Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
LiciaSonnet XLVIII. I saw, sweet Licia, when the Spider ran
Giles Fletcher (1586?1623)I
Within your house, to weave a worthless web;
You present were, and feared her with your fan:
So that, amazèd, speedily she fled.
She, in your house, such sweet perfumes did smell;
And heard the Muses with their notes refined:
Thus, filled with envy, could no longer dwell;
But straight returned, and at your house repined.
“Then tell me, Spider, why of late I saw
Thee lose thy poison, and thy bowels gone?
Did these enchant and keep thy limbs in awe,
And made thy forces to be small or none?
No, no! Thou didst, by chance, my L
Who, for her look, M