Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
ChlorisSonnet XLIV. When I more large thy praises forth shall show
William Smith (fl. 1596)W
That all the World thy beauty shall admire;
Desiring that most sacred Nymph to know,
Which hath the Shepherd’s fancy set on fire.
Till then, my dear, let these thine eyes content
Till then, fair Love, think if I merit favour!
Till then, O let thy merciful assent
Relish my hopes with some comforting savour!
So shall you add such courage to my Muse,
That she shall climb the steep Parnassus’ Hill:
That learned Poets shall my deeds peruse,
When I from thence obtainèd have more skill.
And what I sing shall always be of thee,
As long as life, or breath, remains in me.