Poems and Dramas of Fulke Greville First Lord Brooke: Edited with introductions and notes by Geoffrey Bullough |
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Sonnet LXXI
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Poems and Dramas of Fulke Greville | ||
Sonnet LXXI
[Loue; I did send you forth enamel'd faire]
Loue; I did send you forth enamel'd faire
With hope, and gaue you seisin and liuery
Of Beauties skye, which you did claime as heyre,
By obiects and desires affinitie.
With hope, and gaue you seisin and liuery
Of Beauties skye, which you did claime as heyre,
By obiects and desires affinitie.
And doe you now returne leane with Despaire?
Wounded with Riualls warre, scorched with Iealousie?
Hence Changeling; Loue doth no such colours weare:
Find sureties, or at Honours sessions dye.
Wounded with Riualls warre, scorched with Iealousie?
Hence Changeling; Loue doth no such colours weare:
Find sureties, or at Honours sessions dye.
Sir, know me for your owne, I onely beare,
Faiths ensigne, which is Shame, and Miserie;
My Paradise, and Adams diuerse were:
His fall was Knowledge, mine Simplicitie.
Faiths ensigne, which is Shame, and Miserie;
My Paradise, and Adams diuerse were:
His fall was Knowledge, mine Simplicitie.
What shall I doe, Sir? doe me Prentice bind,
To Knowledge, Honour, Fame or Honestie;
Let me no longer follow Womenkinde,
Where change doth vse all shapes of tyranny;
And I no more will stirre this earthly dust,
Wherein I lose my name, to take on lust.
To Knowledge, Honour, Fame or Honestie;
Let me no longer follow Womenkinde,
Where change doth vse all shapes of tyranny;
And I no more will stirre this earthly dust,
Wherein I lose my name, to take on lust.
Poems and Dramas of Fulke Greville | ||