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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of George Wither > Text of Sonnet: On the Death of Prince Henry

A poem by George Wither

Sonnet: On the Death of Prince Henry

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Title:     Sonnet: On the Death of Prince Henry
Author: George Wither [More Titles by Wither]

Methought his royal person did foretell
A kingly stateliness, from all pride clear;
His look majestic seemed to compel
All men to love him, rather than to fear.
And yet though he were every good man's joy,
And the alonely comfort of his own,
His very name with terror did annoy
His foreign foes so far as he was known.
Hell drooped for fear; the Turkey moon looked pale;
Spain trembled; and the most tempestuous sea,
(Where Behemoth, the Babylonish whale,
Keeps all his bloody and imperious plea)
Was swoln with rage, for fear he'd stop the tide
Of her o'er-daring and insulting pride.





[The end]
George Wither's poem: Sonnet: On the Death of Prince Henry

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