Chapter 26 of 52 · 251 words · ~1 min read

XIV.

TAKE THOSE LIPS AWAY.

The first stanza of this little sonnet, which an eminent critic[885] justly admires for its extreme sweetness, is found in Shakespeare's _Measure for Measure_, act iv. sc. 1. Both the stanzas are preserved in Beaum. and Fletcher's _Bloody Brother_, act v. sc. 2. Sewel and Gildon have printed it among Shakespeare's smaller poems, but they have done the same by twenty other pieces that were never writ by him; their book being a wretched heap of inaccuracies and mistakes. It is not found in Jaggard's old edition of Shakespeare's _Passionate Pilgrim_,[886] &c.

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[The second stanza is an evident addition by another and inferior hand, so that Percy's expression above--"both the stanzas are preserved"--gives a false impression.]

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Take, oh take those lips away, That so sweetlye were forsworne; And those eyes, the breake of day, Lights, that do misleade the morne: But my kisses bring againe, 5 Seales of love, but seal'd in vaine

Hide, oh hide those hills of snowe, Which thy frozen bosom beares, On whose tops the pinkes that growe, Are of those that April wears: 10 But first set my poor heart free, Bound in those icy chains by thee.

FOOTNOTES:

[885] Dr. Warburton in his _Shakesp._

[886] Mr. Malone, in his improved edition of Shakespeare's _Sonnets_, &c. hath substituted this instead of Marlow's Madrigal, printed above; for which he hath assigned reasons, which the reader may see in his vol. x. p. 340.