Shake-speares Sonnets (Quarto 1, 1609)
Peer Reviewed
SHAKE-SPEARES
¶_To keepe an adiunckt to remember thee,
¶
I23
¶Thy pyramyds buylt vp with newer might
¶Our dates are breefe,_and therefor we admire,
¶And rather make them borne to our desire,
¶Then thinke that we before haue heard them tould:
1840Thy registers and thee I both defie,
¶Made more or les by thy continuall hast:
¶
I24
¶It might for fortunes basterd be vnfathered,
1850Weeds among weeds,_or flowers with flowers gatherd.
¶No it was buylded far from accident,
¶Vnder the blow of thralled discontent,
¶Whereto th'inuiting time our fashion calls:
1855It feares not policy that Heriticke,
¶But all alone stands hugely pollitick,
¶_To this I witnes call the foles of time,
1860Which die for goodnes,_who haue liu'd for crime.
¶
I25
¶VVEr't ought to me I bore the canopy,
¶With my extern the outward honoring,
Or
