Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
DianaThe Second Decade. Sonnet II. It may be, Love my death doth not pretend
Henry Constable (15621613)I
Although he shoots at me: but thinks it fit
Thus to bewitch thee for thy benefit!
Causing thy will to my wish to condescend.
For witches, which some murder do intend,
Do make a picture, and do shoot at it;
And in that part where they the picture hit,
The party’s self doth languish to his end.
So L
Within my heart thy heavenly shape doth paint;
Suffering therein his arrows to abide,
Only to th’end he might, by witches’ art,
Within my heart, pierce through thy picture’s side;
And through thy picture’s side, might wound my heart.