GIVE place, ye lovers, here before That spent your boasts and brags in vain; My lady's beauty passeth more The best of yours, I dare well sayen, Than doth the sun the candle-light, Or brightest day the darkest night. And thereto hath a troth as just As had Penelope the fair; For what she saith, ye may it trust, As it by writing sealed were: And virtues hath she many mo' Than I with pen have skill to show. I could rehearse, if that I would, The whole effect of Nature's plaint. When she had lost the perfect mould, The like to whom she could not paint: With wringing hands, how she did cry, And what she said, I know it aye. I know she swore with raging mind, Her kingdom only set apart, There was no loss by law of kind That could have gone so near her heart; And this was chiefly all her pain; "She could not make the like again." Sith Nature thus gave her the praise, To be the chiefest work she wrought, In faith, methink, some better ways On your behalf might well be sought, Than to compare, as ye have done, To match the candle with the sun. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STALKING LEMURS by KAREN SWENSON BRONX, 1818 by JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE MNEMOSYNE by TRUMBULL STICKNEY ON THE SUN COMING OUT IN THE AFTERNOON by HENRY DAVID THOREAU SOLITUDE by ELLA WHEELER WILCOX THE DARKNESS OF EGYPT by MARIA ABDY SAY NO MORE OF ME by ANNA EMILIA BAGSTAD THE WOUNDED VULTURE by ANNE CHARLOTTE LYNCH BOTTA THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: AUTUMN by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |