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Sonnet XXXI 1592 version Look Delia how we steem the

XI ( version)     Look,

Delia, how we 'steem the half-blown rose,    The image of thy blush and summer's honour,    Whilst in her tender green she doth enclose    That pure sweet beauty time bestows upon her.    No sooner spreads her glory in the air    But straight her full-blown pride is in declining;    She then is scorn'd that late adorn'd the fair:    So clouds thy beauty after fairest shining.    No April can revive thy wither'd flowers,   Whose blooming grace adorns thy beauty now;   Swift speedy time, feather'd with flying hours,   Dissolves the beauty of the fairest brow.   O let not then such riches waste in vain,   But love whilst that thou mayst be lov'd again.

Form: sonnet: ababcdcdefefgg 1.

See note above.

Based on Tasso,

Ger.

Lib.

VI, 14-15.

Cf.

Spenser,

Faerie Queene,

II,

II, xxiv-v, which are based on the same original.

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Samuel Daniel

Samuel Daniel (1562 – 14 October 1619) was an English poet and historian. His work and particularly the format he adopted for sonnets, was refer…

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