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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 12
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




Henry Howard

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 201


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

The sun hath twice brought forth his tender green

The  sun  hath  twice  brought  forth  his  tender  green,
Twice  clad  the  earth  in  lively  lustiness;
Once  have  the  winds  the  trees  despoiled  clean,
And  once  again  begins  their  cruelness;
Since  I  have  hid  under  my  breast  the  harm
That  never  shall  recover  healthfulness.
The  winter's  hurt  recovers  with  the  warm;
The  parched  green  restored  is  with  shade;
What  warmth,  alas!  may  serve  for  to  disarm
The  frozen  heart,  that  mine  in  flame  hath  made?
What  cold  again  is  able  to  restore
My  fresh  green  years,  that  wither  thus  and  fade?
Alas!  I  see  nothing  hath  hurt  so  sore
But  Time,  in  time,  reduceth  a  return:
In  time  my  harm  increaseth  more  and  more,
And  seems  to  have  my  cure  always  in  scorn.
Strange  kinds  of  death  in  life  that  I  do  try!
At  hand,  to  melt;  far  off  in  flame  to  burn.
And  like  as  time  list  to  my  cure  apply,
So  doth  each  place  my  comfort  clean  refuse.
All  thing  alive,  that  seeth  the  heavens  with  eye,
With  cloak  of  night,  may  cover,  and  excuse
It  self  from  travail  of  the  day's  unrest,
Save  I,  alas!  against  all  others  use,
That  then  stir  up  the  torments  of  my  breast;
And  curse  each  star  as  causer  of  my  fate.
And  when  the  sun  hath  eke  the  dark  opprest,
And  brought  the  day,  it  doth  nothing  abate
The  travails  of  mine  endless  smart  and  pain.
For  then,  as  one  that  hath  the  light  in  hate,
I  wish  for  night,  more  covertly  to  plain;
And  me  withdraw  from  every  haunted  place,
Lest  by  my  chere  my  chance  appear  too  plain.
And  in  my  mind  I  measure  pace  by  pace,
To  seek  the  place  where  I  myself  had  lost,
That  day  that  I  was  tangled  in  the  lace,
In  seeming  slack,  that  knitteth  ever  most.
But  never  yet  the  travail  of  my  thought,  
Of  better  state,  could  catch  a  cause  to  boast.
For  if  I  found,  some  time  that  I  have  sought,
Those  stars  by  whom  I  trusted  of  the  port,
My  sails  do  fall,  and  I  advance  right  nought;
As  anchor'd  fast  my  spirits  do  all  resort
To  stand  agazed,  and  sink  in  more  and  more
The  deadly  harm  which  she  doth  take  in  sport.
Lo!  if  I  seek,  how  I  do  find  my  sore!
And  if  I  flee,  I  carry  with  me  still
The  venom'd  shaft,  which  doth  his  force  restore
By  haste  of  flight;  and  I  may  plain  my  fill
Unto  myself,  unless  this  careful  song
Print  in  your  heart  some  parcel  of  my  tene.
For  I,  alas!  in  silence  all  too  long,
Of  mine  old  hurt  yet  feel  the  wound  but  green.
Rue  on  my  Life;  or  else  your  cruel  wrong
Shall  well  appear,  and  by  my  death  be  seen.


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