|
My mistress' eyes
are nothing like the sun; |
|
Coral is far more
red than her lips' red; |
|
If snow be white,
why then her breasts are dun; |
|
If hairs be wires,
black wires grow on her head. |
|
I have seen roses damask'd, red and white, |
|
But no such roses
see I in her cheeks; |
|
And in some
perfumes is there more delight |
|
Than in the breath
that from my mistress reeks. |
|
I love to hear her
speak, yet well I know |
|
That music hath a
far more pleasing sound; |
|
I grant I never saw
a goddess go; |
|
My mistress, when
she walks, treads on the ground: |
|
And
yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare |
|
As any
she belied with false compare. |
William Shakespeare’s Sonnet # 130