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Home  »  The English Poets  »  Fawnia

Thomas Humphry Ward, ed. The English Poets. 1880–1918.rnVol. I. Early Poetry: Chaucer to Donne

Robert Greene (1558–1592)

Fawnia

AH, were she pitiful as she is fair,

Or but as mild as she is seeming so,

Then were my hopes greater than my despair,

Then all the world were heaven, nothing woe.

Ah, were her heart relenting as her hand,

That seems to melt even with the mildest touch,

Then knew I where to seat me in a land,

Under wide heavens, but yet [I know] not such.

So as she shows, she seems the budding rose,

Yet sweeter far than is an earthly flower,

Sovereign of beauty, like the spray she grows,

Compassed she is with thorns and cankered flower,

Yet were she willing to be plucked and worn,

She would be gathered, though she grew on thorn.

Ah, when she sings, all music else be still,

For none must be comparèd to her note;

Ne’er breathed such glee from Philomela’s bill,

Nor from the morning-singer’s swelling throat.

Ah, when she riseth from her blissful bed,

She comforts all the world, as doth the sun,

And at her sight the night’s foul vapour’s fled;

When she is set, the gladsome day is done.

O glorious sun, imagine me the west,

Shine in my arms, and set thou in my breast!