Sonnet Xvi: Mongst All The Creatures
Michael Drayton
An Allusion to the Phoenix 'Mongst all the creatures in this spacious round Of the birds' kind, the Phoenix is alone, Which best by you of living things is known; None like to that, none like to you is found. Your beauty is the hot and splend'rous sun, The precious spices be your chaste desire, Which being kindled by that heav'nly fire, Your life so like the Phoenix's begun; Yourself thus burned in that sacred flame, With so rare sweetness all the heav'ns perfuming, Again increasing as you are consuming, Only by dying born the very same; And, wing'd by fame, you to the stars ascend, So you of time shall live beyond the end.
Next 10 Poems
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xvii: Stay, Speedy Time
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xviii: To This Our World
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xx: An Evil Spirit
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxi: A Witless Galant
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxii: Love, Banish'd Heav'n
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxii: With Fools And Children
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxiv: I Hear Some Say
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxix: When Conquering Love
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxv: O Why Should Nature
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xxvi: I Ever Love
Previous 10 Poems
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xv: Since To Obtain Thee
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlviii: Cupid, I Hate Thee
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlvii: In Pride Of Wit
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlvi: Plain-path'd Experience
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlv: Muses, Which Sadly Sit
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlix: Thou Leaden Brain
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xliv: Whilst Thus My Pen
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xliii: Why Should Your Fair Eyes
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xlii: Some Men There Be
- Michael Drayton : Sonnet Xli: Why Do I Speak Of Joy