Selected Poems of Thomas Campion, Samuel Daniel and Sir Walter RaleghPenguin, 2001 - 247 sider Campion's lyrics are the fruits of the two Golden ages of Elizabethan art: the musical and the poetic. His ayres wind together or unravel mixed emotions and ethical paradoxes in a striking array of voices from the ardent, stoical or lecherous, to the vengeful, disillusioned or quirky. Daniel refined the language for tangled emotional states, most famously in his sonnet sequence Delia. His poetry shows him shrinking from ambition and beset by self-doubt, while wrestling with historical and moral concerns. Ralegh cut a figure as flamboyant and melodramatic as Daniel's was reluctant. His world was duplicitous and dangerous, and his poetry took the form of a sophisticated game of political and emotional courtship with his female ruler. |
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Side 54
... thee , Challenge then a sov'reign's place : Say I honour when I love thee , Let me call thy kindness grace . State and Love things divers be , Yet will we teach them to agree . Or , if this be not sufficing , Be thou styled my goddess ...
... thee , Challenge then a sov'reign's place : Say I honour when I love thee , Let me call thy kindness grace . State and Love things divers be , Yet will we teach them to agree . Or , if this be not sufficing , Be thou styled my goddess ...
Side 102
... thee from all obscureness . Although my careful accents never moved thee , Yet count it no disgrace that I have loved thee . Sonnet XXXVIII Fair and lovely maid , look from the shore , See thy Leander striving in these waves : Poor soul ...
... thee from all obscureness . Although my careful accents never moved thee , Yet count it no disgrace that I have loved thee . Sonnet XXXVIII Fair and lovely maid , look from the shore , See thy Leander striving in these waves : Poor soul ...
Side 154
... thee thy name ; a kingly mind , That God thee gave , who found it now too dear For this base world , and hath resumed it near , To sit in skies , and sort with powers divine . Kent thy birthdays , and Oxford held thy youth ; The heavens ...
... thee thy name ; a kingly mind , That God thee gave , who found it now too dear For this base world , and hath resumed it near , To sit in skies , and sort with powers divine . Kent thy birthdays , and Oxford held thy youth ; The heavens ...
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PREFACE | 3 |
from A BOOK OF AYRES 1601 | 9 |
I care not for these ladies | 10 |
Opphavsrett | |
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Astrophil and Stella beauty Book of Ayres C. S. Lewis Catullus conceit court courtly Cynthia Davis death Defence of Ryme Delia delight desire despair disdain doth earth edition Elizabeth Throckmorton Elizabethan ev'ry eyes Faerie Queene fain fair faith fame fire flowers George Puttenham give glory grace Greenblatt 1973 grief hath heart heaven honour hope joys Latham light Lindley live London looks Lord Hay's Masque love's lover lyric Mary Sidney mind mourning muse Musophilus never night notes passion Petrarch Philip Rosseter pity pleasure poem Poesie poet poetic poetry praise Prince Queen Elizabeth rest Rudick Samuel Daniel scorn Shakespeare's Shakespeare's Sonnets Sidney Sidney's sighs sing Sir Walter Ralegh sleep song Sonnet sorrow soul speaker Spenser sprite stanza sweet Tell thee thine things Thomas Campion thou thoughts unto verse virtue Whilst words yield youth ΙΟ