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Home  »  Elizabethan Sonnets  »  Sonnet XXXV. Next, when my sun, by progress, took his hold

Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.

Parthenophil and Parthenophe

Sonnet XXXV. Next, when my sun, by progress, took his hold

Barnabe Barnes (1569?–1609)

NEXT, when my sun, by progress, took his hold

In Cancer, of my Mistress’ crafty mind;

How retrograde seemed She! when as I told

That “in his claws, such torches I did find;

Which if She did not to my tears lay plain

That they might quenchèd be from their outrage;

My love’s hot June should be consumed in pain,

Unless her pity make my grief assuage.”

O, how She frowns! and like the Crab, back turns!

When I request her put her beams apart;

Yet with her beams, my soul’s delight, She burns!

She pities not to think upon my smart!

Nor from her Cancer’s claws can I depart:

For there, the torch of my red-hot Desire

Grieves and relieves me, with continual fire.