A Roundelay |
|
|
He Paints Out His Torment |
|
|
Contention of Love and Reason for his Heart |
|
|
He Demands Pardon for Looking, Loving, and Writing |
|
|
He Calls His Ears, Eyes, and Heart as Witnesses |
|
|
His Lady to be Condemned of Ignorance or Cruelty |
|
|
That She hath Greater Power Over His Happiness and Life, Than Either Fortune, Fate, or Stars |
|
|
A Dialogue Between Him and His Heart |
|
|
His Sighs and Tears are Bootless |
|
|
Why Her Lips Yield Him No Words of Comfort |
|
|