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To write a sonnet doth Juana press me, I've never found me in such stress or pain; A sonnet numbers fourteen lines, 'tis plain, And three are gone, ere I can say, God bless me! I thought that spinning rhymes might sore oppress me, Yet here I'm midway in the last quatrain; And if the foremost tercet I can gain, The quatrains need not any more distress me. To the first tercet I have got at last, And travel through it with such right good will, That with this line I've finished it, I ween; I'm in the second now, and see how fast The thirteenth line runs tripping from my quill; Hurrah, 'tis done! Count if there be fourteen!
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May 10, 2017
May 10, 2017 at 2:15 PM UTC
Sonnet on The Sonnet by Lope de Vega (1562-1635) Translated by James Y. Gibson
To write a sonnet doth Juana press me, I've never found me in such stress or pain; A sonnet numbers fourteen lines, 'tis plain, And three are gone, ere I can say, God bless me! I thought that spinning rhymes might sore oppress me, Yet here I'm midway in the last quatrain; And if the foremost tercet I can gain, The quatrains need not any more distress me. To the first tercet I have got at last, And travel through it with such right good will, That with this line I've finished it, I ween; I'm in the second now, and see how fast The thirteenth line runs tripping from my quill; Hurrah, 'tis done! Count if there be fourteen!
From Lope de Vega's "Nina de Plata". One of my all-time favourite sonnets from a prolific Spanish poet/playwright.
traci-sims
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May 10, 2017
May 10, 2017 at 2:15 PM UTC
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