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Sonnet: Love and the Gentle

Love and the gentle heart are one same thing,

Even as the wise man in his ditty saith.

Each, of itself, would be such life in death

As rational soul bereft of reasoning.

'Tis Nature makes them when she loves: a king

Love is, whose palace where he sojourneth

Is call'd the Heart; there draws he quiet breath

At first, with brief or longer slumbering.

Then beauty seen in virtuous womankind

Will make the eyes desire, and through the heart

Send the desiring of the eyes again;

Where often it abides so long enshrined

That Love at length out of his sleep will start.

And women feel the same for worthy men.

Written by
Dante Alighieri
1265-1321 / Male / Italian
Lines·Words
14·112
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