Ñàéò ïîå糿, â³ðø³, ïîçäîðîâëåííÿ ó â³ðøàõ ::

logo

UA  |  FR  |  RU

Ðîæåâèé ñàéò ñó÷àñíî¿ ïîå糿

Á³áë³îòåêà
Óêðà¿íè
| Ïîåòè
Êë. Ïîå糿
| ²íø³ ïîåò.
ñàéòè, êàíàëè
| ÑËÎÂÍÈÊÈ ÏÎÅÒÀÌ| Ñàéòè â÷èòåëÿì| ÄÎ ÂÓÑ ñèíîí³ìè| Îãîëîøåííÿ| ˳òåðàòóðí³ ïðå쳿| Ñï³ëêóâàííÿ| Êîíòàêòè
Êë. Ïîå糿

 x
>> ÂÕ²Ä ÄÎ ÊËÓÁÓ <<


e-mail
ïàðîëü
çàáóëè ïàðîëü?
< ðåºñòðaö³ÿ >
Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 14
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




William Shakespeare

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 752


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

Sonnets

I.
From  fairest  creatures  we  desire  increase,  
That  thereby  beauty's  rose  might  never  die,  
But  as  the  riper  should  by  time  decease,  
His  tender  heir  might  bear  his  memory:  
But  thou,  contracted  to  thine  own  bright  eyes,  
Feed'st  thy  light'st  flame  with  self-substantial  fuel,  
Making  a  famine  where  abundance  lies,  
Thyself  thy  foe,  to  thy  sweet  self  too  cruel.  
Thou  that  art  now  the  world's  fresh  ornament  
And  only  herald  to  the  gaudy  spring,  
Within  thine  own  bud  buriest  thy  content  
And,  tender  churl,  makest  waste  in  niggarding.  
Pity  the  world,  or  else  this  glutton  be,  
To  eat  the  world's  due,  by  the  grave  and  thee.  

II.
When  forty  winters  shall  beseige  thy  brow,  
And  dig  deep  trenches  in  thy  beauty's  field,  
Thy  youth's  proud  livery,  so  gazed  on  now,  
Will  be  a  tatter'd  weed,  of  small  worth  held:  
Then  being  ask'd  where  all  thy  beauty  lies,  
Where  all  the  treasure  of  thy  lusty  days,  
To  say,  within  thine  own  deep-sunken  eyes,  
Were  an  all-eating  shame  and  thriftless  praise.  
How  much  more  praise  deserved  thy  beauty's  use,  
If  thou  couldst  answer  'This  fair  child  of  mine  
Shall  sum  my  count  and  make  my  old  excuse,'  
Proving  his  beauty  by  succession  thine!  
This  were  to  be  new  made  when  thou  art  old,  
And  see  thy  blood  warm  when  thou  feel'st  it  cold.  

III.
Look  in  thy  glass,  and  tell  the  face  thou  viewest  
Now  is  the  time  that  face  should  form  another;  
Whose  fresh  repair  if  now  thou  not  renewest,  
Thou  dost  beguile  the  world,  unbless  some  mother.  
For  where  is  she  so  fair  whose  unear'd  womb  
Disdains  the  tillage  of  thy  husbandry?  
Or  who  is  he  so  fond  will  be  the  tomb  
Of  his  self-love,  to  stop  posterity?  
Thou  art  thy  mother's  glass,  and  she  in  thee  
Calls  back  the  lovely  April  of  her  prime:  
So  thou  through  windows  of  thine  age  shall  see  
Despite  of  wrinkles  this  thy  golden  time.  
But  if  thou  live,  remember'd  not  to  be,  
Die  single,  and  thine  image  dies  with  thee.  

IV.
Unthrifty  loveliness,  why  dost  thou  spend  
Upon  thyself  thy  beauty's  legacy?  
Nature's  bequest  gives  nothing  but  doth  lend,  
And  being  frank  she  lends  to  those  are  free.  
Then,  beauteous  niggard,  why  dost  thou  abuse  
The  bounteous  largess  given  thee  to  give?  
Profitless  usurer,  why  dost  thou  use  
So  great  a  sum  of  sums,  yet  canst  not  live?  
For  having  traffic  with  thyself  alone,  
Thou  of  thyself  thy  sweet  self  dost  deceive.  
Then  how,  when  nature  calls  thee  to  be  gone,  
What  acceptable  audit  canst  thou  leave?  
Thy  unused  beauty  must  be  tomb'd  with  thee,  
Which,  used,  lives  th'  executor  to  be.  

V.
Those  hours,  that  with  gentle  work  did  frame  
The  lovely  gaze  where  every  eye  doth  dwell,  
Will  play  the  tyrants  to  the  very  same  
And  that  unfair  which  fairly  doth  excel:  
For  never-resting  time  leads  summer  on  
To  hideous  winter  and  confounds  him  there;  
Sap  cheque'd  with  frost  and  lusty  leaves  quite  gone,  
Beauty  o'ersnow'd  and  bareness  every  where:  
Then,  were  not  summer's  distillation  left,  
A  liquid  prisoner  pent  in  walls  of  glass,  
Beauty's  effect  with  beauty  were  bereft,  
Nor  it  nor  no  remembrance  what  it  was:  
But  flowers  distill'd  though  they  with  winter  meet,  
Leese  but  their  show;  their  substance  still  lives  sweet.  

VI.
Then  let  not  winter's  ragged  hand  deface  
In  thee  thy  summer,  ere  thou  be  distill'd:  
Make  sweet  some  vial;  treasure  thou  some  place  
With  beauty's  treasure,  ere  it  be  self-kill'd.  
That  use  is  not  forbidden  usury,  
Which  happies  those  that  pay  the  willing  loan;  
That's  for  thyself  to  breed  another  thee,  
Or  ten  times  happier,  be  it  ten  for  one;  
Ten  times  thyself  were  happier  than  thou  art,  
If  ten  of  thine  ten  times  refigured  thee:  
Then  what  could  death  do,  if  thou  shouldst  depart,  
Leaving  thee  living  in  posterity?  
Be  not  self-will'd,  for  thou  art  much  too  fair  
To  be  death's  conquest  and  make  worms  thine  heir.  

VII.
Lo!  in  the  orient  when  the  gracious  light  
Lifts  up  his  burning  head,  each  under  eye  
Doth  homage  to  his  new-appearing  sight,  
Serving  with  looks  his  sacred  majesty;  
And  having  climb'd  the  steep-up  heavenly  hill,  
Resembling  strong  youth  in  his  middle  age,  
yet  mortal  looks  adore  his  beauty  still,  
Attending  on  his  golden  pilgrimage;  
But  when  from  highmost  pitch,  with  weary  car,  
Like  feeble  age,  he  reeleth  from  the  day,  
The  eyes,  'fore  duteous,  now  converted  are  
From  his  low  tract  and  look  another  way:  
So  thou,  thyself  out-going  in  thy  noon,  
Unlook'd  on  diest,  unless  thou  get  a  son.  

VIII.
Music  to  hear,  why  hear'st  thou  music  sadly?  
Sweets  with  sweets  war  not,  joy  delights  in  joy.  
Why  lovest  thou  that  which  thou  receivest  not  gladly,  
Or  else  receivest  with  pleasure  thine  annoy?  
If  the  true  concord  of  well-tuned  sounds,  
By  uni  ons  married,  do  offend  thine  ear,  
They  do  but  sweetly  chide  thee,  who  confounds  
In  singleness  the  parts  that  thou  shouldst  bear.  
Mark  how  one  string,  sweet  husband  to  another,  
Strikes  each  in  each  by  mutual  ordering,  
Resembling  sire  and  child  and  happy  mother  
Who  all  in  one,  one  pleasing  note  do  sing:  
Whose  speechless  song,  being  many,  seeming  one,  
Sings  this  to  thee:  'thou  single  wilt  prove  none.'  

IX.
Is  it  for  fear  to  wet  a  widow's  eye  
That  thou  consumest  thyself  in  single  life?  
Ah!  if  thou  issueless  shalt  hap  to  die.  
The  world  will  wail  thee,  like  a  makeless  wife;  
The  world  will  be  thy  widow  and  still  weep  
That  thou  no  form  of  thee  hast  left  behind,  
When  every  private  widow  well  may  keep  
By  children's  eyes  her  husband's  shape  in  mind.  
Look,  what  an  unthrift  in  the  world  doth  spend  
Shifts  but  his  place,  for  still  the  world  enjoys  it;  
But  beauty's  waste  hath  in  the  world  an  end,  
And  kept  unused,  the  user  so  destroys  it.  
No  love  toward  others  in  that  bosom  sits  
That  on  himself  such  murderous  shame  commits.  

X.
For  shame!  deny  that  thou  bear'st  love  to  any,  
Who  for  thyself  art  so  unprovident.  
Grant,  if  thou  wilt,  thou  art  beloved  of  many,  
But  that  thou  none  lovest  is  most  evident;  
For  thou  art  so  possess'd  with  murderous  hate  
That  'gainst  thyself  thou  stick'st  not  to  conspire.  
Seeking  that  beauteous  roof  to  ruinate  
Which  to  repair  should  be  thy  chief  desire.  
O,  change  thy  thought,  that  I  may  change  my  mind!  
Shall  hate  be  fairer  lodged  than  gentle  love?  
Be,  as  thy  presence  is,  gracious  and  kind,  
Or  to  thyself  at  least  kind-hearted  prove:  
Make  thee  another  self,  for  love  of  me,  
That  beauty  still  may  live  in  thine  or  thee.  

XI.
As  fast  as  thou  shalt  wane,  so  fast  thou  growest  
In  one  of  thine,  from  that  which  thou  departest;  
And  that  fresh  blood  which  youngly  thou  bestowest  
Thou  mayst  call  thine  when  thou  from  youth  convertest.  
Herein  lives  wisdom,  beauty  and  increase:  
Without  this,  folly,  age  and  cold  decay:  
If  all  were  minded  so,  the  times  should  cease  
And  threescore  year  would  make  the  world  away.  
Let  those  whom  Nature  hath  not  made  for  store,  
Harsh  featureless  and  rude,  barrenly  perish:  
Look,  whom  she  best  endow'd  she  gave  the  more;  
Which  bounteous  gift  thou  shouldst  in  bounty  cherish:  
She  carved  thee  for  her  seal,  and  meant  thereby  
Thou  shouldst  print  more,  not  let  that  copy  die.  

XII.
When  I  do  count  the  clock  that  tells  the  time,  
And  see  the  brave  day  sunk  in  hideous  night;  
When  I  behold  the  violet  past  prime,  
And  sable  curls  all  silver'd  o'er  with  white;  
When  lofty  trees  I  see  barren  of  leaves  
Which  erst  from  heat  did  canopy  the  herd,  
And  summer's  green  all  girded  up  in  sheaves  
Borne  on  the  bier  with  white  and  bristly  beard,  
Then  of  thy  beauty  do  I  question  make,  
That  thou  among  the  wastes  of  time  must  go,  
Since  sweets  and  beauties  do  themselves  forsake  
And  die  as  fast  as  they  see  others  grow;  
And  nothing  'gainst  Time's  scythe  can  make  defence  
Save  breed,  to  brave  him  when  he  takes  thee  hence.  

XIII.
O,  that  you  were  yourself!  but,  love,  you  are  
No  longer  yours  than  you  yourself  here  live:  
Against  this  coming  end  you  should  prepare,  
And  your  sweet  semblance  to  some  other  give.  
So  should  that  beauty  which  you  hold  in  lease  
Find  no  determination:  then  you  were  
Yourself  again  after  yourself's  decease,  
When  your  sweet  issue  your  sweet  form  should  bear.  
Who  lets  so  fair  a  house  fall  to  decay,  
Which  husbandry  in  honour  might  uphold  
Against  the  stormy  gusts  of  winter's  day  
And  barren  rage  of  death's  eternal  cold?  
O,  none  but  unthrifts!  Dear  my  love,  you  know  
You  had  a  father:  let  your  son  say  so.  

XIV.
Not  from  the  stars  do  I  my  judgment  pluck;  
And  yet  methinks  I  have  astronomy,  
But  not  to  tell  of  good  or  evil  luck,  
Of  plagues,  of  dearths,  or  seasons'  quality;  
Nor  can  I  fortune  to  brief  minutes  tell,  
Pointing  to  each  his  thunder,  rain  and  wind,  
Or  say  with  princes  if  it  shall  go  well,  
By  oft  predict  that  I  in  heaven  find:  
But  from  thine  eyes  my  knowledge  I  derive,  
And,  constant  stars,  in  them  I  read  such  art  
As  truth  and  beauty  shall  together  thrive,  
If  from  thyself  to  store  thou  wouldst  convert;  
Or  else  of  thee  this  I  prognosticate:  
Thy  end  is  truth's  and  beauty's  doom  and  date.  

XV.
When  I  consider  every  thing  that  grows  
Holds  in  perfection  but  a  little  moment,  
That  this  huge  stage  presenteth  nought  but  shows  
Whereon  the  stars  in  secret  influence  comment;  
When  I  perceive  that  men  as  plants  increase,  
Cheered  and  cheque'd  even  by  the  self-same  sky,  
Vaunt  in  their  youthful  sap,  at  height  decrease,  
And  wear  their  brave  state  out  of  memory;  
Then  the  conceit  of  this  inconstant  stay  
Sets  you  most  rich  in  youth  before  my  sight,  
Where  wasteful  Time  debateth  with  Decay,  
To  change  your  day  of  youth  to  sullied  night;  
And  all  in  war  with  Time  for  love  of  you,  
As  he  takes  from  you,  I  engraft  you  new.  

XVI.
But  wherefore  do  not  you  a  mightier  way  
Make  war  upon  this  bloody  tyrant,  Time?  
And  fortify  yourself  in  your  decay  
With  means  more  blessed  than  my  barren  rhyme?  
Now  stand  you  on  the  top  of  happy  hours,  
And  many  maiden  gardens  yet  unset  
With  virtuous  wish  would  bear  your  living  flowers,  
Much  liker  than  your  painted  counterfeit:  
So  should  the  lines  of  life  that  life  repair,  
Which  this,  Time's  pencil,  or  my  pupil  pen,  
Neither  in  inward  worth  nor  outward  fair,  
Can  make  you  live  yourself  in  eyes  of  men.  
To  give  away  yourself  keeps  yourself  still,  
And  you  must  live,  drawn  by  your  own  sweet  skill.  

XVII.
Who  will  believe  my  verse  in  time  to  come,  
If  it  were  fill'd  with  your  most  high  deserts?  
Though  yet,  heaven  knows,  it  is  but  as  a  tomb  
Which  hides  your  life  and  shows  not  half  your  parts.  
If  I  could  write  the  beauty  of  your  eyes  
And  in  fresh  numbers  number  all  your  graces,  
The  age  to  come  would  say  'This  poet  lies:  
Such  heavenly  touches  ne'er  touch'd  earthly  faces.'  
So  should  my  papers  yellow'd  with  their  age  
Be  scorn'd  like  old  men  of  less  truth  than  tongue,  
And  your  true  rights  be  term'd  a  poet's  rage  
And  stretched  metre  of  an  antique  song:  
But  were  some  child  of  yours  alive  that  time,  
You  should  live  twice;  in  it  and  in  my  rhyme.  

XVIII.
Shall  I  compare  thee  to  a  summer's  day?  
Thou  art  more  lovely  and  more  temperate:  
Rough  winds  do  shake  the  darling  buds  of  May,  
And  summer's  lease  hath  all  too  short  a  date:  
Sometime  too  hot  the  eye  of  heaven  shines,  
And  often  is  his  gold  complexion  dimm'd;  
And  every  fair  from  fair  sometime  declines,  
By  chance  or  nature's  changing  course  untrimm'd;  
But  thy  eternal  summer  shall  not  fade  
Nor  lose  possession  of  that  fair  thou  owest;  
Nor  shall  Death  brag  thou  wander'st  in  his  shade,  
When  in  eternal  lines  to  time  thou  growest:  
So  long  as  men  can  breathe  or  eyes  can  see,  
So  long  lives  this  and  this  gives  life  to  thee.  

XIX.
Devouring  Time,  blunt  thou  the  lion's  paws,  
And  make  the  earth  devour  her  own  sweet  brood;  
Pluck  the  keen  teeth  from  the  fierce  tiger's  jaws,  
And  burn  the  long-lived  phoenix  in  her  blood;  
Make  glad  and  sorry  seasons  as  thou  fleets,  
And  do  whate'er  thou  wilt,  swift-footed  Time,  
To  the  wide  world  and  all  her  fading  sweets;  
But  I  forbid  thee  one  most  heinous  crime:  
O,  carve  not  with  thy  hours  my  love's  fair  brow,  
Nor  draw  no  lines  there  with  thine  antique  pen;  
Him  in  thy  course  untainted  do  allow  
For  beauty's  pattern  to  succeeding  men.  
Yet,  do  thy  worst,  old  Time:  despite  thy  wrong,  
My  love  shall  in  my  verse  ever  live  young.  

XX.
A  woman's  face  with  Nature's  own  hand  painted  
Hast  thou,  the  master-mistress  of  my  passion;  
A  woman's  gentle  heart,  but  not  acquainted  
With  shifting  change,  as  is  false  women's  fashion;  
An  eye  more  bright  than  theirs,  less  false  in  rolling,  
Gilding  the  object  whereupon  it  gazeth;  
A  man  in  hue,  all  'hues'  in  his  controlling,  
Much  steals  men's  eyes  and  women's  souls  amazeth.  
And  for  a  woman  wert  thou  first  created;  
Till  Nature,  as  she  wrought  thee,  fell  a-doting,  
And  by  addition  me  of  thee  defeated,  
By  adding  one  thing  to  my  purpose  nothing.  
But  since  she  prick'd  thee  out  for  women's  pleasure,  
Mine  be  thy  love  and  thy  love's  use  their  treasure.  


XXI.
So  is  it  not  with  me  as  with  that  Muse  
Stirr'd  by  a  painted  beauty  to  his  verse,  
Who  heaven  itself  for  ornament  doth  use  
And  every  fair  with  his  fair  doth  rehearse  
Making  a  couplement  of  proud  compare,  
With  sun  and  moon,  with  earth  and  sea's  rich  gems,  
With  April's  first-born  flowers,  and  all  things  rare  
That  heaven's  air  in  this  huge  rondure  hems.  
O'  let  me,  true  in  love,  but  truly  write,  
And  then  believe  me,  my  love  is  as  fair  
As  any  mother's  child,  though  not  so  bright  
As  those  gold  candles  fix'd  in  heaven's  air:  
Let  them  say  more  than  like  of  hearsay  well;  
I  will  not  praise  that  purpose  not  to  sell.  

XXII.
MY  glass  shall  not  persuade  me  I  am  old,  
So  long  as  youth  and  thou  are  of  one  date;  
But  when  in  thee  time's  furrows  I  behold,  
Then  look  I  death  my  days  should  expiate.  
For  all  that  beauty  that  doth  cover  thee  
Is  but  the  seemly  raiment  of  my  heart,  
Which  in  thy  breast  doth  live,  as  thine  in  me:  
How  can  I  then  be  elder  than  thou  art?  
O,  therefore,  love,  be  of  thyself  so  wary  
As  I,  not  for  myself,  but  for  thee  will;  
Bearing  thy  heart,  which  I  will  keep  so  chary  
As  tender  nurse  her  babe  from  faring  ill.  
Presume  not  on  thy  heart  when  mine  is  slain;  
Thou  gavest  me  thine,  not  to  give  back  again.  

XXIII.
As  an  unperfect  actor  on  the  stage  
Who  with  his  fear  is  put  besides  his  part,  
Or  some  fierce  thing  replete  with  too  much  rage,  
Whose  strength's  abundance  weakens  his  own  heart.  
So  I,  for  fear  of  trust,  forget  to  say  
The  perfect  ceremony  of  love's  rite,  
And  in  mine  own  love's  strength  seem  to  decay,  
O'ercharged  with  burden  of  mine  own  love's  might.  
O,  let  my  books  be  then  the  eloquence  
And  dumb  presagers  of  my  speaking  breast,  
Who  plead  for  love  and  look  for  recompense  
More  than  that  tongue  that  more  hath  more  express'd.  
O,  learn  to  read  what  silent  love  hath  writ:  
To  hear  with  eyes  belongs  to  love's  fine  wit.  

XXIV.
Mine  eye  hath  play'd  the  painter  and  hath  stell'd  
Thy  beauty's  form  in  table  of  my  heart;  
My  body  is  the  frame  wherein  'tis  held,  
And  perspective  it  is  the  painter's  art.  
For  through  the  painter  must  you  see  his  skill,  
To  find  where  your  true  image  pictured  lies;  
Which  in  my  bosom's  shop  is  hanging  still,  
That  hath  his  windows  glazed  with  thine  eyes.  
Now  see  what  good  turns  eyes  for  eyes  have  done:  
Mine  eyes  have  drawn  thy  shape,  and  thine  for  me  
Are  windows  to  my  breast,  where-through  the  sun  
Delights  to  peep,  to  gaze  therein  on  thee;  
Yet  eyes  this  cunning  want  to  grace  their  art;  
They  draw  but  what  they  see,  know  not  the  heart.  

XXV.
Let  those  who  are  in  favour  with  their  stars  
Of  public  honour  and  proud  titles  boast,  
Whilst  I,  whom  fortune  of  such  triumph  bars,  
Unlook'd  for  joy  in  that  I  honour  most.  
Great  princes'  favourites  their  fair  leaves  spread  
But  as  the  marigold  at  the  sun's  eye,  
And  in  themselves  their  pride  lies  buried,  
For  at  a  frown  they  in  their  glory  die.  
The  painful  warrior  famoused  for  fight,  
After  a  thousand  victories  once  foil'd,  
Is  from  the  book  of  honour  razed  quite,  
And  all  the  rest  forgot  for  which  he  toil'd:  
Then  happy  I,  that  love  and  am  beloved  
Where  I  may  not  remove  nor  be  removed.  

XXVI.
Lord  of  my  love,  to  whom  in  vassalage  
Thy  merit  hath  my  duty  strongly  knit,  
To  thee  I  send  this  written  embassage,  
To  witness  duty,  not  to  show  my  wit:  
Duty  so  great,  which  wit  so  poor  as  mine  
May  make  seem  bare,  in  wanting  words  to  show  it,  
But  that  I  hope  some  good  conceit  of  thine  
In  thy  soul's  thought,  all  naked,  will  bestow  it;  
Till  whatsoever  star  that  guides  my  moving  
Points  on  me  graciously  with  fair  aspect  
And  puts  apparel  on  my  tatter'd  loving,  
To  show  me  worthy  of  thy  sweet  respect:  
Then  may  I  dare  to  boast  how  I  do  love  thee;  
Till  then  not  show  my  head  where  thou  mayst  prove  me.  

XXVII.
Weary  with  toil,  I  haste  me  to  my  bed,  
The  dear  repose  for  limbs  with  travel  tired;  
But  then  begins  a  journey  in  my  head,  
To  work  my  mind,  when  body's  work's  expired:  
For  then  my  thoughts,  from  far  where  I  abide,  
Intend  a  zealous  pilgrimage  to  thee,  
And  keep  my  drooping  eyelids  open  wide,  
Looking  on  darkness  which  the  blind  do  see  
Save  that  my  soul's  imaginary  sight  
Presents  thy  shadow  to  my  sightless  view,  
Which,  like  a  jewel  hung  in  ghastly  night,  
Makes  black  night  beauteous  and  her  old  face  new.  
Lo!  thus,  by  day  my  limbs,  by  night  my  mind,  
For  thee  and  for  myself  no  quiet  find.  

XXVIII
How  can  I  then  return  in  happy  plight,  
That  am  debarr'd  the  benefit  of  rest?  
When  day's  oppression  is  not  eased  by  night,  
But  day  by  night,  and  night  by  day,  oppress'd?  
And  each,  though  enemies  to  either's  reign,  
Do  in  consent  shake  hands  to  torture  me;  
The  one  by  toil,  the  other  to  complain  
How  far  I  toil,  still  farther  off  from  thee.  
I  tell  the  day,  to  please  them  thou  art  bright  
And  dost  him  grace  when  clouds  do  blot  the  heaven:  
So  flatter  I  the  swart-complexion'd  night,  
When  sparkling  stars  twire  not  thou  gild'st  the  even.  
But  day  doth  daily  draw  my  sorrows  longer  
And  night  doth  nightly  make  grief's  strength  seem  stronger.  

XXIX.
When,  in  disgrace  with  fortune  and  men's  eyes,  
I  all  alone  beweep  my  outcast  state  
And  trouble  deal  heaven  with  my  bootless  cries  
And  look  upon  myself  and  curse  my  fate,  
Wishing  me  like  to  one  more  rich  in  hope,  
Featured  like  him,  like  him  with  friends  possess'd,  
Desiring  this  man's  art  and  that  man's  scope,  
With  what  I  most  enjoy  contented  least;  
Yet  in  these  thoughts  myself  almost  despising,  
Haply  I  think  on  thee,  and  then  my  state,  
Like  to  the  lark  at  break  of  day  arising  
From  sullen  earth,  sings  hymns  at  heaven's  gate;  
For  thy  sweet  love  remember'd  such  wealth  brings  
That  then  I  scorn  to  change  my  state  with  kings.  

XXX.
When  to  the  sessions  of  sweet  silent  thought  
I  summon  up  remembrance  of  things  past,  
I  sigh  the  lack  of  many  a  thing  I  sought,  
And  with  old  woes  new  wail  my  dear  time's  waste:  
Then  can  I  drown  an  eye,  unused  to  flow,  
For  precious  friends  hid  in  death's  dateless  night,  
And  weep  afresh  love's  long  since  cancell'd  woe,  
And  moan  the  expense  of  many  a  vanish'd  sight:  
Then  can  I  grieve  at  grievances  foregone,  
And  heavily  from  woe  to  woe  tell  o'er  
The  sad  account  of  fore-bemoaned  moan,  
Which  I  new  pay  as  if  not  paid  before.  
But  if  the  while  I  think  on  thee,  dear  friend,  
All  losses  are  restored  and  sorrows  end.  

XXXI.
Thy  bosom  is  endeared  with  all  hearts,  
Which  I  by  lacking  have  supposed  dead,  
And  there  reigns  love  and  all  love's  loving  parts,  
And  all  those  friends  which  I  thought  buried.  
How  many  a  holy  and  obsequious  tear  
Hath  dear  religious  love  stol'n  from  mine  eye  
As  interest  of  the  dead,  which  now  appear  
But  things  removed  that  hidden  in  thee  lie!  
Thou  art  the  grave  where  buried  love  doth  live,  
Hung  with  the  trophies  of  my  lovers  gone,  
Who  all  their  parts  of  me  to  thee  did  give;  
That  due  of  many  now  is  thine  alone:  
Their  images  I  loved  I  view  in  thee,  
And  thou,  all  they,  hast  all  the  all  of  me.  

XXXII.
If  thou  survive  my  well-contented  day,  
When  that  churl  Death  my  bones  with  dust  shall  cover,  
And  shalt  by  fortune  once  more  re-survey  
These  poor  rude  lines  of  thy  deceased  lover,  
Compare  them  with  the  bettering  of  the  time,  
And  though  they  be  outstripp'd  by  every  pen,  
Reserve  them  for  my  love,  not  for  their  rhyme,  
Exceeded  by  the  height  of  happier  men.  
O,  then  vouchsafe  me  but  this  loving  thought:  
'Had  my  friend's  Muse  grown  with  this  growing  age,  
A  dearer  birth  than  this  his  love  had  brought,  
To  march  in  ranks  of  better  equipage:  
But  since  he  died  and  poets  better  prove,  
Theirs  for  their  style  I'll  read,  his  for  his  love.'  

XXXIII.
Full  many  a  glorious  morning  have  I  seen  
Flatter  the  mountain-tops  with  sovereign  eye,  
Kissing  with  golden  face  the  meadows  green,  
Gilding  pale  streams  with  heavenly  alchemy;  
Anon  permit  the  basest  clouds  to  ride  
With  ugly  rack  on  his  celestial  face,  
And  from  the  forlorn  world  his  visage  hide,  
Stealing  unseen  to  west  with  this  disgrace:  
Even  so  my  sun  one  early  morn  did  shine  
With  all  triumphant  splendor  on  my  brow;  
But  out,  alack!  he  was  but  one  hour  mine;  
The  region  cloud  hath  mask'd  him  from  me  now.  
Yet  him  for  this  my  love  no  whit  disdaineth;  
Suns  of  the  world  may  stain  when  heaven's  sun  staineth.  

XXXIV.
Why  didst  thou  promise  such  a  beauteous  day,  
And  make  me  travel  forth  without  my  cloak,  
To  let  base  clouds  o'ertake  me  in  my  way,  
Hiding  thy  bravery  in  their  rotten  smoke?  
'Tis  not  enough  that  through  the  cloud  thou  break,  
To  dry  the  rain  on  my  storm-beaten  face,  
For  no  man  well  of  such  a  salve  can  speak  
That  heals  the  wound  and  cures  not  the  disgrace:  
Nor  can  thy  shame  give  physic  to  my  grief;  
Though  thou  repent,  yet  I  have  still  the  loss:  
The  offender's  sorrow  lends  but  weak  relief  
To  him  that  bears  the  strong  offence's  cross.  
Ah!  but  those  tears  are  pearl  which  thy  love  sheds,  
And  they  are  rich  and  ransom  all  ill  deeds.  

XXXV.
No  more  be  grieved  at  that  which  thou  hast  done:  
Roses  have  thorns,  and  silver  fountains  mud;  
Clouds  and  eclipses  stain  both  moon  and  sun,  
And  loathsome  canker  lives  in  sweetest  bud.  
All  men  make  faults,  and  even  I  in  this,  
Authorizing  thy  trespass  with  compare,  
Myself  corrupting,  salving  thy  amiss,  
Excusing  thy  sins  more  than  thy  sins  are;  
For  to  thy  sensual  fault  I  bring  in  sense--  
Thy  adverse  party  is  thy  advocate--  
And  'gainst  myself  a  lawful  plea  commence:  
Such  civil  war  is  in  my  love  and  hate  
That  I  an  accessary  needs  must  be  
To  that  sweet  thief  which  sourly  robs  from  me.  

XXXVI.
Let  me  confess  that  we  two  must  be  twain,  
Although  our  undivided  loves  are  one:  
So  shall  those  blots  that  do  with  me  remain  
Without  thy  help  by  me  be  borne  alone.  
In  our  two  loves  there  is  but  one  respect,  
Though  in  our  lives  a  separable  spite,  
Which  though  it  alter  not  love's  sole  effect,  
Yet  doth  it  steal  sweet  hours  from  love's  delight.  
I  may  not  evermore  acknowledge  thee,  
Lest  my  bewailed  guilt  should  do  thee  shame,  
Nor  thou  with  public  kindness  honour  me,  
Unless  thou  take  that  honour  from  thy  name:  
But  do  not  so;  I  love  thee  in  such  sort  
As,  thou  being  mine,  mine  is  thy  good  report.  

XXXVII.
AS  a  decrepit  father  takes  delight  
To  see  his  active  child  do  deeds  of  youth,  
So  I,  made  lame  by  fortune's  dearest  spite,  
Take  all  my  comfort  of  thy  worth  and  truth.  
For  whether  beauty,  birth,  or  wealth,  or  wit,  
Or  any  of  these  all,  or  all,  or  more,  
Entitled  in  thy  parts  do  crowned  sit,  
I  make  my  love  engrafted  to  this  store:  
So  then  I  am  not  lame,  poor,  nor  despised,  
Whilst  that  this  shadow  doth  such  substance  give  
That  I  in  thy  abundance  am  sufficed  
And  by  a  part  of  all  thy  glory  live.  
Look,  what  is  best,  that  best  I  wish  in  thee:  
This  wish  I  have;  then  ten  times  happy  me!  

XXXVIII.
How  can  my  Muse  want  subject  to  invent,  
While  thou  dost  breathe,  that  pour'st  into  my  verse  
Thine  own  sweet  argument,  too  excellent  
For  every  vulgar  paper  to  rehearse?  
O,  give  thyself  the  thanks,  if  aught  in  me  
Worthy  perusal  stand  against  thy  sight;  
For  who's  so  dumb  that  cannot  write  to  thee,  
When  thou  thyself  dost  give  invention  light?  
Be  thou  the  tenth  Muse,  ten  times  more  in  worth  
Than  those  old  nine  which  rhymers  invocate;  
And  he  that  calls  on  thee,  let  him  bring  forth  
Eternal  numbers  to  outlive  long  date.  
If  my  slight  Muse  do  please  these  curious  days,  
The  pain  be  mine,  but  thine  shall  be  the  praise.  

XXXIX.
O,  how  thy  worth  with  manners  may  I  sing,  
When  thou  art  all  the  better  part  of  me?  
What  can  mine  own  praise  to  mine  own  self  bring?  
And  what  is  't  but  mine  own  when  I  praise  thee?  
Even  for  this  let  us  divided  live,  
And  our  dear  love  lose  name  of  single  one,  
That  by  this  separation  I  may  give  
That  due  to  thee  which  thou  deservest  alone.  
O  absence,  what  a  torment  wouldst  thou  prove,  
Were  it  not  thy  sour  leisure  gave  sweet  leave  
To  entertain  the  time  with  thoughts  of  love,  
Which  time  and  thoughts  so  sweetly  doth  deceive,  
And  that  thou  teachest  how  to  make  one  twain,  
By  praising  him  here  who  doth  hence  remain!  

XL.
Take  all  my  loves,  my  love,  yea,  take  them  all;  
What  hast  thou  then  more  than  thou  hadst  before?  
No  love,  my  love,  that  thou  mayst  true  love  call;  
All  mine  was  thine  before  thou  hadst  this  more.  
Then  if  for  my  love  thou  my  love  receivest,  
I  cannot  blame  thee  for  my  love  thou  usest;  
But  yet  be  blamed,  if  thou  thyself  deceivest  
By  wilful  taste  of  what  thyself  refusest.  
I  do  forgive  thy  robbery,  gentle  thief,  
Although  thou  steal  thee  all  my  poverty;  
And  yet,  love  knows,  it  is  a  greater  grief  
To  bear  love's  wrong  than  hate's  known  injury.  
Lascivious  grace,  in  whom  all  ill  well  shows,  
Kill  me  with  spites;  yet  we  must  not  be  foes.  


XLI.
Those  petty  wrongs  that  liberty  commits,  
When  I  am  sometime  absent  from  thy  heart,  
Thy  beauty  and  thy  years  full  well  befits,  
For  still  temptation  follows  where  thou  art.  
Gentle  thou  art  and  therefore  to  be  won,  
Beauteous  thou  art,  therefore  to  be  assailed;  
And  when  a  woman  woos,  what  woman's  son  
Will  sourly  leave  her  till  she  have  prevailed?  
Ay  me!  but  yet  thou  mightest  my  seat  forbear,  
And  chide  try  beauty  and  thy  straying  youth,  
Who  lead  thee  in  their  riot  even  there  
Where  thou  art  forced  to  break  a  twofold  truth,  
Hers  by  thy  beauty  tempting  her  to  thee,  
Thine,  by  thy  beauty  being  false  to  me.  

XLII.
That  thou  hast  her,  it  is  not  all  my  grief,  
And  yet  it  may  be  said  I  loved  her  dearly;  
That  she  hath  thee,  is  of  my  wailing  chief,  
A  loss  in  love  that  touches  me  more  nearly.  
Loving  offenders,  thus  I  will  excuse  ye:  
Thou  dost  love  her,  because  thou  knowst  I  love  her;  
And  for  my  sake  even  so  doth  she  abuse  me,  
Suffering  my  friend  for  my  sake  to  approve  her.  
If  I  lose  thee,  my  loss  is  my  love's  gain,  
And  losing  her,  my  friend  hath  found  that  loss;  
Both  find  each  other,  and  I  lose  both  twain,  
And  both  for  my  sake  lay  on  me  this  cross:  
But  here's  the  joy;  my  friend  and  I  are  one;  
Sweet  flattery!  then  she  loves  but  me  alone.  

XLIII.
When  most  I  wink,  then  do  mine  eyes  best  see,  
For  all  the  day  they  view  things  unrespected;  
But  when  I  sleep,  in  dreams  they  look  on  thee,  
And  darkly  bright  are  bright  in  dark  directed.  
Then  thou,  whose  shadow  shadows  doth  make  bright,  
How  would  thy  shadow's  form  form  happy  show  
To  the  clear  day  with  thy  much  clearer  light,  
When  to  unseeing  eyes  thy  shade  shines  so!  
How  would,  I  say,  mine  eyes  be  blessed  made  
By  looking  on  thee  in  the  living  day,  
When  in  dead  night  thy  fair  imperfect  shade  
Through  heavy  sleep  on  sightless  eyes  doth  stay!  
All  days  are  nights  to  see  till  I  see  thee,  
And  nights  bright  days  when  dreams  do  show  thee  me.  

XLIV.
If  the  dull  substance  of  my  flesh  were  thought,  
Injurious  distance  should  not  stop  my  way;  
For  then  despite  of  space  I  would  be  brought,  
From  limits  far  remote  where  thou  dost  stay.  
No  matter  then  although  my  foot  did  stand  
Upon  the  farthest  earth  removed  from  thee;  
For  nimble  thought  can  jump  both  sea  and  land  
As  soon  as  think  the  place  where  he  would  be.  
But  ah!  thought  kills  me  that  I  am  not  thought,  
To  leap  large  lengths  of  miles  when  thou  art  gone,  
But  that  so  much  of  earth  and  water  wrought  
I  must  attend  time's  leisure  with  my  moan,  
Receiving  nought  by  elements  so  slow  
But  heavy  tears,  badges  of  either's  woe.  

XLV.
The  other  two,  slight  air  and  purging  fire,  
Are  both  with  thee,  wherever  I  abide;  
The  first  my  thought,  the  other  my  desire,  
These  present-absent  with  swift  motion  slide.  
For  when  these  quicker  elements  are  gone  
In  tender  embassy  of  love  to  thee,  
My  life,  being  made  of  four,  with  two  alone  
Sinks  down  to  death,  oppress'd  with  melancholy;  
Until  life's  composition  be  recured  
By  those  swift  messengers  return'd  from  thee,  
Who  even  but  now  come  back  again,  assured  
Of  thy  fair  health,  recounting  it  to  me:  
This  told,  I  joy;  but  then  no  longer  glad,  
I  send  them  back  again  and  straight  grow  sad.  

XLVI.
Mine  eye  and  heart  are  at  a  mortal  war  
How  to  divide  the  conquest  of  thy  sight;  
Mine  eye  my  heart  thy  picture's  sight  would  bar,  
My  heart  mine  eye  the  freedom  of  that  right.  
My  heart  doth  plead  that  thou  in  him  dost  lie--  
A  closet  never  pierced  with  crystal  eyes--  
But  the  defendant  doth  that  plea  deny  
And  says  in  him  thy  fair  appearance  lies.  
To  'cide  this  title  is  impanneled  
A  quest  of  thoughts,  all  tenants  to  the  heart,  
And  by  their  verdict  is  determined  
The  clear  eye's  moiety  and  the  dear  heart's  part:  
As  thus;  mine  eye's  due  is  thy  outward  part,  
And  my  heart's  right  thy  inward  love  of  heart.  

XLVII.
Betwixt  mine  eye  and  heart  a  league  is  took,  
And  each  doth  good  turns  now  unto  the  other:  
When  that  mine  eye  is  famish'd  for  a  look,  
Or  heart  in  love  with  sighs  himself  doth  smother,  
With  my  love's  picture  then  my  eye  doth  feast  
And  to  the  painted  banquet  bids  my  heart;  
Another  time  mine  eye  is  my  heart's  guest  
And  in  his  thoughts  of  love  doth  share  a  part:  
So,  either  by  thy  picture  or  my  love,  
Thyself  away  art  resent  still  with  me;  
For  thou  not  farther  than  my  thoughts  canst  move,  
And  I  am  still  with  them  and  they  with  thee;  
Or,  if  they  sleep,  thy  picture  in  my  sight  
Awakes  my  heart  to  heart's  and  eye's  delight.  

XLVIII.
How  careful  was  I,  when  I  took  my  way,  
Each  trifle  under  truest  bars  to  thrust,  
That  to  my  use  it  might  unused  stay  
From  hands  of  falsehood,  in  sure  wards  of  trust!  
But  thou,  to  whom  my  jewels  trifles  are,  
Most  worthy  of  comfort,  now  my  greatest  grief,  
Thou,  best  of  dearest  and  mine  only  care,  
Art  left  the  prey  of  every  vulgar  thief.  
Thee  have  I  not  lock'd  up  in  any  chest,  
Save  where  thou  art  not,  though  I  feel  thou  art,  
Within  the  gentle  closure  of  my  breast,  
From  whence  at  pleasure  thou  mayst  come  and  part;  
And  even  thence  thou  wilt  be  stol'n,  I  fear,  
For  truth  proves  thievish  for  a  prize  so  dear.  

XLIX.
Against  that  time,  if  ever  that  time  come,  
When  I  shall  see  thee  frown  on  my  defects,  
When  as  thy  love  hath  cast  his  utmost  sum,  
Call'd  to  that  audit  by  advised  respects;  
Against  that  time  when  thou  shalt  strangely  pass  
And  scarcely  greet  me  with  that  sun  thine  eye,  
When  love,  converted  from  the  thing  it  was,  
Shall  reasons  find  of  settled  gravity,--  
Against  that  time  do  I  ensconce  me  here  
Within  the  knowledge  of  mine  own  desert,  
And  this  my  hand  against  myself  uprear,  
To  guard  the  lawful  reasons  on  thy  part:  
To  leave  poor  me  thou  hast  the  strength  of  laws,  
Since  why  to  love  I  can  allege  no  cause.  

L.
How  heavy  do  I  journey  on  the  way,  
When  what  I  seek,  my  weary  travel's  end,  
Doth  teach  that  ease  and  that  repose  to  say  
'Thus  far  the  miles  are  measured  from  thy  friend!'  
The  beast  that  bears  me,  tired  with  my  woe,  
Plods  dully  on,  to  bear  that  weight  in  me,  
As  if  by  some  instinct  the  wretch  did  know  
His  rider  loved  not  speed,  being  made  from  thee:  
The  bloody  spur  cannot  provoke  him  on  
That  sometimes  anger  thrusts  into  his  hide;  
Which  heavily  he  answers  with  a  groan,  
More  sharp  to  me  than  spurring  to  his  side;  
For  that  same  groan  doth  put  this  in  my  mind;  
My  grief  lies  onward  and  my  joy  behind.  

LI.
Thus  can  my  love  excuse  the  slow  offence  
Of  my  dull  bearer  when  from  thee  I  speed:  
From  where  thou  art  why  should  I  haste  me  thence?  
Till  I  return,  of  posting  is  no  need.  
O,  what  excuse  will  my  poor  beast  then  find,  
When  swift  extremity  can  seem  but  slow?  
Then  should  I  spur,  though  mounted  on  the  wind;  
In  winged  speed  no  motion  shall  I  know:  
Then  can  no  horse  with  my  desire  keep  pace;  
Therefore  desire  of  perfect'st  love  being  made,  
Shall  neigh--no  dull  flesh--in  his  fiery  race;  
But  love,  for  love,  thus  shall  excuse  my  jade;  
Since  from  thee  going  he  went  wilful-slow,  
Towards  thee  I'll  run,  and  give  him  leave  to  go.  

LII.
So  am  I  as  the  rich,  whose  blessed  key  
Can  bring  him  to  his  sweet  up-locked  treasure,  
The  which  he  will  not  every  hour  survey,  
For  blunting  the  fine  point  of  seldom  pleasure.  
Therefore  are  feasts  so  solemn  and  so  rare,  
Since,  seldom  coming,  in  the  long  year  set,  
Like  stones  of  worth  they  thinly  placed  are,  
Or  captain  jewels  in  the  carcanet.  
So  is  the  time  that  keeps  you  as  my  chest,  
Or  as  the  wardrobe  which  the  robe  doth  hide,  
To  make  some  special  instant  special  blest,  
By  new  unfolding  his  imprison'd  pride.  
Blessed  are  you,  whose  worthiness  gives  scope,  
Being  had,  to  triumph,  being  lack'd,  to  hope.  

LIII.
What  is  your  substance,  whereof  are  you  made,  
That  millions  of  strange  shadows  on  you  tend?  
Since  every  one  hath,  every  one,  one  shade,  
And  you,  but  one,  can  every  shadow  lend.  
Describe  Adonis,  and  the  counterfeit  
Is  poorly  imitated  after  you;  
On  Helen's  cheek  all  art  of  beauty  set,  
And  you  in  Grecian  tires  are  painted  new:  
Speak  of  the  spring  and  foison  of  the  year;  
The  one  doth  shadow  of  your  beauty  show,  
The  other  as  your  bounty  doth  appear;  
And  you  in  every  blessed  shape  we  know.  
In  all  external  grace  you  have  some  part,  
But  you  like  none,  none  you,  for  constant  heart.  

LIV.
O,  how  much  more  doth  beauty  beauteous  seem  
By  that  sweet  ornament  which  truth  doth  give!  
The  rose  looks  fair,  but  fairer  we  it  deem  
For  that  sweet  odour  which  doth  in  it  live.  
The  canker-blooms  have  full  as  deep  a  dye  
As  the  perfumed  tincture  of  the  roses,  
Hang  on  such  thorns  and  play  as  wantonly  
When  summer's  breath  their  masked  buds  discloses:  
But,  for  their  virtue  only  is  their  show,  
They  live  unwoo'd  and  unrespected  fade,  
Die  to  themselves.  Sweet  roses  do  not  so;  
Of  their  sweet  deaths  are  sweetest  odours  made:  
And  so  of  you,  beauteous  and  lovely  youth,  
When  that  shall  fade,  my  verse  distills  your  truth.  

LV.
Not  marble,  nor  the  gilded  monuments  
Of  princes,  shall  outlive  this  powerful  rhyme;  
But  you  shall  shine  more  bright  in  these  contents  
Than  unswept  stone  besmear'd  with  sluttish  time.  
When  wasteful  war  shall  statues  overturn,  
And  broils  root  out  the  work  of  masonry,  
Nor  Mars  his  sword  nor  war's  quick  fire  shall  burn  
The  living  record  of  your  memory.  
'Gainst  death  and  all-oblivious  enmity  
Shall  you  pace  forth;  your  praise  shall  still  find  room  
Even  in  the  eyes  of  all  posterity  
That  wear  this  world  out  to  the  ending  doom.  
So,  till  the  judgment  that  yourself  arise,  
You  live  in  this,  and  dwell  in  lover's  eyes.  

LVI.
SWEET  love,  renew  thy  force;  be  it  not  said  
Thy  edge  should  blunter  be  than  appetite,  
Which  but  to-day  by  feeding  is  allay'd,  
To-morrow  sharpen'd  in  his  former  might:  
So,  love,  be  thou;  although  to-day  thou  fill  
Thy  hungry  eyes  even  till  they  wink  with  fullness,  
To-morrow  see  again,  and  do  not  kill  
The  spirit  of  love  with  a  perpetual  dullness.  
Let  this  sad  interim  like  the  ocean  be  
Which  parts  the  shore,  where  two  contracted  new  
Come  daily  to  the  banks,  that,  when  they  see  
Return  of  love,  more  blest  may  be  the  view;  
Else  call  it  winter,  which  being  full  of  care  
Makes  summer's  welcome  thrice  more  wish'd,  more  rare.  

LVII.
BEING  your  slave,  what  should  I  do  but  tend  
Upon  the  hours  and  times  of  your  desire?  
I  have  no  precious  time  at  all  to  spend,  
Nor  services  to  do,  till  you  require.  
Nor  dare  I  chide  the  world-without-end  hour  
Whilst  I,  my  sovereign,  watch  the  clock  for  you,  
Nor  think  the  bitterness  of  absence  sour  
When  you  have  bid  your  servant  once  adieu;  
Nor  dare  I  question  with  my  jealous  thought  
Where  you  may  be,  or  your  affairs  suppose,  
But,  like  a  sad  slave,  stay  and  think  of  nought  
Save,  where  you  are  how  happy  you  make  those.  
So  true  a  fool  is  love  that  in  your  will,  
Though  you  do  any  thing,  he  thinks  no  ill.  

LVIII.
THAT  god  forbid  that  made  me  first  your  slave,  
I  should  in  thought  control  your  times  of  pleasure,  
Or  at  your  hand  the  account  of  hours  to  crave,  
Being  your  vassal,  bound  to  stay  your  leisure!  
O,  let  me  suffer,  being  at  your  beck,  
The  imprison'd  absence  of  your  liberty;  
And  patience,  tame  to  sufferance,  bide  each  cheque,  
Without  accusing  you  of  injury.  
Be  where  you  list,  your  charter  is  so  strong  
That  you  yourself  may  privilege  your  time  
To  what  you  will;  to  you  it  doth  belong  
Yourself  to  pardon  of  self-doing  crime.  
I  am  to  wait,  though  waiting  so  be  hell;  
Not  blame  your  pleasure,  be  it  ill  or  well.  

LIX.
IF  there  be  nothing  new,  but  that  which  is  
Hath  been  before,  how  are  our  brains  beguiled,  
Which,  labouring  for  invention,  bear  amiss  
The  second  burden  of  a  former  child!  
O,  that  record  could  with  a  backward  look,  
Even  of  five  hundred  courses  of  the  sun,  
Show  me  your  image  in  some  antique  book,  
Since  mind  at  first  in  character  was  done!  
That  I  might  see  what  the  old  world  could  say  
To  this  composed  wonder  of  your  frame;  
Whether  we  are  mended,  or  whether  better  they,  
Or  whether  revolution  be  the  same.  
O,  sure  I  am,  the  wits  of  former  days  
To  subjects  worse  have  given  admiring  praise.  

LX.
LIKE  as  the  waves  make  towards  the  pebbled  shore,  
So  do  our  minutes  hasten  to  their  end;  
Each  changing  place  with  that  which  goes  before,  
In  sequent  toil  all  forwards  do  contend.  
Nativity,  once  in  the  main  of  light,  
Crawls  to  maturity,  wherewith  being  crown'd,  
Crooked  elipses  'gainst  his  glory  fight,  
And  Time  that  gave  doth  now  his  gift  confound.  
Time  doth  transfix  the  flourish  set  on  youth  
And  delves  the  parallels  in  beauty's  brow,  
Feeds  on  the  rarities  of  nature's  truth,  
And  nothing  stands  but  for  his  scythe  to  mow:  
And  yet  to  times  in  hope  my  verse  shall  stand,  
Praising  thy  worth,  despite  his  cruel  hand.  



LXI.
IS  it  thy  will  thy  image  should  keep  open  
My  heavy  eyelids  to  the  weary  night?  
Dost  thou  desire  my  slumbers  should  be  broken,  
While  shadows  like  to  thee  do  mock  my  sight?  
Is  it  thy  spirit  that  thou  send'st  from  thee  
So  far  from  home  into  my  deeds  to  pry,  
To  find  out  shames  and  idle  hours  in  me,  
The  scope  and  tenor  of  thy  jealousy?  
O,  no!  thy  love,  though  much,  is  not  so  great:  
It  is  my  love  that  keeps  mine  eye  awake;  
Mine  own  true  love  that  doth  my  rest  defeat,  
To  play  the  watchman  ever  for  thy  sake:  
For  thee  watch  I  whilst  thou  dost  wake  elsewhere,  
From  me  far  off,  with  others  all  too  near.  

LXII.
SIN  of  self-love  possesseth  all  mine  eye  
And  all  my  soul  and  all  my  every  part;  
And  for  this  sin  there  is  no  remedy,  
It  is  so  grounded  inward  in  my  heart.  
Methinks  no  face  so  gracious  is  as  mine,  
No  shape  so  true,  no  truth  of  such  account;  
And  for  myself  mine  own  worth  do  define,  
As  I  all  other  in  all  worths  surmount.  
But  when  my  glass  shows  me  myself  indeed,  
Beated  and  chopp'd  with  tann'd  antiquity,  
Mine  own  self-love  quite  contrary  I  read;  
Self  so  self-loving  were  iniquity.  
'Tis  thee,  myself,  that  for  myself  I  praise,  
Painting  my  age  with  beauty  of  thy  days.  

LXIII.
AGAINST  my  love  shall  be,  as  I  am  now,  
With  Time's  injurious  hand  crush'd  and  o'er-worn;  
When  hours  have  drain'd  his  blood  and  fill'd  his  brow  
With  lines  and  wrinkles;  when  his  youthful  morn  
Hath  travell'd  on  to  age's  steepy  night,  
And  all  those  beauties  whereof  now  he's  king  
Are  vanishing  or  vanish'd  out  of  sight,  
Stealing  away  the  treasure  of  his  spring;  
For  such  a  time  do  I  now  fortify  
Against  confounding  age's  cruel  knife,  
That  he  shall  never  cut  from  memory  
My  sweet  love's  beauty,  though  my  lover's  life:  
His  beauty  shall  in  these  black  lines  be  seen,  
And  they  shall  live,  and  he  in  them  still  green.  

LXIV.
WHEN  I  have  seen  by  Time's  fell  hand  defaced  
The  rich  proud  cost  of  outworn  buried  age;  
When  sometime  lofty  towers  I  see  down-razed  
And  brass  eternal  slave  to  mortal  rage;  
When  I  have  seen  the  hungry  ocean  gain  
Advantage  on  the  kingdom  of  the  shore,  
And  the  firm  soil  win  of  the  watery  main,  
Increasing  store  with  loss  and  loss  with  store;  
When  I  have  seen  such  interchange  of  state,  
Or  state  itself  confounded  to  decay;  
Ruin  hath  taught  me  thus  to  ruminate,  
That  Time  will  come  and  take  my  love  away.  
This  thought  is  as  a  death,  which  cannot  choose  
But  weep  to  have  that  which  it  fears  to  lose.  

LXV.
SINCE  brass,  nor  stone,  nor  earth,  nor  boundless  sea,  
But  sad  mortality  o'er-sways  their  power,  
How  with  this  rage  shall  beauty  hold  a  plea,  
Whose  action  is  no  stronger  than  a  flower?  
O,  how  shall  summer's  honey  breath  hold  out  
Against  the  wreckful  siege  of  battering  days,  
When  rocks  impregnable  are  not  so  stout,  
Nor  gates  of  steel  so  strong,  but  Time  decays?  
O  fearful  meditation!  where,  alack,  
Shall  Time's  best  jewel  from  Time's  chest  lie  hid?  
Or  what  strong  hand  can  hold  his  swift  foot  back?  
Or  who  his  spoil  of  beauty  can  forbid?  
O,  none,  unless  this  miracle  have  might,  
That  in  black  ink  my  love  may  still  shine  bright.  

LXVI.
TIRED  with  all  these,  for  restful  death  I  cry,  
As,  to  behold  desert  a  beggar  born,  
And  needy  nothing  trimm'd  in  jollity,  
And  purest  faith  unhappily  forsworn,  
And  guilded  honour  shamefully  misplaced,  
And  maiden  virtue  rudely  strumpeted,  
And  right  perfection  wrongfully  disgraced,  
And  strength  by  limping  sway  disabled,  
And  art  made  tongue-tied  by  authority,  
And  folly  doctor-like  controlling  skill,  
And  simple  truth  miscall'd  simplicity,  
And  captive  good  attending  captain  ill:  
Tired  with  all  these,  from  these  would  I  be  gone,  
Save  that,  to  die,  I  leave  my  love  alone.  

LXVII.
AH!  wherefore  with  infection  should  he  live,  
And  with  his  presence  grace  impiety,  
That  sin  by  him  advantage  should  achieve  
And  lace  itself  with  his  society?  
Why  should  false  painting  imitate  his  cheek  
And  steal  dead  seeing  of  his  living  hue?  
Why  should  poor  beauty  indirectly  seek  
Roses  of  shadow,  since  his  rose  is  true?  
Why  should  he  live,  now  Nature  bankrupt  is,  
Beggar'd  of  blood  to  blush  through  lively  veins?  
For  she  hath  no  exchequer  now  but  his,  
And,  proud  of  many,  lives  upon  his  gains.  
O,  him  she  stores,  to  show  what  wealth  she  had  
In  days  long  since,  before  these  last  so  bad.  

LXVIII.
THUS  is  his  cheek  the  map  of  days  outworn,  
When  beauty  lived  and  died  as  flowers  do  now,  
Before  the  bastard  signs  of  fair  were  born,  
Or  durst  inhabit  on  a  living  brow;  
Before  the  golden  tresses  of  the  dead,  
The  right  of  sepulchres,  were  shorn  away,  
To  live  a  second  life  on  second  head;  
Ere  beauty's  dead  fleece  made  another  gay:  
In  him  those  holy  antique  hours  are  seen,  
Without  all  ornament,  itself  and  true,  
Making  no  summer  of  another's  green,  
Robbing  no  old  to  dress  his  beauty  new;  
And  him  as  for  a  map  doth  Nature  store,  
To  show  false  Art  what  beauty  was  of  yore.  

LXIX.
THOSE  parts  of  thee  that  the  world's  eye  doth  view  
Want  nothing  that  the  thought  of  hearts  can  mend;  
All  tongues,  the  voice  of  souls,  give  thee  that  due,  
Uttering  bare  truth,  even  so  as  foes  commend.  
Thy  outward  thus  with  outward  praise  is  crown'd;  
But  those  same  tongues  that  give  thee  so  thine  own  
In  other  accents  do  this  praise  confound  
By  seeing  farther  than  the  eye  hath  shown.  
They  look  into  the  beauty  of  thy  mind,  
And  that,  in  guess,  they  measure  by  thy  deeds;  
Then,  churls,  their  thoughts,  although  their  eyes  were  kind,  
To  thy  fair  flower  add  the  rank  smell  of  weeds:  
But  why  thy  odour  matcheth  not  thy  show,  
The  solve  is  this,  that  thou  dost  common  grow.  

LXX.
THAT  thou  art  blamed  shall  not  be  thy  defect,  
For  slander's  mark  was  ever  yet  the  fair;  
The  ornament  of  beauty  is  suspect,  
A  crow  that  flies  in  heaven's  sweetest  air.  
So  thou  be  good,  slander  doth  but  approve  
Thy  worth  the  greater,  being  woo'd  of  time;  
For  canker  vice  the  sweetest  buds  doth  love,  
And  thou  present'st  a  pure  unstained  prime.  
Thou  hast  pass'd  by  the  ambush  of  young  days,  
Either  not  assail'd  or  victor  being  charged;  
Yet  this  thy  praise  cannot  be  so  thy  praise,  
To  tie  up  envy  evermore  enlarged:  
If  some  suspect  of  ill  mask'd  not  thy  show,  
Then  thou  alone  kingdoms  of  hearts  shouldst  owe.  

LXXI.
NO  longer  mourn  for  me  when  I  am  dead  
Then  you  shall  hear  the  surly  sullen  bell  
Give  warning  to  the  world  that  I  am  fled  
From  this  vile  world,  with  vilest  worms  to  dwell:  
Nay,  if  you  read  this  line,  remember  not  
The  hand  that  writ  it;  for  I  love  you  so  
That  I  in  your  sweet  thoughts  would  be  forgot  
If  thinking  on  me  then  should  make  you  woe.  
O,  if,  I  say,  you  look  upon  this  verse  
When  I  perhaps  compounded  am  with  clay,  
Do  not  so  much  as  my  poor  name  rehearse.  
But  let  your  love  even  with  my  life  decay,  
Lest  the  wise  world  should  look  into  your  moan  
And  mock  you  with  me  after  I  am  gone.  

LXXII.
O,  LEST  the  world  should  task  you  to  recite  
What  merit  lived  in  me,  that  you  should  love  
After  my  death,  dear  love,  forget  me  quite,  
For  you  in  me  can  nothing  worthy  prove;  
Unless  you  would  devise  some  virtuous  lie,  
To  do  more  for  me  than  mine  own  desert,  
And  hang  more  praise  upon  deceased  I  
Than  niggard  truth  would  willingly  impart:  
O,  lest  your  true  love  may  seem  false  in  this,  
That  you  for  love  speak  well  of  me  untrue,  
My  name  be  buried  where  my  body  is,  
And  live  no  more  to  shame  nor  me  nor  you.  
For  I  am  shamed  by  that  which  I  bring  forth,  
And  so  should  you,  to  love  things  nothing  worth.  

LXXIII.
THAT  time  of  year  thou  mayst  in  me  behold  
When  yellow  leaves,  or  none,  or  few,  do  hang  
Upon  those  boughs  which  shake  against  the  cold,  
Bare  ruin'd  choirs,  where  late  the  sweet  birds  sang.  
In  me  thou  seest  the  twilight  of  such  day  
As  after  sunset  fadeth  in  the  west,  
Which  by  and  by  black  night  doth  take  away,  
Death's  second  self,  that  seals  up  all  in  rest.  
In  me  thou  see'st  the  glowing  of  such  fire  
That  on  the  ashes  of  his  youth  doth  lie,  
As  the  death-bed  whereon  it  must  expire  
Consumed  with  that  which  it  was  nourish'd  by.  
This  thou  perceivest,  which  makes  thy  love  more  strong,  
To  love  that  well  which  thou  must  leave  ere  long.  

LXXIV.
BUT  be  contented:  when  that  fell  arrest  
Without  all  bail  shall  carry  me  away,  
My  life  hath  in  this  line  some  interest,  
Which  for  memorial  still  with  thee  shall  stay.  
When  thou  reviewest  this,  thou  dost  review  
The  very  part  was  consecrate  to  thee:  
The  earth  can  have  but  earth,  which  is  his  due;  
My  spirit  is  thine,  the  better  part  of  me:  
So  then  thou  hast  but  lost  the  dregs  of  life,  
The  prey  of  worms,  my  body  being  dead,  
The  coward  conquest  of  a  wretch's  knife,  
Too  base  of  thee  to  be  remembered.  
The  worth  of  that  is  that  which  it  contains,  
And  that  is  this,  and  this  with  thee  remains.  

LXXV.
SO  are  you  to  my  thoughts  as  food  to  life,  
Or  as  sweet-season'd  showers  are  to  the  ground;  
And  for  the  peace  of  you  I  hold  such  strife  
As  'twixt  a  miser  and  his  wealth  is  found;  
Now  proud  as  an  enjoyer  and  anon  
Doubting  the  filching  age  will  steal  his  treasure,  
Now  counting  best  to  be  with  you  alone,  
Then  better'd  that  the  world  may  see  my  pleasure;  
Sometime  all  full  with  feasting  on  your  sight  
And  by  and  by  clean  starved  for  a  look;  
Possessing  or  pursuing  no  delight,  
Save  what  is  had  or  must  from  you  be  took.  
Thus  do  I  pine  and  surfeit  day  by  day,  
Or  gluttoning  on  all,  or  all  away.  

LXXVI.
WHY  is  my  verse  so  barren  of  new  pride,  
So  far  from  variation  or  quick  change?  
Why  with  the  time  do  I  not  glance  aside  
To  new-found  methods  and  to  compounds  strange?  
Why  write  I  still  all  one,  ever  the  same,  
And  keep  invention  in  a  noted  weed,  
That  every  word  doth  almost  tell  my  name,  
Showing  their  birth  and  where  they  did  proceed?  
O,  know,  sweet  love,  I  always  write  of  you,  
And  you  and  love  are  still  my  argument;  
So  all  my  best  is  dressing  old  words  new,  
Spending  again  what  is  already  spent:  
For  as  the  sun  is  daily  new  and  old,  
So  is  my  love  still  telling  what  is  told.  

LXXVII.
THY  glass  will  show  thee  how  thy  beauties  wear,  
Thy  dial  how  thy  precious  minutes  waste;  
The  vacant  leaves  thy  mind's  imprint  will  bear,  
And  of  this  book  this  learning  mayst  thou  taste.  
The  wrinkles  which  thy  glass  will  truly  show  
Of  mouthed  graves  will  give  thee  memory;  
Thou  by  thy  dial's  shady  stealth  mayst  know  
Time's  thievish  progress  to  eternity.  
Look,  what  thy  memory  can  not  contain  
Commit  to  these  waste  blanks,  and  thou  shalt  find  
Those  children  nursed,  deliver'd  from  thy  brain,  
To  take  a  new  acquaintance  of  thy  mind.  
These  offices,  so  oft  as  thou  wilt  look,  
Shall  profit  thee  and  much  enrich  thy  book.  

LXXVIII.
SO  oft  have  I  invoked  thee  for  my  Muse  
And  found  such  fair  assistance  in  my  verse  
As  every  alien  pen  hath  got  my  use  
And  under  thee  their  poesy  disperse.  
Thine  eyes  that  taught  the  dumb  on  high  to  sing  
And  heavy  ignorance  aloft  to  fly  
Have  added  feathers  to  the  learned's  wing  
And  given  grace  a  double  majesty.  
Yet  be  most  proud  of  that  which  I  compile,  
Whose  influence  is  thine  and  born  of  thee:  
In  others'  works  thou  dost  but  mend  the  style,  
And  arts  with  thy  sweet  graces  graced  be;  
But  thou  art  all  my  art  and  dost  advance  
As  high  as  learning  my  rude  ignorance.  

LXXIX.
WHILST  I  alone  did  call  upon  thy  aid,  
My  verse  alone  had  all  thy  gentle  grace,  
But  now  my  gracious  numbers  are  decay'd  
And  my  sick  Muse  doth  give  another  place.  
I  grant,  sweet  love,  thy  lovely  argument  
Deserves  the  travail  of  a  worthier  pen,  
Yet  what  of  thee  thy  poet  doth  invent  
He  robs  thee  of  and  pays  it  thee  again.  
He  lends  thee  virtue  and  he  stole  that  word  
From  thy  behavior;  beauty  doth  he  give  
And  found  it  in  thy  cheek;  he  can  afford  
No  praise  to  thee  but  what  in  thee  doth  live.  
Then  thank  him  not  for  that  which  he  doth  say,  
Since  what  he  owes  thee  thou  thyself  dost  pay.  

LXXX.
O,  HOW  I  faint  when  I  of  you  do  write,  
Knowing  a  better  spirit  doth  use  your  name,  
And  in  the  praise  thereof  spends  all  his  might,  
To  make  me  tongue-tied,  speaking  of  your  fame!  
But  since  your  worth,  wide  as  the  ocean  is,  
The  humble  as  the  proudest  sail  doth  bear,  
My  saucy  bark  inferior  far  to  his  
On  your  broad  main  doth  wilfully  appear.  
Your  shallowest  help  will  hold  me  up  afloat,  
Whilst  he  upon  your  soundless  deep  doth  ride;  
Or  being  wreck'd,  I  am  a  worthless  boat,  
He  of  tall  building  and  of  goodly  pride:  
Then  if  he  thrive  and  I  be  cast  away,  
The  worst  was  this;  my  love  was  my  decay.  


LXXXI.
OR  I  shall  live  your  epitaph  to  make,  
Or  you  survive  when  I  in  earth  am  rotten;  
From  hence  your  memory  death  cannot  take,  
Although  in  me  each  part  will  be  forgotten.  
Your  name  from  hence  immortal  life  shall  have,  
Though  I,  once  gone,  to  all  the  world  must  die:  
The  earth  can  yield  me  but  a  common  grave,  
When  you  entombed  in  men's  eyes  shall  lie.  
Your  monument  shall  be  my  gentle  verse,  
Which  eyes  not  yet  created  shall  o'er-read,  
And  tongues  to  be  your  being  shall  rehearse  
When  all  the  breathers  of  this  world  are  dead;  
You  still  shall  live--such  virtue  hath  my  pen--  
Where  breath  most  breathes,  even  in  the  mouths  of  men.  

LXXXII.
I  GRANT  thou  wert  not  married  to  my  Muse  
And  therefore  mayst  without  attaint  o'erlook  
The  dedicated  words  which  writers  use  
Of  their  fair  subject,  blessing  every  book  
Thou  art  as  fair  in  knowledge  as  in  hue,  
Finding  thy  worth  a  limit  past  my  praise,  
And  therefore  art  enforced  to  seek  anew  
Some  fresher  stamp  of  the  time-bettering  days  
And  do  so,  love;  yet  when  they  have  devised  
What  strained  touches  rhetoric  can  lend,  
Thou  truly  fair  wert  truly  sympathized  
In  true  plain  words  by  thy  true-telling  friend;  
And  their  gross  painting  might  be  better  used  
Where  cheeks  need  blood;  in  thee  it  is  abused.  

LXXXIII.
I  NEVER  saw  that  you  did  painting  need  
And  therefore  to  your  fair  no  painting  set;  
I  found,  or  thought  I  found,  you  did  exceed  
The  barren  tender  of  a  poet's  debt;  
And  therefore  have  I  slept  in  your  report,  
That  you  yourself  being  extant  well  might  show  
How  far  a  modern  quill  doth  come  too  short,  
Speaking  of  worth,  what  worth  in  you  doth  grow.  
This  silence  for  my  sin  you  did  impute,  
Which  shall  be  most  my  glory,  being  dumb;  
For  I  impair  not  beauty  being  mute,  
When  others  would  give  life  and  bring  a  tomb.  
There  lives  more  life  in  one  of  your  fair  eyes  
Than  both  your  poets  can  in  praise  devise.  

LXXXIV.
WHO  is  it  that  says  most?  which  can  say  more  
Than  this  rich  praise,  that  you  alone  are  you?  
In  whose  confine  immured  is  the  store  
Which  should  example  where  your  equal  grew.  
Lean  penury  within  that  pen  doth  dwell  
That  to  his  subject  lends  not  some  small  glory;  
But  he  that  writes  of  you,  if  he  can  tell  
That  you  are  you,  so  dignifies  his  story,  
Let  him  but  copy  what  in  you  is  writ,  
Not  making  worse  what  nature  made  so  clear,  
And  such  a  counterpart  shall  fame  his  wit,  
Making  his  style  admired  every  where.  
You  to  your  beauteous  blessings  add  a  curse,  
Being  fond  on  praise,  which  makes  your  praises  worse.  

LXXXV.
MY  tongue-tied  Muse  in  manners  holds  her  still,  
While  comments  of  your  praise,  richly  compiled,  
Reserve  their  character  with  golden  quill  
And  precious  phrase  by  all  the  Muses  filed.  
I  think  good  thoughts  whilst  other  write  good  words,  
And  like  unletter'd  clerk  still  cry  'Amen'  
To  every  hymn  that  able  spirit  affords  
In  polish'd  form  of  well-refined  pen.  
Hearing  you  praised,  I  say  ''Tis  so,  'tis  true,'  
And  to  the  most  of  praise  add  something  more;  
But  that  is  in  my  thought,  whose  love  to  you,  
Though  words  come  hindmost,  holds  his  rank  before.  
Then  others  for  the  breath  of  words  respect,  
Me  for  my  dumb  thoughts,  speaking  in  effect.  

LXXXVI.
WAS  it  the  proud  full  sail  of  his  great  verse,  
Bound  for  the  prize  of  all  too  precious  you,  
That  did  my  ripe  thoughts  in  my  brain  inhearse,  
Making  their  tomb  the  womb  wherein  they  grew?  
Was  it  his  spirit,  by  spirits  taught  to  write  
Above  a  mortal  pitch,  that  struck  me  dead?  
No,  neither  he,  nor  his  compeers  by  night  
Giving  him  aid,  my  verse  astonished.  
He,  nor  that  affable  familiar  ghost  
Which  nightly  gulls  him  with  intelligence  
As  victors  of  my  silence  cannot  boast;  
I  was  not  sick  of  any  fear  from  thence:  
But  when  your  countenance  fill'd  up  his  line,  
Then  lack'd  I  matter;  that  enfeebled  mine.  

LXXXVII.
FAREWELL!  thou  art  too  dear  for  my  possessing,  
And  like  enough  thou  know'st  thy  estimate:  
The  charter  of  thy  worth  gives  thee  releasing;  
My  bonds  in  thee  are  all  determinate.  
For  how  do  I  hold  thee  but  by  thy  granting?  
And  for  that  riches  where  is  my  deserving?  
The  cause  of  this  fair  gift  in  me  is  wanting,  
And  so  my  patent  back  again  is  swerving.  
Thyself  thou  gavest,  thy  own  worth  then  not  knowing,  
Or  me,  to  whom  thou  gavest  it,  else  mistaking;  
So  thy  great  gift,  upon  misprision  growing,  
Comes  home  again,  on  better  judgment  making.  
Thus  have  I  had  thee,  as  a  dream  doth  flatter,  
In  sleep  a  king,  but  waking  no  such  matter.  

LXXXVIII.
WHEN  thou  shalt  be  disposed  to  set  me  light,  
And  place  my  merit  in  the  eye  of  scorn,  
Upon  thy  side  against  myself  I'll  fight,  
And  prove  thee  virtuous,  though  thou  art  forsworn.  
With  mine  own  weakness  being  best  acquainted,  
Upon  thy  part  I  can  set  down  a  story  
Of  faults  conceal'd,  wherein  I  am  attainted,  
That  thou  in  losing  me  shalt  win  much  glory:  
And  I  by  this  will  be  a  gainer  too;  
For  bending  all  my  loving  thoughts  on  thee,  
The  injuries  that  to  myself  I  do,  
Doing  thee  vantage,  double-vantage  me.  
Such  is  my  love,  to  thee  I  so  belong,  
That  for  thy  right  myself  will  bear  all  wrong.  

LXXXIX.
SAY  that  thou  didst  forsake  me  for  some  fault,  
And  I  will  comment  upon  that  offence;  
Speak  of  my  lameness,  and  I  straight  will  halt,  
Against  thy  reasons  making  no  defence.  
Thou  canst  not,  love,  disgrace  me  half  so  ill,  
To  set  a  form  upon  desired  change,  
As  I'll  myself  disgrace:  knowing  thy  will,  
I  will  acquaintance  strangle  and  look  strange,  
Be  absent  from  thy  walks,  and  in  my  tongue  
Thy  sweet  beloved  name  no  more  shall  dwell,  
Lest  I,  too  much  profane,  should  do  it  wrong  
And  haply  of  our  old  acquaintance  tell.  
For  thee  against  myself  I'll  vow  debate,  
For  I  must  ne'er  love  him  whom  thou  dost  hate.  

XC.
THEN  hate  me  when  thou  wilt;  if  ever,  now;  
Now,  while  the  world  is  bent  my  deeds  to  cross,  
Join  with  the  spite  of  fortune,  make  me  bow,  
And  do  not  drop  in  for  an  after-loss:  
Ah,  do  not,  when  my  heart  hath  'scoped  this  sorrow,  
Come  in  the  rearward  of  a  conquer'd  woe;  
Give  not  a  windy  night  a  rainy  morrow,  
To  linger  out  a  purposed  overthrow.  
If  thou  wilt  leave  me,  do  not  leave  me  last,  
When  other  petty  griefs  have  done  their  spite  
But  in  the  onset  come;  so  shall  I  taste  
At  first  the  very  worst  of  fortune's  might,  
And  other  strains  of  woe,  which  now  seem  woe,  
Compared  with  loss  of  thee  will  not  seem  so.  

XCI.
SOME  glory  in  their  birth,  some  in  their  skill,  
Some  in  their  wealth,  some  in  their  bodies'  force,  
Some  in  their  garments,  though  new-fangled  ill,  
Some  in  their  hawks  and  hounds,  some  in  their  horse;  
And  every  humour  hath  his  adjunct  pleasure,  
Wherein  it  finds  a  joy  above  the  rest:  
But  these  particulars  are  not  my  measure;  
All  these  I  better  in  one  general  best.  
Thy  love  is  better  than  high  birth  to  me,  
Richer  than  wealth,  prouder  than  garments'  cost,  
Of  more  delight  than  hawks  or  horses  be;  
And  having  thee,  of  all  men's  pride  I  boast:  
Wretched  in  this  alone,  that  thou  mayst  take  
All  this  away  and  me  most  wretched  make.  

XCII.
BUT  do  thy  worst  to  steal  thyself  away,  
For  term  of  life  thou  art  assured  mine,  
And  life  no  longer  than  thy  love  will  stay,  
For  it  depends  upon  that  love  of  thine.  
Then  need  I  not  to  fear  the  worst  of  wrongs,  
When  in  the  least  of  them  my  life  hath  end.  
I  see  a  better  state  to  me  belongs  
Than  that  which  on  thy  humour  doth  depend;  
Thou  canst  not  vex  me  with  inconstant  mind,  
Since  that  my  life  on  thy  revolt  doth  lie.  
O,  what  a  happy  title  do  I  find,  
Happy  to  have  thy  love,  happy  to  die!  
But  what's  so  blessed-fair  that  fears  no  blot?  
Thou  mayst  be  false,  and  yet  I  know  it  not.  

XCIII.
SO  shall  I  live,  supposing  thou  art  true,  
Like  a  deceived  husband;  so  love's  face  
May  still  seem  love  to  me,  though  alter'd  new;  
Thy  looks  with  me,  thy  heart  in  other  place:  
For  there  can  live  no  hatred  in  thine  eye,  
Therefore  in  that  I  cannot  know  thy  change.  
In  many's  looks  the  false  heart's  history  
Is  writ  in  moods  and  frowns  and  wrinkles  strange,  
But  heaven  in  thy  creation  did  decree  
That  in  thy  face  sweet  love  should  ever  dwell;  
Whate'er  thy  thoughts  or  thy  heart's  workings  be,  
Thy  looks  should  nothing  thence  but  sweetness  tell.  
How  like  Eve's  apple  doth  thy  beauty  grow,  
if  thy  sweet  virtue  answer  not  thy  show!  

XCIV.
THEY  that  have  power  to  hurt  and  will  do  none,  
That  do  not  do  the  thing  they  most  do  show,  
Who,  moving  others,  are  themselves  as  stone,  
Unmoved,  cold,  and  to  temptation  slow,  
They  rightly  do  inherit  heaven's  graces  
And  husband  nature's  riches  from  expense;  
They  are  the  lords  and  owners  of  their  faces,  
Others  but  stewards  of  their  excellence.  
The  summer's  flower  is  to  the  summer  sweet,  
Though  to  itself  it  only  live  and  die,  
But  if  that  flower  with  base  infection  meet,  
The  basest  weed  outbraves  his  dignity:  
For  sweetest  things  turn  sourest  by  their  deeds;  
Lilies  that  fester  smell  far  worse  than  weeds.  

XCV.
HOW  sweet  and  lovely  dost  thou  make  the  shame  
Which,  like  a  canker  in  the  fragrant  rose,  
Doth  spot  the  beauty  of  thy  budding  name!  
O,  in  what  sweets  dost  thou  thy  sins  enclose!  
That  tongue  that  tells  the  story  of  thy  days,  
Making  lascivious  comments  on  thy  sport,  
Cannot  dispraise  but  in  a  kind  of  praise;  
Naming  thy  name  blesses  an  ill  report.  
O,  what  a  mansion  have  those  vices  got  
Which  for  their  habitation  chose  out  thee,  
Where  beauty's  veil  doth  cover  every  blot,  
And  all  things  turn  to  fair  that  eyes  can  see!  
Take  heed,  dear  heart,  of  this  large  privilege;  
The  hardest  knife  ill-used  doth  lose  his  edge.  

XCVI.
SOME  say  thy  fault  is  youth,  some  wantonness;  
Some  say  thy  grace  is  youth  and  gentle  sport;  
Both  grace  and  faults  are  loved  of  more  and  less;  
Thou  makest  faults  graces  that  to  thee  resort.  
As  on  the  finger  of  a  throned  queen  
The  basest  jewel  will  be  well  esteem'd,  
So  are  those  errors  that  in  thee  are  seen  
To  truths  translated  and  for  true  things  deem'd.  
How  many  lambs  might  the  stem  wolf  betray,  
If  like  a  lamb  he  could  his  looks  translate!  
How  many  gazers  mightst  thou  lead  away,  
If  thou  wouldst  use  the  strength  of  all  thy  state!  
But  do  not  so;  I  love  thee  in  such  sort  
As,  thou  being  mine,  mine  is  thy  good  report.  

XCVII.
HOW  like  a  winter  hath  my  absence  been  
From  thee,  the  pleasure  of  the  fleeting  year!  
What  freezings  have  I  felt,  what  dark  days  seen!  
What  old  December's  bareness  every  where!  
And  yet  this  time  removed  was  summer's  time,  
The  teeming  autumn,  big  with  rich  increase,  
Bearing  the  wanton  burden  of  the  prime,  
Like  widow'd  wombs  after  their  lords'  decease:  
Yet  this  abundant  issue  seem'd  to  me  
But  hope  of  orphans  and  unfather'd  fruit;  
For  summer  and  his  pleasures  wait  on  thee,  
And,  thou  away,  the  very  birds  are  mute;  
Or,  if  they  sing,  'tis  with  so  dull  a  cheer  
That  leaves  look  pale,  dreading  the  winter's  near.  

XCVIII
FROM  you  have  I  been  absent  in  the  spring,  
When  proud-pied  April  dress'd  in  all  his  trim  
Hath  put  a  spirit  of  youth  in  every  thing,  
That  heavy  Saturn  laugh'd  and  leap'd  with  him.  
Yet  nor  the  lays  of  birds  nor  the  sweet  smell  
Of  different  flowers  in  odour  and  in  hue  
Could  make  me  any  summer's  story  tell,  
Or  from  their  proud  lap  pluck  them  where  they  grew;  
Nor  did  I  wonder  at  the  lily's  white,  
Nor  praise  the  deep  vermilion  in  the  rose;  
They  were  but  sweet,  but  figures  of  delight,  
Drawn  after  you,  you  pattern  of  all  those.  
Yet  seem'd  it  winter  still,  and,  you  away,  
As  with  your  shadow  I  with  these  did  play:  

XCIX
THE  forward  violet  thus  did  I  chide:  
Sweet  thief,  whence  didst  thou  steal  thy  sweet  that  smells,  
If  not  from  my  love's  breath?  The  purple  pride  
Which  on  thy  soft  cheek  for  complexion  dwells  
In  my  love's  veins  thou  hast  too  grossly  dyed.  
The  lily  I  condemned  for  thy  hand,  
And  buds  of  marjoram  had  stol'n  thy  hair:  
The  roses  fearfully  on  thorns  did  stand,  
One  blushing  shame,  another  white  despair;  
A  third,  nor  red  nor  white,  had  stol'n  of  both  
And  to  his  robbery  had  annex'd  thy  breath;  
But,  for  his  theft,  in  pride  of  all  his  growth  
A  vengeful  canker  eat  him  up  to  death.  
More  flowers  I  noted,  yet  I  none  could  see  
But  sweet  or  colour  it  had  stol'n  from  thee.  

C
WHERE  art  thou,  Muse,  that  thou  forget'st  so  long  
To  speak  of  that  which  gives  thee  all  thy  might?  
Spend'st  thou  thy  fury  on  some  worthless  song,  
Darkening  thy  power  to  lend  base  subjects  light?  
Return,  forgetful  Muse,  and  straight  redeem  
In  gentle  numbers  time  so  idly  spent;  
Sing  to  the  ear  that  doth  thy  lays  esteem  
And  gives  thy  pen  both  skill  and  argument.  
Rise,  resty  Muse,  my  love's  sweet  face  survey,  
If  Time  have  any  wrinkle  graven  there;  
If  any,  be  a  satire  to  decay,  
And  make  Time's  spoils  despised  every  where.  
Give  my  love  fame  faster  than  Time  wastes  life;  
So  thou  prevent'st  his  scythe  and  crooked  knife.  


CI.
O  TRUANT  Muse,  what  shall  be  thy  amends  
For  thy  neglect  of  truth  in  beauty  dyed?  
Both  truth  and  beauty  on  my  love  depends;  
So  dost  thou  too,  and  therein  dignified.  
Make  answer,  Muse:  wilt  thou  not  haply  say  
'Truth  needs  no  colour,  with  his  colour  fix'd;  
Beauty  no  pencil,  beauty's  truth  to  lay;  
But  best  is  best,  if  never  intermix'd?'  
Because  he  needs  no  praise,  wilt  thou  be  dumb?  
Excuse  not  silence  so;  for't  lies  in  thee  
To  make  him  much  outlive  a  gilded  tomb,  
And  to  be  praised  of  ages  yet  to  be.  
Then  do  thy  office,  Muse;  I  teach  thee  how  
To  make  him  seem  long  hence  as  he  shows  now.  

CII.
MY  love  is  strengthen'd,  though  more  weak  in  seeming;  
I  love  not  less,  though  less  the  show  appear:  
That  love  is  merchandized  whose  rich  esteeming  
The  owner's  tongue  doth  publish  every  where.  
Our  lo

Íîâ³ òâîðè