Contents
-BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
Elegy III: If sad Complaint would shew a Lovers pain
Giles Fletcher (1586?1623)
1.
IF sad Complaint would shew a Lover’s pain; | Or Tears express the torments of my heart: | If melting Sighs would ruth and pity gain; | Or true Laments but ease a Lover’s smart: 2. | Then should my Plaints the thunder’s noise surmount; | And Tears, like seas, should flow from out my eyes. | Then Sighs, like air, should far exceed all count; | And true Laments with sorrow dim the skies. 3. | But Plaints and Tears, Laments and Sighs I spend: | Yet greater torments do my heart destroy. | I could all these from out my heart still send; | If, after these, I might my Love enjoy. 4. | But heavens conspire; and heavens I must obey: | That seeking love, I still must want my ease. | For greatest joys are tempered with delay: | Things soon obtained do least of all us please. 5. | My thoughts repine, and think the time too long. | My love impatient wisheth to obtain. | I blame the heavens, that do me all this wrong: | To make me loved; and will not ease my pain. 6. | No pain like this, to love and not enjoy. | No grief like this, to mourn and not be heard. | No time so long as that which breeds annoy. | No hell like this, to love and be deferred. 7. | But heaven shall stand, and earth inconstant fly; | The sun shall freeze, and ice inconstant burn; | The mountains flow, and all the earth be dry: | Ere time shall force my loving thoughts to turn. 8. | “Do you resolve, sweet Love! to do the same: | Say that you do, and seal it with a kiss! | Then shall our truths [troths] the heavens’ unkindness blame; | That cannot hurt, yet shew their spite in this. 9. | “The silly Prentice, bound for many years, | Doth hope that time his service will release; | The town besieged, that lives in midst of fears, | Doth hope in time the cruel wars will cease; 10. | “The toiling Ploughman sings in hope to reap; | The tossèd bark expecteth for a shore; | The boy at school to be at play doth leap, | And straight forgets the fear he had before: 11. | “If those, by hope, do joy in their distress; | And constant are, in hope to conquer time: | Then let not hope in us, sweet Friend! be less; | And cause our love to wither in the prime.
| “Let us conspire, and time will have an end; | So both of us in time shall have a friend.”
F I N I S.
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