In this category:

    FLEURSDUMAL POETRY LIBRARY - classic, modern, experimental & visual & sound poetry, poetry in translation, city poets, poetry archive, pre-raphaelites, editor's choice, etc.
    CLASSIC POETRY
    Shakespeare, William
    -Shakespeare Sonnets

New on FdM

  1. Fame is a bee by Emily Dickinson
  2. Ask me no more by Alfred Lord Tennyson
  3. Keith Douglas: How to Kill
  4. Christine de Pisan: Comme surpris
  5. Conrad Ferdinand Meyer: In der Sistina
  6. Emma Lazarus: Age and Death
  7. William Blake’s Universe
  8. Natalie Amiri & Düzen Tekkal: Nous n’avons pas peur. Le courage des femmes iraniennes
  9. Much Madness is divinest Sense by Emily Dickinson
  10. Death. A spirit sped by Stephen Crane

Or see the index

All categories

  1. AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE (11)
  2. AUDIO, CINEMA, RADIO & TV (217)
  3. DANCE & PERFORMANCE (59)
  4. DICTIONARY OF IDEAS (178)
  5. EXHIBITION – art, art history, photos, paintings, drawings, sculpture, ready-mades, video, performing arts, collages, gallery, etc. (1,498)
  6. FICTION & NON-FICTION – books, booklovers, lit. history, biography, essays, translations, short stories, columns, literature: celtic, beat, travesty, war, dada & de stijl, drugs, dead poets (3,776)
  7. FLEURSDUMAL POETRY LIBRARY – classic, modern, experimental & visual & sound poetry, poetry in translation, city poets, poetry archive, pre-raphaelites, editor's choice, etc. (4,699)
  8. LITERARY NEWS & EVENTS – art & literature news, in memoriam, festivals, city-poets, writers in Residence (1,604)
  9. MONTAIGNE (110)
  10. MUSEUM OF LOST CONCEPTS – invisible poetry, conceptual writing, spurensicherung (54)
  11. MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY – department of ravens & crows, birds of prey, riding a zebra, spring, summer, autumn, winter (177)
  12. MUSEUM OF PUBLIC PROTEST (137)
  13. MUSIC (216)
  14. PRESS & PUBLISHING (90)
  15. REPRESSION OF WRITERS, JOURNALISTS & ARTISTS (112)
  16. STORY ARCHIVE – olv van de veestraat, reading room, tales for fellow citizens (16)
  17. STREET POETRY (46)
  18. THEATRE (185)
  19. TOMBEAU DE LA JEUNESSE – early death: writers, poets & artists who died young (348)
  20. ULTIMATE LIBRARY – danse macabre, ex libris, grimm & co, fairy tales, art of reading, tales of mystery & imagination, sherlock holmes theatre, erotic poetry, ideal women (223)
  21. WAR & PEACE (125)
  22. · (2)

Or see the index



  1. Subscribe to new material: RSS

William Shakespeare: Sonnet 72

William Shakespeare

(1564-1616)

THE SONNETS

 

72

O lest the world should task you to recite,

What merit lived in me that you should love

After my death (dear love) forget me quite,

For you in me can nothing worthy prove.

Unless you would devise some virtuous lie,

To do more for me than mine own desert,

And hang more praise upon deceased I,

Than niggard truth would willingly impart:

O lest your true love may seem false in this,

That you for love speak well of me untrue,

My name be buried where my body is,

And live no more to shame nor me, nor you.

For I am shamed by that which I bring forth,

And so should you, to love things nothing worth.

 

kempis.nl poetry magazine

More in: -Shakespeare Sonnets

Previous and Next Entry

« | »

Thank you for reading Fleurs du Mal - magazine for art & literature