,  when  the  mavis  sings,  
Begin  his  witless  note  apace  to  clatter.  
But  they  that  skill  not  of  so  heavenly  matter,  
All  that  they  know  not,  envy  or  admire,  
Rather  than  envy  let  them  wonder  at  her,  
But  not  to  deem  of  her  desert  aspire.  
Deep  in  the  closet  of  my  parts  entire,  
Her  worth  is  written  with  a  golden  quill:  
That  me  with  heavenly  fury  doth  inspire,  
And  my  glad  mouth  with  her  sweet  praises  fill.  
Which  when  as  fame  in  her  shrill  trump  shall  thunder  
Let  the  world  choose  to  envy  or  to  wonder.  
LXXXVI
Venemous  tongue,  tipped  with  vile  adders'  sting,  
Of  that  self  kind  with  which  the  Furies  fell  
Their  snaky  heads  do  comb,  from  which  a  spring  
Of  poisoned  words  and  spiteful  speeches  well.  
Let  all  the  plagues  and  horrid  pains  of  hell,  
Upon  thee  fall  for  thine  accursed  hire:  
That  with  false-forged  lies,  which  thou  didst  tell,  
In  my  true  love  did  stir  up  coals  of  ire,  
The  sparks  whereof  let  kindle  thine  own  fire,  
And  catching  hold  on  thine  own  wicked  head  
Consume  thee  quite,  that  didst  with  guile  conspire  
In  my  sweet  peace  such  breaches  to  have  bred.  
Shame  be  thy  meed,  and  mischief  thy  reward,  
Due  to  thyself  that  it  for  me  prepared.  
LXXXVII
Since  I  did  leave  the  presence  of  my  love,  
Many  long  weary  days  have  I  outworn:  
And  many  nights,  that  slowly  seemed  to  move  
Their  sad  protract  from  evening  until  morn.  
For  when  as  day  the  heaven  doth  adorn,  
I  wish  that  night  the  noyous  day  would  end:  
And  when  as  night  hath  us  of  light  forlorn,  
I  wish  that  day  would  shortly  reascend.  
Thus  I  the  time  with  expectation  spend,  
And  fain  my  grief  with  changes  to  beguile,  
That  further  seems  his  term  still  to  extend,  
And  maketh  every  minute  seem  a  mile.  
So  sorrow  still  doth  seem  too  long  to  last,  
But  joyous  hours  do  fly  away  too  fast.  
LXXXVIII
Since  I  have  lacked  the  comfort  of  that  light,  
The  which  was  wont  to  lead  my  thoughts  astray:  
I  wander  as  in  darkness  of  the  night,  
Afraid  of  every  danger's  least  dismay.  
Ne  ought  I  see,  though  in  the  clearest  day,  
When  others  gaze  upon  their  shadows  vain:  
But  th'only  image  of  that  heavenly  ray,  
Whereof  some  glance  doth  in  mine  eye  remain.  
Of  which  beholding  the  idea  plain,  
Through  contemplation  of  my  purest  part:  
With  light  thereof  I  do  myself  sustain,  
And  thereon  feed  my  love-afamished  heart.  
But  with  such  brightness  whilst  I  fill  my  mind,  
I  starve  my  body  and  mine  eyes  do  blind.  
LXXXIX
Like  as  the  culver  on  the  bared  bough,  
Sits  mourning  for  the  absence  of  her  mate,  
And  in  her  songs  sends  many  a  wishful  vow,  
For  his  return  that  seems  to  linger  late.  
So  I  alone  now  left  disconsolate,  
Mourn  to  myself  the  absence  of  my  love:  
And  wandering  here  and  there  all  desolate,  
Seek  with  my  plaints  to  match  that  mournful  dove:  
Ne  joy  of  aught  that  under  heaven  doth  hove,  
Can  comfort  me,  but  her  own  joyous  sight:  
Whose  sweet  aspect  both  God  and  man  can  move,  
In  her  unspotted  pleasauns  to  delight.  
Dark  is  my  day,  while  her  fair  light  I  miss,  
And  dead  my  life  that  wants  such  lively  bliss.  






In  youth  before  I  waxed  old,  
The  blind  boy  Venus'  baby,  
For  want  of  cunning  made  me  bold,  
In  bitter  hive  to  grope  for  honey.  
             But  when  he  saw  me  stung  and  cry,  
             He  took  his  wings  and  away  did  fly.  
As  Diane  hunted  on  a  day,  
She  chanced  to  come  where  Cupid  lay,  
His  quiver  by  his  head:  
One  of  his  shafts  she  stole  away,  
And  one  of  hers  did  close  convey,  
Into  the  other's  stead:  
             With  that  love  wounded  my  love's  heart  
             But  Diane  beasts  with  Cupid's  dart.  
I  saw  in  secret  to  my  Dame,  
How  little  Cupid  humbly  came:  
And  said  to  her  "All  hail,  my  mother."  
But  when  he  saw  me  laugh,  for  shame  
His  face  with  bashfull  blood  did  flame,  
Not  knowing  Venus  from  the  other,  
"Then  never  blush,  Cupid"  (quoth  I)  
"For  many  have  err'd  in  this  beauty."  
Upon  a  day  as  love  lay  sweetly  slumbring,  
All  in  his  mother's  lap:  
A  gentle  bee  with  his  loud  trumpet  murm'ring,  
About  him  flew  by  hap.  
Whereof  when  he  was  wakened  with  the  noise,  
And  saw  the  beast  so  small:  
"What's  this"  (quoth  he)  "that  gives  so  great  a  voice,  
That  wakens  men  withall?  
In  angry  wise  he  flies  about,  
And  threatens  all  with  courage  stout."  
To  whom  his  mother  closely  smiling  said,  
Twixt  earnest  and  twixt  game:  
"See  thou  thy  selfe  likewise  art  little  made,  
If  thou  regard  the  same.  
And  yet  thou  suff'rst  neither  gods  in  sky,  
Nor  men  in  earth  to  rest;  
But  when  thou  art  disposed  cruelly,  
Their  sleep  thou  dost  molest.  
Then  either  change  thy  cruelty,  
Or  give  like  leave  unto  the  fly."  
Natheless  the  cruel  boy  not  so  content,  
Would  needs  the  fly  pursue,  
And  in  his  hand  with  heedless  hardiment,  
Him  caught  for  to  subdue.  
But  when  on  it  he  hasty  hand  did  lay,  
The  bee  him  stung  therefore:  
"Now  out  alas"  (he  cried)  "and  wellaway,  
I  wounded  am  full  sore:  
The  fly  that  I  so  much  did  scorn,  
Hath  hurt  me  with  his  little  horn."  
Unto  his  mother  straight  he  weeping  came,  
And  of  his  grief  complained:  
Who  could  not  chose  but  laugh  at  his  fond  game,  
Though  sad  to  see  him  pained.  
"Think  now"  (quoth  she)  "my  son  how  great  the  smart  
Of  those  whom  thou  dost  wound:  
Full  many  thou  hast  pricked  to  the  heart,  
That  pity  never  found:  
Therefore  henceforth  some  pity  take,  
When  thou  dost  spoil  of  lovers  make."  
She  took  him  straight  full  pitiously  lamenting,  
And  wrapt  him  in  her  smock:  
She  wrapt  him  softly,  all  the  while  repenting,  
That  he  the  fly  did  mock.  
She  drest  his  wound  and  it  embalmed  well  
With  salve  of  sovereign  might:  
And  then  she  bath'd  him  in  a  dainty  well  
The  well  of  dear  delight.  
Who  would  not  oft  be  stung  as  thus,  
To  be  so  bath'd  in  Venus'  bliss?  
The  wanton  boy  was  shortly  well  recured,  
Of  that  his  malady:  
But  he  soon  after  fresh  again  enured,  
His  former  cruelty.  
And  since  that  time  he  wounded  hath  my  self  
With  his  sharp  dart  of  love:  
And  now  forgets  the  cruel  careless  elf,  
His  mother's  hest  to  prove.  
So  now  I  languish,  till  he  please  
My  pining  anguish  to  appease.  

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