Sonnet Xli: Why Do I Speak Of Joy
Michael Drayton
Love's Lunacy Why do I speak of joy, or write of love, When my heart is the very den of horror, And in my soul the pains of Hell I prove, With all his torments and infernal terror? What should I say? What yet remains to do? My brain is dry with weeping all too long, My sighs be spent in uttering my woe, And I want words wherewith to tell my wrong; But, still distracted in Love's lunacy, And, bedlam-like, thus raging in my grief, Now rail upon her hair, then on her eye, Now call her Goddess, then I call her thief, Now I deny her, then I do confess her, Now do I curse her, then again I bless her.
Next 10 Poems
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlii: Some Men There Be
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xliii: Why Should Your Fair Eyes
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xliv: Whilst Thus My Pen
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlix: Thou Leaden Brain
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlv: Muses, Which Sadly Sit
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlvi: Plain-path'd Experience
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlvii: In Pride Of Wit
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlviii: Cupid, I Hate Thee
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xv: Since To Obtain Thee
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xvi: Mongst All The Creatures
Previous 10 Poems
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xl: My Heart The Anvil
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xix: You Cannot Love
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xiv: If He From Heav'n
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xiii: Letters And Lines
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xii: That Learned Father
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xi: You Not Alone
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet X: To Nothing Fitter
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Viii: There's Nothing Grieves Me
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Vii: Love In A Humour
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Vi: How Many Paltry Things