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Search results for: sonnet | Found 863 Poems |
581. | Sonnet XLVII by Edmund Spenser> | TRust not the treason of those smyling lookes,
vntill ye haue theyr guylefull traynes well tryde:
for they are lyke but vnto golden hookes,
that fr... |
582. | Sonnet IIII by Edmund Spenser> | NEw yeare forth looking out of Ianus gate,
Doth seeme to promise hope of new delight:
and bidding th'old Adieu, his passed date
bids all old though... |
583. | Sonnet XIIII by Edmund Spenser> | REtourne agayne my forces late dismayd,
Vnto the siege by you abandon'd quite,
great shame it is to leaue like one afrayd,
so fayre a peece for one... |
584. | Sonnet LXXVII by Edmund Spenser> | Was it a dreame, or did I see it playne,
a goodly table of pure yvory:
all spred with iuncats, fit to entertayne,
the greatest Prince with pompous ... |
585. | Sonnet VIII by Edmund Spenser> | MOre then most faire, full of the liuing fire,
Kindled aboue vnto the maker neere:
no eies buy ioyes, in which al powers conspire,
that to the worl... |
586. | Sonnet XXXIII by Edmund Spenser> | GReat wrong I doe, I can it not deny,
to that most sacred Empresse my dear dred,
not finishing her Queene of faery,
that mote enlarge her liuing pr... |
587. | Sonnet VII by Edmund Spenser> | Fayre eyes, the myrrour of my mazed hart,
what wondrous vertue is contaynd in you
the which both lyfe and death forth fro[m] you dart
into the obie... |
588. | Sonnet XXXI by Edmund Spenser> | Ah why hath nature to so hard a hart,
giuen so goodly giftes of beauties grace?
whose pryde depraues each other better part,
and all those pretious... |
589. | Sonnet VI by Edmund Spenser> | BE nought dismayd that her vnmoued mind,
doth still persist in her rebellious pride:
such loue not lyke to lusts of baser kynd,
the harder wonne, t... |
590. | Sonnet XI by Edmund Spenser> | DAyly when I do seeke and sew for peace,
And hostages doe offer for my truth:
she cruell warriour doth her selfe addresse,
to battell, and the wear... |
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