Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
ChlorisSonnet XV. These weeping Truce-men shew I living languish
William Smith (fl. 1596)T
My woeful wailings tell my discontent:
Yet C
My thrilling throbs, her heart cannot relent.
My kids to hear the rhymes and roundelays,
Which I, on wasteful hills, was wont to sing,
Did more delight than lark in summer days:
Whole echo made the neighbour groves to ring.
But now my flock, all drooping, bleats and cries;
Because my Pipe, the author of their sport,
All rent, and torn, and unrespected, lies:
Their lamentations do my cares consort.
They cease to feed, and listen to the plaint;
Which I pour forth unto a cruel Saint.