Sonnets by Tommaso Campanella;Michelangelo Buonarroti
page 48 of 178 (26%)
page 48 of 178 (26%)
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Temper the source of this supreme delight,
Lest joy so poignant slay a soul so weak. XXVII. _NO ESCAPE FROM LOVE._ _Non posso altra figura._ I cannot by the utmost flight of thought Conceive another form of air or clay, Wherewith against thy beauty to array My wounded heart in armour fancy-wrought: For, lacking thee, so low my state is brought, That Love hath stolen all my strength away; Whence, when I fain would halve my griefs, they weigh With double sorrow, and I sink to nought. Thus all in vain my soul to scape thee flies, For ever faster flies her beauteous foe: From the swift-footed feebly run the slow! Yet with his hands Love wipes my weeping eyes, Saying, this toil will end in happy cheer; What costs the heart so much, must needs be dear! XXVIII. |
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