Classic and Contemporary Poetry
PHILOMELA: SONNET (ANSWER), by ROBERT GREENE Poet's Biography First Line: Nature foreeseing how men would devise Last Line: No more but one, and heart will never lose him. Variant Title(s): Philomela: Woman's Eyes; Answer Subject(s): Eyes; Love; Man-woman Relationships; Women; Male-female Relations | ||||||||
NATURE foreeseing how men would devise More wiles than Proteus, women to entice, Granted them two, and those bright-shining eyes, To pierce into men's faults if they were wise; For they with show of virtue mask their vice: Therefore to women's eyes belong these gifts, The one must love, the other see men's shifts. Both these await upon one simple heart, And what they choose, it hides up without change. The emerald will not with his portrait part, Nor will a woman's thoughts delight to range; They hold it bad to have so base exchange: One heart, one friend, though that two eyes do choose him, No more but one, and heart will never lose him. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MISERY AND SPLENDOR by ROBERT HASS THE APPLE TREES AT OLEMA by ROBERT HASS DOUBLE SONNET by ANTHONY HECHT CONDITIONS XXI by ESSEX HEMPHILL CALIFORNIA SORROW: MOUNTAIN VIEW by MARY KINZIE SUPERBIA: A TRIUMPH WITH NO TRAIN by MARY KINZIE COUNSEL TO UNREASON by LEONIE ADAMS TWENTY QUESTIONS by DAVID LEHMAN A FAREWELL TO FOLLY: CONTENT by ROBERT GREENE |
|