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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


CAELIA: SONNETS: 10 by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643)

Poet Analysis

First Line: TO GET A LOVE AND BEAUTY SO DIVINE
Last Line: FORTUNE MY MISTRESS, OR YOU NOT SO FAIR.
Subject(s): LOVE - NATURE OF; TIME;

TO get a Love and Beauty so divine,
(In these so wary times) the fact must be
Of greater fortunes to the world than mine;
Those are the steps to that felicity;
For love no other gate hath than the eyes,
And inward worth is now esteem'd as none;
Mere outsides only to that blessing rise,
Which Truth and Love did once account their own;
Yet as she wants her fairer, she may miss
The common cause of love, and be as free
From earth, as her composure heavenly is;
If not, I restless rest in misery,
And daily wish, to keep me from despair,
Fortune my mistress, or you not so fair.



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