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XXXVI

PITY refusing my poor Love to feed,

A beggar starved for want of help he lies,

And at your mouth, the door of beauty, cries
That thence some alms of sweet grants may proceed.

But as he waiteth for some almës-deed

A cherry-tree before the door he spies

'O dear!' quoth he, 'two cherries may suffice,
Two only life may save in this my need.'

But beggars, can they nought but cherries eat?
Pardon my Love, he is a goddess' son,
And never feedeth but on dainty meat,
Else need he not to pine as he hath done :
For only the sweet fruit of this sweet tree
Can give food to my Love, and life to me.

HENRY CONSTABLE

1555?-1610?

N

XXXVII

JEEDS must I leave, and yet needs must I love ; In vain my wit doth paint in verse my woe : Disdain in thee despair in me doth show

How by my wit I do my folly prove.

All this my heart from love can never move;
Love is not in my heart, no, lady, no :

My heart is love itself; till I forego
My heart, I never can my love remove.
How shall I then leave love? I do intend
Not to crave grace, but yet to wish it still;
Not to praise thee, but beauty to commend,
And so by beauty's praise, praise thee I will.
For as my heart is love, love not in me,
So beauty thou,-beauty is not in thee.

HENRY CONSTABLE

1555-1610?·

XXXVIII

TO SAINT KATHARINE.

BECAUSE thou wast the daughter of a king,

Whose beauty did all Nature's works exceed,
And wisdom wonder to the world did breed,
A muse might rouse itself on Cupid's wing;
But, sith the graces which from nature spring
Were graced by those which from grace did proceed,
And glory have deserved, my Muse doth need
An angel's feathers when thy praise I sing.
For all in thee became angelical :

An angel's face had angels' purity,

And thou an angel's tongue didst speak withal;
Lo! why thy soul, set free by martyrdom,
Was crowned by God in angels' company,
And angels' hands thy body did entomb.

THOMAS LODGE

1556?-1625

FAIR

XXXIX

AIR art thou, Phyllis; ay, so fair, sweet maid,
As nor the sun nor I have seen more fair;
For in thy checks sweet roses are embayed,
And gold more pure than gold doth gild thy hair.
Sweet bees have hived their honey on thy tongue,
And Hebe spiced her nectar with thy breath:
About thy neck do all the graces throng,
And lay such baits as might entangle Death.

In such a breast what heart would not be thrall?
From such sweet arms who would not wish embraces?
At thy fair hands who wonders not at all
Wonder itself through ignorance embases.
Yet nathëless though wondrous gifts you call these
My faith is far more wonderful than all these.

XL

MUSES that sing Love's sensual empery,

And lovers kindling your enragèd fires

At Cupid's bonfires burning in the eye,
Blown with the empty breath of vain desires,-

You that prefer the painted cabinet
Before the wealthy jewels it doth store ye,
That all your joys in dying figures set,
And stain the living substance of your glory;
Abjure those joys, abhor their memory,
And let my Love the honoured subject be
Of love, and honour's complete history;
Your eyes were never yet let in to see
The majesty and riches of the mind,
But dwell in darkness; for your god is blind.

GEORGE CHAPMAN

1557-1634

I

XLI

SAW the object of my pining thought
Within a garden of sweet Nature's placing:
Wherein an arbour artificial wrought,

By workman's wondrous skill the garden gracing,
Did boast his glory, glory far renowned,
For in his shady boughs my mistress slept :
And with a garland of his branches crowned,
Her dainty forehead from the sun ykept.
Imperious Love upon her eyelids tending,
Playing his wanton sports at every beck,
And into every finest limb descending,
From eyes to lips, from lips to ivory neck;
And every limb supplied, and t' every part
Had free accéss, but durst not touch her heart.

THOMAS WATSON

1560-1592

ROBERT GREENE

1561-1592

XLII

FRANCESCO'S

SONNET,

CALLED HIS PARTING BLOW.

EASON, that long in prison of my will

RE

Hast wept thy mistress' wants and loss of time, Thy wonted siege of honour safely climb;

To thee I yield as guilty of mine ill.

Lo, fettered in their tears, mine eyes are prest
To pay due homage to their native guide :
My wretched heart, wounded with bad betide,
To crave his peace from reason is addrest.

My thoughts ashamed, since by themselves consumed,
Have done their duty to repentant wit:
Ashamed of all, sweet guide, I sorry sit,
To see in youth how I too far presumed.
Thus he whom love and error did betray
Subscribes to thee and takes the better way.

Sero sed Serio.

WHA

XLIII

HAT meant the poets in invective verse
To sing Medea's shame, and Scylla's pride,
Calypso's charms by which so many died?
Only for this their vices they rehearse :
That curious wits which in the world converse,
May shun the dangers and enticing shows
Of such false sirens, those home-breeding foes,
That from their eyes their venom do disperse.
So soon kills not the basilisk with sight;
The viper's tooth is not so venomous;
The adder's tongue not half so dangerous,
As they that bear the shadow of delight,
Who chain blind youths in trammels of their hair,
Till waste brings woe, and sorrow hastes despair.

XLIV

LOOK, Delia, how w' esteem the half-blown rose, SAMUEL DANIEL The image of thy blush and summer's honour,

Whilst yet her tender bud doth undisclose

That full of beauty Time bestows upon her.

No sooner spreads her glory in the air,

But straight her wide-blown pomp comes to decline;
She then is scorned that late adorned the fair;
So fade the roses of those cheeks of thine.
No April can revive thy withered flowers,
Whose springing grace adorns thy glory now;
Swift speedy Time, feathered with flying hours,
Dissolves the beauty of the fairest brow.
Then do not thou such treasure waste in vain,
But love now whilst thou mayst be loved again.

1562-1619

XLV

BEAUTY, sweet Love, is like the morning dew,

Whose short refresh upon the tender green

Cheers for a time but till the sun doth shew,

And straight 'tis gone as it had never been.
Soon doth it fade that makes the fairest flourish,
Short is the glory of the blushing rose;
The hue which thou so carefully dost nourish,
Yet which at length thou must be forced to lose.
When thou, surcharged with burthen of thy years,
Shalt bend thy wrinkles homeward to the earth,
And that in beauty's lease, expired, appears
The date of age, the calends of our death,—
But ah, no more!—this must not be foretold;
For women grieve to think they must be old.

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