Internet Shakespeare Editions

About this text

  • Title: A Lover's Complaint (Quarto, 1609)
  • Editor: Hardy M. Cook
  • ISBN: 978-1-55058-411-0

    Copyright Hardy M. Cook. This text may be freely used for educational, non-profit purposes; for all other uses contact the Editor.
    Author: William Shakespeare
    Editor: Hardy M. Cook
    Not Peer Reviewed

    A Lover's Complaint (Quarto, 1609)

    COMPLAINT.

    With obiects manyfold; each seuerall stone,
    With wit well blazond smil'd or made some mone.

    Lo all these trophies of affections hot,
    Of pensiu'd and subdew'd desires the tender,
    220Nature hath chargd me that I hoord them not,
    But yeeld them vp where I my selfe must render:
    That is to you my origin and ender:
    For these of force must your oblations be,
    Since I their Aulter, you enpatrone me.

    225Oh then aduance (of yours) that phraseles hand,
    Whose white weighes downe the airy scale of praise,
    Take all these similies to your owne command,
    Hollowed with sighes that burning lunges did raise:
    What me your minister for you obaies
    230Workes vnder you, and to your audit comes
    Their distract parcells, in combined summes.

    Lo this deuice was sent me from a Nun,
    Or Sister sanctified of holiest note,
    Which late her noble suit in court did shun,
    Whose rarest hauings made the blossoms dote,
    For she was sought by spirits of ritchest cote,
    235But kept cold distance, and did thence remoue,
    To spend her liuing in eternall loue.

    But oh my sweet what labour ist to leaue,
    The thing we haue not, mastring what not striues,
    Playing the Place which did no forme receiue,
    240Playing patient sports in vnconstraind giues,
    She that her fame so to her selfe contriues,
    The scarres of battaile scapeth by the flight,
    And makes her absence valiant, not her might.

    Oh pardon me in that my boast is true,
    L
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