Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
ZepheriaCanzon 35. Since from the flowered sweets of every blessedness
AnonymousS
Which from thy beauties delicate peruse
Incessantly doth flow, mine heart, like anch’ress
Aye cloistered, lives to sad and cheerless Muse.
If any smiling joy fortune to fawn on me,
Suggesting to my spirit sweet content:
Anon, I article with his felicity;
And ere mine heart vouchsafes him entertainment,
I him depose, on these Interrogatories.
First, “If he came from my Z
Then, “If he may to light restore mine eyes,
Which long have dwelt in dark?” If then, he say,
“Nay! but thy thoughts to unbend from off her beauties,
I come!” eftsoons, I strangle him while in his infancy,
Better slay him, than he do thee to die!