Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
DeliaSonnet XLIII. My Delia hath the waters of mine eyes
Samuel Daniel (15621619)[First printed, with verbal differences, in Sonnets after Sidney’s Astrophel (1591). ]
M
(The ready handmaids on her grace attending)
That never fall to ebb, but ever rise;
For to their flow, she never grants an ending.
Th’ocean never did attend more duly
Upon his Sovereign’s course, the night’s pale Queen;
Nor paid the impost of his waves more truly,
Than mine unto her Deity have been.
Yet nought, the rock of that hard heart can move;
Where beat these tears with zeal, and fury driveth:
And yet, I rather languish in her love,
Than I would joy the fairest she that liveth.
I doubt to find such pleasure in my gaining;
As now I taste, in compass of complaining.