The Devonshire Manuscript/The fruite of all the seruise that I serue
Introduction | Contributors | Textual Introduction |
f. [72r]
1 The fruite of all the ser{{s}8}uise that I ser{{s}8} ue
2 Dispaire doth repe such haples hap have I
3 but tho he have no powre to make me swarve
4 yet bye the fire for colde I fele I dye /
5 In paradis for hunger{g'} still I sterve
6 and In the flowde / for thurste to deth I drye
7 so tantalus am I and yn worst payne
8 andyd es{es} my helpe / & helples dothe remayne /s amidst
fs
Commentary
[edit | edit source]Attributed to Sir Thomas Wyatt,[1] this poem was entered by H8. This poem features an interesting use of Petrarch’s contraries: the speaker feels cold by the fire, hungers in paradise, and thirsts in a flood. Despite the proximity of the adored, the speaker remains despondent.
Works Cited
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