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love_n beauty_n heart_n love_v 3,294 5 5.7449 4 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A19223 Diana The praises of his mistres, in certaine sweete sonnets. By H.C. Constable, Henry, 1562-1613. 1592 (1592) STC 5637; ESTC S105134 5,733 32

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and neuer shootes awry mine eye thus helpes thine eye to worke my smart Thine eye a fier is both in heate and light mine eye of teares a riuer doth become Oh that the water of mine eye had might to quench the flames that from thine eyes doo come Or that the fier kindled by thine eye the flowing streames of mine eyes could make drie Sonnetto decimo Ladie in beautie and in fauor rare of fauor not of due I fauor craue Nature to thee Beautie and Fauor gaue faire then thou art and Fauor thou maist spare When on poore mee bestow'd your fauors are lesse Fauor in your face you shall not haue If fauor then a wounded soule may saue of murthers guilt deare Ladie then beware My losse of life a million sold were lesse than the least losse should vnto you befall yet graunt this gift which gift when I possesse both I haue life and you no losse at all For by your Fauor onelie I doo liue and Fauour you may well both keepe and giue Sonnetto vndeci Mine eye with all the deadlie sinnes is fraught ☜ First proud sith it presum'd to looke so hie a watchman being made stood gazing by and idle tooke no heede till I was caught And enuious beares enuie that my thought should in his absence be to her so nie to kill my hart mine eie let in her eie and so consent gaue to a murther wrought And couetous it neuer would remooue from her faire haire gold so doth please his sight Vnchast a baud betweene my hart and loue a glutton eie with teares drunke euerie night These sinnes procured haue a Goddesse ire wherefore my hart is damnd in Loues sweete fire Sonnetto dodeci ☞ My Reason absent did mine eyes require to watch and ward and such foes to descrie as they should neere my hart approching spie but traitor eies my harts death did conspire Corrupted with Hopes giftes let in Desire to burne my hart and sought no remedie though store of water were in either eie which well imploid might well haue quencht the fire Reason returnd Loue and Fortune made Iudges to iudge mine eies to punishment Fortune sith they by sight my hart betraide from wished sight adiudgd them banishment Loue sith by fire murdred my hart was found adiudged them in teares for to be drownd Sonnetto tredeci Falslie doth enuie of your praises blame my tongue my pen my hart of flatterie because I said there was no sunne but thee it calld my tongue the partiall trumpe of fame And saith my pen hath flattered thy name because my pen did to my tongue agree and that my hart must needs a flattrer bee which taught both tongue and pen to say the same No no I flatter not when thee I call the sunne sith that the sunne was neuer such but when the sunne thee I compar'd withall doubtles the sunne I flattered too much Witnes mine eies I saie the truth in this they haue seene thee and know that so it is Sonnetto quaterdeci Wonder it is and pitie i st that shee in whom all beauties treasure we may finde that may inrich the bodie and the minde towards the poore should vse no charitie My Loue is gone a begging vnto thee and if that Beautie had not been more kinde than Pitie long ere this he had been pinde but Beautie is content his food to bee Oh pitie haue when such poore Orphans beg Loue naked boy hath nothing on his backe and though he wanteth neither arme nor leg yet maym'd he is sith he his sight doth lacke And yet though blinde he beautie can beholde and yet though nak'd he feeles more heat than colde Sonnetto quindeci Much sorrow in it selfe my loue doth moue more my dispaire to loue a hopelesse blisse my follie most to loue whom sure to misse oh helpe me but this last griefe to remoue All paines if you commaund it ioy shall proue and wisdome to seeke ioy then say but this Because my pleasure in thy torment is I doo commaund thee without hope to loue So when this thought my sorrow shall augment that my owne follie did procure my paine then shall I say to giue my selfe content obedience onely made me loue in vaine It was your will and not my want of wit I haue the paine beare you the blame of it Sonnetto sedeci Pitie refusing my poore Loue to feed a begger staru'd for want of helpe he lies and at your mouth the doore of Beautie cries that thence some almes of sweete grants might proceed But as he waiteth for some almes-deed a cherrie tree before the doore he spies Oh deare quoth he two cherries may suffise two onely may saue life in this my need But beggers can they naught but cherries eate Pardon my Loue he is a Goddesse sonne and neuer feedeth but on daintie meate els need he not to pine as he hath done For onely the sweete frute of this sweete tree can giue food to my Loue and life to mee Sonnetto decisette My Ladies presence makes the Roses red because to see her lips they blush for shame ☜ the Lillies leaues for enuie pale became and her white hands in them this enuie bred The Marigold the leaues abroad doth spred because the sunnes and her power is the same the Violet of purple colour came di'd in the bloud she made my hart to shed In briefe all flowers from her their vertue take from her sweete breath their sweet smells doo proceed the liuing heate which her eie beames doth make warmeth the ground and quickeneth the seed The raine wherewith she watereth the flowers falls from mine eyes which she dissolues in showers Sonnetto deciotto The Fouler hides as closelie as he may the net where caught the sillie bird should bee least he the threatning prison should but see and so for feare be forc'd to flie away My Ladie so the while she doth assay in curled knots fast to entangle mee puts on her vayle to th' end I should not flee the golden net wherein I am a pray Alas most sweete what need is of a net to catch a bird that is alreadie tane Sith with your hand alone you maie it get for it desires to flie into the same What neede such art my thoughts then to intrap when of themselues they flie into your lap Sonnetto decinoue When your perfections to my thoughts appeare they say among themselues O happie wee which euer shall so rare an obiect see but happie hart if thoughts lesse happie were For their delights haue cost my hart full deare in whom of loue a thousand causes bee and each cause breedes a thousand loues in mee and each loue more than thousand harts can beare How can my hart so manie loues then hold which yet by heapes encrease from day to day But like a ship that 's ouer-charg'd with golde must either sinke or hurle the golde away But hurle not loue thou canst not feeble hart In thine owne blood thou therefore drowned art Sonnetto vinti Sweete hand the sweete but cruell bowe thou art from whence at mee fiue yuorie arrowes flie so with fiue wounds at once I wounded lie bearing my brest the print of euerie dart Saint Fraunces had the like yet felt no smart where I in liuing torments neuer die His wounds were in his hands and feete where I all these fiue helplesse wounds feele in my hart Now as Saint Fraunces if a Saint am I the bowe that shot these shafts a relique is I meane the hand which is the reason whie so manie for deuotion thee would kisse And some thy gloue kisse as a thing diuine this arrowes quiuer and this reliques shrine A calculation vpon the birth of an honourable Ladies daughter borne in the yeare 1588. on a Friday Faire by inheritance whom borne we see both in the wondrous yeare and on the day wherein the fairest Planet beareth sway the Heauens to thee this fortune doth decree Thou of a world of harts in time shalt bee a Monarch great and with one beauties ray so manie hoasts of harts thy face shall slay as all the rest for loue shall yeeld to thee But euen as Alexander when he knew his Fathers conquests wept least he should leaue no Kingdome vnto him for to subdue so shall thy Mother thee of praise bereaue So manie harts alreadie she hath slaine as few behinde to conquer shall remaine Vltimo Sonnetto Faire Sunne if you would haue me praise your light when night approacheth wherefore doo you flie Time is so short Beauties so manie bee as I haue need to see them day and night That by continuall view my verses might tell all the beames of your diuinitie which praise to you and ioy should be to mee you liuing by my verse I by your sight I by your sight and not you by my vearse neede mortall skill immortall praise rehearse No no though eies were blinde and verse were dumb your beautie should be seene and your fame knowne For by the winde which from my sighes doo come your praises round about the world is blowne
DIANA The praises of his Mistres in certaine sweete Sonnets By H. C. VERITAS TEMPORE PATET OCCVLTA R S LONDON Printed by I. C. for Richard Smith and are to be sold at the VVest doore of Paules 1592. To his absent Diana SEuer'd from sweete Content my liues sole light Banisht by ouer-weening wit from my desire This poore acceptance onely I require That though my fault haue forc'd me from thy sight Yet that thou wouldst my sorrowes to requite Review these Sonnets pictures of thy praise Wherein each woe thy wondrous worth doth raise Though first thy worth bereft me of delight See them forsaken for I them forsooke Forsaken first of thee next of my sence And when thou deignst on their blacke teares to looke Shed not one teare my teares to recompence But ioy in this though Fates gainst mee repine My verse still liues to witnes thee diuine To the Gentlemen Readers THE eye Gentlemen is the Iudge of beautie the eare of vtteraunce the sense of Art these insuing Sonnets sonnes of no partiall Iudge whose eies were acquainted with Beauties Riches whose eares frequented to Angelicall sounds and sense rauished with excellent Science are now by misfortune left as Orphans and craue desertfull acceptance of your experienst iudgements in whom rests what euer Beautie would grace or Art adorne Beeing left desolate they seeke entertainment farther they will not how euer you accept them better they desire not but as you like to vse them Sonetto primo REsolu'd to loue vnworthie to obtaine I doo no fauor craue but humble wise to thee my sighes in verse I sacrifise onely some pitie and no helpe to gaine Heare then and as my heart shall aye remaine a patient obiect to thy lightning eies a patient eare bring thou to thundring cries feare not the cracke when I the blow sustaine So as thine eye bred mine ambitious thought so shall thine eare make proud my voyce for ioy lo Deare what wonders great by thee are wrought when I but little fauours doo enioy The voyce is made the eare for to reioyce and your eare giueth pleasure to my voyce Sonnetto secondo It maie be Loue my death doth not pretend although he shootes at mee but thinkes it fit thus to bewitch thee for my benefit causing thy will to my wish condiscend For witches which some murther doo intend doo make a picture and doo shoote at it and in that part where they the picture hit the parties selfe doth languish to his end So Loue too weake by force thy hart to taint within my hart thy heauenly shape doth paint suffring therein his arrowes to abide onelie to th' end he might by witches art within my hart pierce through thy pictures side and through thy pictures side might wound my hart Sonnetto terzo Blame not my hart for flieng vp too hie sith thou art cause that it this flight begunne for earthlie vapors drawne vp by the Sunne Comets begin and night-sunnes in the skie Mine humble hart so with thy heauenlie eie drawne vp aloft all low desires doth shunne raise then me vp as thou my hart hast done so during night in heauen remaine maie I. I saie againe blame not my high desire sith of vs both the cause thereof depends In thee doth shine in mee doth burne a fire fire drawes vp other and it selfe ascends Thine eie a fier and so drawes vp my loue my loue a fier and so ascends aboue Sonnetto quattro The Sonne his iourney ending in the West taking his lodging vp in Thetis bed though from our eyes his beames be banished yet with his light th' Antipodes be blest Now when the Sunne time brings my Sunne to rest which mee too oft of rest hath hindered and whiter skinne with white sheete couered and softer cheeke doth on soft pillow rest Then I oh Sunne of Sunnes and Light of Lights wish me with those Antipodes to bee which see and feele thy beames and heate by nights Well though the night both cold and darksome is yet halfe the dayes delight the night graunts mee I feele my Sunnes heate though his light I misse Sonnetto quinto Flie lowe deare Loue thy Sunne dost thou not see Take heed doo not so neere his rayes aspire least for thy pride inflam'd with wreakfull ire it burne thy wings as it hath burned mee Thou haply saist thy wings immortall bee and so cannot consumed be with fire the one is Hope the other is Desire and that the heauens bestow'd them both on thee A Muses words made thee with Hope to flye an Angels face Desier hath begot thy selfe engendred by a Goddesse eye yet for all this immortall thou art not Of heauenly eye though thou begotten art yet art thou borne but of a mortall hart Sonnetto sesto Vnciuill sicknesse hast thou no regard but dost presume my dearest to molest and without leaue dar'st enter in that brest wheretoo sweete Loue approach yet neuer dar'd Spare thou her health which my life hath not spar'd too bitter such reuenge of my vnrest although with wrongs my thought she hath opprest my wrongs seeke not reuenge they craue reward Cease Sicknesse cease in her then to remaine and come and welcome harbour thou in mee whom Loue long since hath taught to suffer paine So she which hath so oft my paine increast Oh God that I might so reuenged bee by my more paine might haue her paine releast Sonnetto settimo A frend of mine pitieng my hopelesse loue hoping by killing hope my hope to slaie Let not quoth hee thy hope thy hart betraie impossible it is hir hart to moue But sith resolued loue cannot remoue as long as thy diuine perfections staie thy Godhead then he sought to take awaie Deare seeke reuenge and him a liar proue Gods onelie doo impossibilities Impossible saith he thy grace to gaine show then the power of thy diuinities by graunting me thy fauor to obtaine So shall thy foe giue to himselfe the lie a Goddesse thou shalt proue and happie I. Sonnetto ottauo If true loue might true loues reward obtaine dumbe wonder onely might speake of my ioy but too much woorth hath made thee too much coy and told me long agoe I sighd in vaine Not then vaine hope of vndeserued gaine hath made me paint in verses mine annoy but for thy pleasure that thou mightst enioy thy beauties sight in glasses of my paine See then thy selfe though mee thou wilt not heare by looking on my verse for paine in verse loue doth in paine beautie in loue appeare So if thou wouldst my verses meaning see expound them thus when I my loue rehearse None loues like him that is None faire like mee Sonnetto nono Thine eye the glasse where I behold my hart ☜ mine eye the window through the which thine eye may see my hart and there thy selfe espye in bloudie colours how thou painted art Thine eye the pyle is of a murdring dart mine eye the sight thou tak'st thy leuell by to hit my hart