Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
Nonfictions
 
Authors
All Titles
 






In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Edmund Spenser > Text of Amoretti: Sonnet 43

A poem by Edmund Spenser

Amoretti: Sonnet 43

________________________________________________
Title:     Amoretti: Sonnet 43
Author: Edmund Spenser [More Titles by Spenser]

Shall I then silent be, or shall I speake?
And if I speake, her wrath renew I shall;
And if I silent be, my hart will breake,
Or choked be with overflowing gall.
What tyranny is this, both my hart to thrall,
And eke my toung with proud restraint to tie,
That neither I may speake nor thinke at all,
But like a stupid stock in silence die!
Yet I my hart with silence secretly
Will teach to speak and my just cause to plead,
And eke mine eies, with meek humility,
Love-learned letters to her eyes to read;
Which her deep wit, that true harts thought can spel,
Wil soon conceive, and learne to construe well.





[The end]
Edmund Spenser's poem: Amoretti: Sonnet 43

________________________________________________



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN