Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
Parthenophil and ParthenopheSonnet LXXIII. Why did rich Nature, Graces grant to thee?
Barnabe Barnes (1569?1609)W
Since Thou art such a niggard of thy grace!
Or how can Graces in thy body be?
Where neither they, nor pity find a place!
Ah, they be Handmaids to thy Beauty’s Fury!
Making thy face to tyrannize on men.
Condemned before thy Beauty, by Love’s Jury;
And by thy frowns, adjudged to Sorrow’s Den:
Grant me some grace! for Thou, with grace art wealthy;
And kindly may’st afford some gracious thing.
Mine hopes all, as my mind, weak and unhealthy;
All her looks gracious, yet no grace do bring
To me, poor wretch! Yet be the Graces there!
But I, the Furies in my breast do bear!