Part, Dialogue
1 1, 1| following sonnet:~5.~Beloved, sweet, and honourable wound,~From
2 1, 1| and joy the sore give me?~Sweet is my pain: to this world
3 1, 1| breast,~For languishing is sweet and burning best.~Fate vexes
4 1, 1| good, but an acute evil; sweet, not sweet, but an agonized
5 1, 1| an acute evil; sweet, not sweet, but an agonized longing;
6 1, 2| bitter, there would be no sweet; seeing that it is through
7 1, 3| and the chains.~If it be sweet in plaintiveness to droop,~
8 1, 3| soothing is the ardour, sweet the smart.~So high the light
9 1, 5| rapture, no delight,~So sweet, so grateful, so divine,~
10 1, 5| in this state are not so sweet that they have not united
11 2, 1| sour, with bitter and with sweet~Experience, the fruits,
12 2, 1| bitter joy, and through sweet pain,~Weighted with lead,
13 2, 1| anger and the ire of my sweet enemy~Cease not to wound
14 2, 1| in restrainment, and the sweet angers which are the efficacious
15 2, 1| magistracy, nothing more sweet and dear, no food to be
16 2, 1| What would'st thou more, sweet foe?~What wish is that which
17 2, 4| that it is converted into sweet and proper nutriment, and
18 2, 4| which are really good and sweet according to common nature;
19 2, 5| turning cruel pain~Into a sweet content,~Two lovely stars
20 2, 5| rivers, seas,~How dear and sweet you show yourselves, For
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