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Home  »  Elizabethan Sonnets  »  Sonnet 57. You best discerned of my mind’s inward eyes

Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.

Idea

Sonnet 57. You best discerned of my mind’s inward eyes

Michael Drayton (1563–1631)

[First printed in 1605 (No. 57), and in all later editions.]

YOU best discerned of my mind’s inward eyes,

And yet your graces outwardly Divine,

Whose dear remembrance in my bosom lies,

Too rich a relic for so poor a shrine.

You, in whom Nature chose herself to view,

When she, her own perfection would admire;

Bestowing all her excellence on you,

At whose pure eyes, LOVE lights his hallowed fire;

Even as a man that in some trance hath seen

More than his wondring utterance can unfold;

That, rapt in spirit, in better worlds hath been.

So must your praise distractedly be told!

Most of all short, when I would shew you most,

In your perfections so much am I lost.