Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
IdeaSonnet 35. Some misbelieving and profane in Love
Michael Drayton (15631631)[First printed in 1594 (No. 12), and in all later editions. ]
To Miracle
To Miracle
S
When I do speak of miracles by thee,
May say, that thou art flatterèd by me;
Who only write, my skill in Verse to prove.
See miracles! ye Unbelieving, see!
A dumb-born Muse made to express the mind!
A cripple Hand to write, yet lame by kind!
One by thy name, the other touching thee.
Blind were mine eyes, till they were seen of thine;
And mine ears deaf, by thy fame healèd be:
My vices cured by virtues sprung from thee;
My hopes revived, which long in grave had lien.
All unclean thoughts (foul spirits) cast out in me,
Only by virtue that proceeds from thee.