A Vision upon the Fairy Queen

A Vision Vpon This Conceipt of the Faery Queene
Walter Raleigh

First printed in 1590, as a commendatory poem at the front of Spenser's The Faerie Queene.
Raleigh imagines the tomb of Petrarch's Laura under the care of Love and Virtue. They depart to follow Spenser's Fairy Queen, leaving behind only Oblivion for Petrarch.

4474729A Vision Vpon This Conceipt of the Faery QueeneWalter Raleigh

Me thought I saw the graue where Laura lay,
Within that Temple, where the vestall flame
Was wont to burne; and passing by that way,
To see that buried dust of liuing fame,
Whose tombe faire loue and fairer vertue kept;
All suddeinly I saw the Faery Queene:
At whose approch the soule of Petrarke wept;
And from thenceforth, those graces were not seene,
For they this Queene attended: in whose steed
Obliuion laid him downe on Lauras herse:
Hereat the hardest stones were seene to bleed,
And grones of buried ghostes the heuens did perse,
Where Homers spright did tremble all for griefe,
And curst th' accesse of that celestiall theife.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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