Sonnet XXXVII O Why Doth Delia
O why doth Delia credit so her glass,
Gazing her beauty deign'd her by the skies,
And doth not rather look on him (alas) Whose state best shows the force of murd'ring eyes?
The broken tops of lofty trees declare The fury of a mercy-wanting storm;
And of what force your wounding graces are,
Upon my self you best may find the form.
Then leave your glass, and gaze your self on me,
That Mirror shows what power is in your face;
To view your form too much may danger be:
Narcissus chang'd t'a flower in such a case.
And you are chang'd, but not t'a Hyacint;
I fear your eye hath turn'd your heart to flint.
Samuel Daniel
Другие работы автора
Sonnet V Whilst Youth and Error
Whilst youth and error led my wand'ring mind And set my thoughts in heedless ways to range, All unawares a goddes chaste I find, Diana-like, to work my sudden change For her no sooner had my view bewray'd,
Sonnet XLI When Men Shall Find
When men shall find thy flower, thy glory pass, And thou with carefull brow sitting alone, Received hast this message from thy glass, That tells thee truth, and says that all is gone,
Sonnet LVII Like As the Lute
Like as the lute that joys or else dislikes As in his art that plays upon the same, So sounds my Muse according as she strikes On my heart strings high tun'd unto her fame Her touch doth cause the warble of the sound Which here I yield i...
Sonnet XIX Restore Thy Tresses
Restore thy tresses to the golden ore, Yield Citherea's son those arcs of love, Bequeath the heav'ns the stars that I adore, And to th'Orient do thy pearls remove