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Home  »  Elizabethan Sonnets  »  Sonnet 24. I hear some say, “This man is not in love!”

Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.

Idea

Sonnet 24. I hear some say, “This man is not in love!”

Michael Drayton (1563–1631)

[First printed in 1602 (No. 27), and in all later editions.]

I HEAR some say, “This man is not in love!”

“Who! can he love? a likely thing!” they say.

“Read but his Verse, and it will easily prove!”

O, judge not rashly, gentle Sir, I pray!

Because I loosely trifle in this sort,

As one that fain his sorrows would beguile:

You now suppose me, all this time, in sport;

And please yourself with this conceit the while.

Ye shallow Censures! sometimes, see ye not,

In greatest perils, some men pleasant be;

Where Fame by death is only to be got,

They resolute! So stands the case with me.

Where other men, in depth of Passion cry;

I laugh at Fortune, as in jest to die!