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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 3
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




John Heywood

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 132


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

A Praise of His Lady

Give  place,  you  ladies,  and  begone!  
Boast  not  yourselves  at  all!  
For  here  at  hand  approacheth  one  
Whose  face  will  stain  you  all.  
   
The  virtue  of  her  lively  looks  
Excels  the  precious  stone;  
I  wish  to  have  none  other  books  
To  read  or  look  upon.  
   
In  each  of  her  two  crystal  eyes  
Smileth  a  naked  boy;  
It  would  you  all  in  heart  suffice  
To  see  that  lamp  of  joy.  
   
I  think  Nature  hath  lost  the  mould  
Where  she  her  shape  did  take;  
Or  else  I  doubt  if  Nature  could  
So  fair  a  creature  make.  
   
She  may  be  well  compared  
Unto  the  Phoenix  kind,  
Whose  like  was  never  seen  or  heard,  
That  any  man  can  find.  
   
In  life  she  is  Diana  chaste,  
In  troth  Penelopey;  
In  word  and  eke  in  deed  steadfast.  
--What  will  you  more  we  say?  
   
If  all  the  world  were  sought  so  far,  
Who  could  find  such  a  wight?  
Her  beauty  twinkleth  like  a  star  
Within  the  frosty  night.  
   
Her  rosial  colour  comes  and  goes  
With  such  a  comely  grace,  
More  ruddier,  too,  than  doth  the  rose,  
Within  her  lively  face.  
   
At  Bacchus'  feast  none  shall  her  meet,  
Ne  at  no  wanton  play,  
Nor  gazing  in  an  open  street,  
Nor  gadding  as  a  stray.  
   
The  modest  mirth  that  she  doth  use  
Is  mix'd  with  shamefastness;  
All  vice  she  doth  wholly  refuse,  
And  hateth  idleness.  
   
O  Lord!  it  is  a  world  to  see  
How  virtue  can  repair,  
And  deck  in  her  such  honesty,  
Whom  Nature  made  so  fair.  
   
Truly  she  doth  so  far  exceed  
Our  women  nowadays,  
As  doth  the  jeliflower  a  weed;  
And  more  a  thousand  ways.  
   
How  might  I  do  to  get  a  graff  
Of  this  unspotted  tree?  
--For  all  the  rest  are  plain  but  chaff,  
Which  seem  good  corn  to  be.  
   
This  gift  alone  I  shall  her  give;  
When  death  doth  what  he  can,  
Her  honest  fame  shall  ever  live  
Within  the  mouth  of  man.  



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