Sonnet XVI Happy In Sleep
Happy in sleep, waking content to languish,
Embracing clouds by night; in daytime, mourn;
All things I loath save her and mine own anguish,
Pleas'd in my hurt inured to live forlorn.
Nought do I crave but love, death, or my Lady,
Hoarse with crying mercy, mercy yet my merit;
So man vows and prayers e'er made I,
That now at length t'yield, mere pity were it.
But still the Hydra of my cares renewing,
Revives new sorrows of her fresh disdaining;
Still must I go the summer winds pursuing,
Finding no end nor period of my paining.
Wail all my life, my griefs do touch so nearly,
And thus I live, because I love her dearly.
Samuel Daniel
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Sonnet XLIII Thou Canst Not Die
Thou canst not die whilst any zeal abound In feeling hearts that can conceive these lines; Though thou a Laura hast no Petrarch found, In base attire, yet clearly Beauty shines And I, though born in a colder clime,
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
Sonnet XXII Come Time
Come Time, the anchor-hold of my desire, My last resort whereto my hopes appeal, Cause once the date of her disdain t'expire; Make her the sentence of her wrath repeal