Transcription of Sonnets - DjVu
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Sonnets by WILLIAM shakespeare 1609 DjVu Editions E-books 2001, Global Language Resources, : SonnetsTable of : From fairest creatures we desire : When fortie Winters shall beseige thy : Looke in thy glasse and tell the face thou : Vnthrifty louelinesse why dost thou : Those howers that with gentle worke did : Then let not winters wragged hand : Loe in the Orient when the gracious : Musick to heare, why hear st thou musick : Is it for feare to wet a widdowes : For shame deny that thou bear st loue to : As fast as thou shalt wane so fast thou grow : When I doe count the clock that tels the : O that you were your selfe, but loue you : Not from the stars do I my iudgement : When I consider euery thing that : But wherefore do not you a mightier : Who will beleeue my verse in time to : Shall I compare thee to a Summers day?
Shakespeare: Sonnets 2: When fortie Winters shall beseige thy brow. 3: Looke in thy glasse and tell the face thou vewest Looke in thy glasse and tell the face thou vewest, Now is the time that face should forme an other, ( ) ( )
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