Minor Poems of Michael Drayton by Michael Drayton
page 79 of 375 (21%)
page 79 of 375 (21%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
|
Teares be the language which you speake,
Which my hart wanting, yet must breake; My tongue must cease to tell my wrongs, And make my sighs to get them tongs, Yet more then this to her belongs. Sonet 57 _To_ Lucie _Countesse of Bedford_ Great Lady, essence of my chiefest good, Of the most pure and finest tempred spirit, Adorn'd with gifts, enobled by thy blood, Which by discent true vertue do'st inherit: That vertue which no fortune can depriue, Which thou by birth tak'st from thy gracious mother, Whose royall minds with equall motion striue, Which most in honour shall excell the other; Vnto thy fame my Muse herself shall taske, Which rain'st vpon me thy sweet golden showers, And but thy selfe, no subject will I aske, Vpon whose praise my soule shall spend her powers. Sweet Lady yet, grace this poore Muse of mine, Whose faith, whose zeale, whose life, whose all is thine. Sonet 58 _To the Lady_ Anne Harington |
|


