Peer Reviewed
- Edition: The Sonnets
Shake-speares Sonnets (Quarto 1, 1609)
- Texts of this edition
- Facsimiles
225I6
226BVt wherefore do not you a mightier waie
227Make warre vppon this bloudie tirant time?
229With meanes more blessed then my barren rime?
230Now stand you on the top of happie houres,
231And many maiden gardens yet vnset,
233Much liker then your painted counterfeit:
234So should the lines of life that life repaire
235Which this (Times pensel or my pupill pen )
236Neither in inward worth nor outward faire
237Can make you liue your selfe in eies of men,
240I7
243Though yet heauen knowes it is but as a tombe
244Which hides your life , and shewes not halfe your parts:
245If I could write the beauty of your eyes,
246And in fresh numbers number all your graces,
247The age to come would say this Poet lies,
248Such heauenly touches nere toucht earthly faces.
249So should my papers (yellowed with their age)
251And your true rights be termd a Poets rage,
255I8.
256SHall I compare thee to a Summers day?
257Thou art more louely and more temperate:
258Rough windes do shake the darling buds of Maie,
260Sometime too hot the eye of heauen shines,
261And often is his gold complexion dimm'd,
262And euery faire from faire some-time declines,
264But thy eternall Sommer shall not fade,
267When in eternall lines to time thou grow'st,
269So long liues this, and this giues life to thee,