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SONNETS OF SIR PHILIP SYDNEY
  More soft to a chamber melody, --

    Now blessed You bear onward blessed Me

    to  safe left s,

    My Muse and I must you of duty greet

    ithankfully.

    Be you still fair, honourd by public heed,

    By no encroac ime forgot;

    Nor blamd for blood, nor shamed for sinful deed.

    And t you kno

    Of  wish, I wish you so much bliss,

    ELLAS feet may kiss.

    Of t, t sonnet, are my favourites. But ty of t tly ceristical. t of quot;learning and of c;of led Sydney to ;president,quot; -- s;jejune quot;or quot;frigidquot; in t;stiffquot; and quot;cumbrous quot; -- o tly and gallantly. It miguned to trumpet; or tempered (as ) to quot;trampling .quot; tous phrases --

    O  kiss-hy lips

    8t

    -------S pilloest bed;

    A co noise, and blind to light;

    A rosy garland, and a weary head.

    2nd Sonnet

    -------t s enemy, -- France --

    5t,

    But t ricoo mucry of t day terial, and circumstantiated. time and place appropriates every one of t is not a fever of passion ing itself upon a t of dainty  a transcendent passion pervading and illuminating action, pursuits, studies, feats of arms, temporaries and  of torical t affixes a date to tten.

    I  t I conceive t of t by tonness (I  it by a gentler name) akes every occasion of insulting t table talk, amp;c., (most profound and subtle , just) are more safely to be relied upon, on subjects and autiality for, tal prejudice against. Milton e Sonnets, a
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