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Home  »  The Poetical Works  »  The Lover comforteth himself with the Worthiness of his Love

Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517–47). The Poetical Works. 1880.

Songs and Sonnets

The Lover comforteth himself with the Worthiness of his Love

WHEN raging love with extreme pain

Most cruelly distrains my heart;

When that my tears, as floods of rain,

Bear witness of my woful smart;

When sighs have wasted so my breath

That I lie at the point of death:

I call to mind the navy great

That the Greeks brought to Troy town:

And how the boisterous winds did beat

Their ships, and rent their sails adown;

Till Agamemnon’s daughter’s blood

Appeas’d the Gods that them withstood.

And how that in those ten years war

Full many a bloody deed was done;

And many a lord that came full far,

There caught his bane, alas! too soon;

And many a good knight overrun,

Before the Greeks had Helen won.

Then think I thus: ‘Sith such repair,

So long time war of valiant men,

Was all to win a lady fair,

Shall I not learn to suffer then?

And think my life well spent to be,

Serving a worthier wight than she?’

Therefore I never will repent,

But pains contented still endure;

For like as when, rough winter spent,

The pleasant spring straight draweth in ure;

So after raging storms of care,

Joyful at length may be my fare.