Sinetes passions vppon his fortunes offered for an incense at the shrine of the ladies which guided his distempered thoughtes. The patrons patheticall posies, sonets, maddrigals, and rowndelayes. Together with Sinetes dompe. By Robert Parry Gent.

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Title
Sinetes passions vppon his fortunes offered for an incense at the shrine of the ladies which guided his distempered thoughtes. The patrons patheticall posies, sonets, maddrigals, and rowndelayes. Together with Sinetes dompe. By Robert Parry Gent.
Author
Parry, Robert, fl. 1540-1612.
Publication
At London :: Printed by T[homas] P[urfoot] for William Holme, and are to be sould on Ludgate hill at the signe of the holy Lambe,
1597.
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"Sinetes passions vppon his fortunes offered for an incense at the shrine of the ladies which guided his distempered thoughtes. The patrons patheticall posies, sonets, maddrigals, and rowndelayes. Together with Sinetes dompe. By Robert Parry Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A09044.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 14, 2025.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

Sonetto. 27 Daungers altered delayes in loue. (Book 27)

THe heart inthraul'd with loues •…•…ttractiue force, (Whose hope doth martch with honours equipage, When reason doth his true desertes remorse) Must take his time his sorrowes to assuage: For cheeries ripe will not so long endure, But will in time, fade, wither, and decay, That which this day, could finest witts allure; To morrowe, CORIDON doth cast away, The Iron being hot who list not for to strike, Shall sure, being colde, neu'r forge it to his minde, And all those partes, moueth loue to like; Doe oft (in time) make loue to proue vnkinde.
Eu'n so in time daunger attends delaye, For time and tide for no mans pleasures staye.
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