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Amour 20

By Michael Drayton

Topics: classic

Reading sometyme, my sorrowes to beguile,     I find old Poets hylls and floods admire:     One, he doth wonder monster-breeding Nyle,     Another meruailes Sulphure Aetnas fire.     Now broad-brymd Indus, then of Pindus height,     Pelion and Ossa, frosty Caucase old,     The Delian Cynthus, then Olympus weight,     Slow Arrer, franticke Gallus, Cydnus cold.     Some Ganges, Ister, and of Tagus tell,     Some whir-poole Po, and slyding Hypasis;     Some old Pernassus where the Muses dwell,     Some Helycon, and some faire Simois:         A, fooles! thinke I, had you Idea seene,         Poore Brookes and Banks had no such wonders beene.

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"Reading sometyme, my sorrowes to beguile,..."

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Author:Michael Drayton

"Reading sometyme, my sorrowes to beguile,..." by Michael Drayton

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Michael Drayton

About Michael Drayton

Michael Drayton (1563–1631) was an English poet whose "Poly-Olbion" (1612–1622) is a vast topographical poem describing the landscape and legends of England and Wales. His sonnet "Since there's no help" is among the finest of the Elizabethan era.

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"DORILVS in sorrowes deepe,         Autumne waxing ..."

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