I must complain, yet do enjoy (John Dowland): Difference between revisions
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*'''CPDL #16846:''' [{{ | *'''CPDL #16846:''' [{{SERVER}}/wiki/images/0/00/656.pdf {{pdf}}] [{{SERVER}}/brianrussell/656.mid {{mid}}] [{{SERVER}}/brianrussell/656.nwc NoteWorthy Composer] | ||
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==General Information== | ==General Information== |
Revision as of 11:53, 3 August 2011
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- CPDL #16846: NoteWorthy Composer
- Editor: Brian Russell (submitted 2008-05-07). Score information: A4, 3 pages, 27 kB Copyright: CPDL
- Edition notes:
General Information
Title: I must complaine, yet doe enioy
Composer: John Dowland
Number of voices: 4vv Voicing: SATB
Genre: Secular, Madrigal
Language: English
Instruments: a cappella
Published: 1603
Description: No. XVII from The Third and Last Booke of Songs or Aires (1603)
External websites:
Original text and translations
English text
I must complain, yet do enjoy, enjoy my love,
She is too fair, too rich in beauty's parts
Thence is my grief for nature while she strove
With all her graces and divinest arts,
To form her too, too beautiful of hue
She had no leisure, she had no leisure,
no leisure left to make her true.
Should I agrieved wish she were less, she were less fair,
that were repugnant to my own desires,
She is admired, new suitors still repair,
That kindles daily love's forgetful fires,
Rest jealous thoughts, and thus resolve at last,
She hath more beauty, she hath more beauty,
more beauty than becomes the chaste.