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Michael Drayton - Sonnet XXV: O Why Should Nature

O why should Nature niggardly restrain 
That foreign nations relish not our tongue? 
Else should my lines glide on the waves of Rhene 
And crown the Pyrens with my living song. 
But, bounded thus, to Scotland get you forth, 
Thence take you wing unto the Orcades; 
There let my verse get glory in the North, 
Making my sighs to thaw the frozen seas; 
And let the Bards within that Irish isle, 
To whom my Muse with fiery wing shall pass, 
Call back the stiff-neck'd rebels from exile, 
And mollify the slaught'ring Gallowglass; 
And when my flowing numbers they rehearse, 
Let wolves and bears be charmed with my verse. 

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Added: Mar 17 2005 | Viewed: 1169 times | Comments (0)

Sonnet XXV: O Why Should Nature - Comments and Information

Poet: Michael Drayton
Poem: Sonnet XXV: O Why Should Nature

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