0
Amoretti: Sonnet 18 - Edmund Spenser
0 0

Amoretti: Sonnet 18 Edmund Spenser

"Amoretti: Sonnet 18" by Edmund Spenser, a classic poem, explores themes of love, beauty, and the passage of time. Spenser praises his beloved's enduring beauty, suggesting that true love immortalizes the beloved through verse. The lyrical meaning emphasizes love's power to transcend mortality. #Classical, 1595. Its cultural impact lies in its influence on romantic poetry.

Amoretti: Sonnet 18 - Edmund Spenser
The rolling wheele that runneth often round,
    The hardest steele in tract of time doth teare:
    and drizling drops that often doe redound,
    the firmest flint doth in continuance weare.
Yet cannot I with many a dropping teare,
    and long intreaty soften her hard hart:
    that she will once vouchsafe my plaint to heare,
    or looke with pitty on my payneful smart.
But when I pleade, she bids me play my part,
    and when I weep, she sayes teares are but water:
    and when I sigh, she sayes I know the art,
    and when I waile she turnes hir selfe to laughter.
So doe I weepe, and wayle, and pleade in vaine,
    whiles she as steele and flint doth still remayne.
Comments (0)
The minimum comment length is 50 characters.
Information
There are no comments yet. You can be the first!
Login Register
Log into your account
And gain new opportunities
Forgot your password?