Sonnet 1
- From fairest creatures we desire increase
Sonnet 2
-
When forty winters shall besiege
thy brow
Sonnet 3 - Look in thy glass and
tell the face thou viewest
Sonnet 4 -
Unthrifty loveliness, why
dost thou spend
Sonnet 6 - Then let not winter's
ragged hand deface
Music to hear, why
hear'st thou music sadly
Sonnet 9 -
Is it for fear to wet a
widow's eye
Sonnet 10 -
For shame deny that thou
bear'st love to any
Sonnet 11 -
As fast as thou shalt
wane, so fast thou grow'st
When I do count the clock
that tells the time
Sonnet 13 - O! that you were
your self; but, love, you are
Sonnet 14 - Not from the stars
do I my judgement pluck;
Sonnet 15 - When I consider
every thing that grows
Sonnet 16 - But wherefore do not
you a mightier way
Sonnet 17 - Who will believe my
verse in time to come
Sonnet 18
-
Shall I compare thee to a summer's
day?
Sonnet 19 - Devouring Time,
blunt thou the lion's paws
Sonnet 20 - A woman's face with
nature's own hand painted
Sonnet 21 - So
is it not with me as with that
Muse,
Sonnet
22 - My glass shall not persuade
me I am old
Sonnet 23 - As an unperfect
actor on the stage
Sonnet 24 - Mine eye hath play'd
the painter and hath steel'd
Sonnet 25 - Let those who are in
favour with their stars
Sonnet 26 - Lord of my love, to
whom in vassalage
Sonnet
27 - Weary with toil, I haste me
to my bed
Sonnet
28 - How can I then return in
happy plight
Sonnet 29
-
When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes
Sonnet 30 - When to the sessions
of sweet silent thought
Sonnet 31 -
Thy bosom is endeared with all
hearts
Sonnet 32 -
If thou survive my well-contented day
Sonnet 33 -
Full many a glorious morning have I seen
Sonnet 34 - Why didst thou promise such a beauteous day
Sonnet 35 - No more be grieved at that which thou hast done
Sonnet 36 - Let me confess
that we two must be twain
Sonnet 37 - As a decrepit
father takes delight
Sonnet 38 - How can my muse
want subject to invent
Sonnet 39 - O! how thy worth
with manners may I sing
Sonnet 40
- Take all my loves, my love, yea, take them all
Sonnet 41 - Those petty wrongs
that liberty commits
Sonnet 42 - That thou hast her,
it is not all my grief
Sonnet 43 - When most I wink,
then do mine eyes best see
Sonnet 44
- If the dull substance of my flesh were thought
Sonnet 45 - The other two,
slight air and purging fire
Sonnet 46 - Mine eye and heart
are at a mortal war
Sonnet 47 - Betwixt mine eye and
heart a league is took
Sonnet 48 - How careful was I,
when I took my way
Sonnet 49 - Against that time,
if ever that time come
Sonnet 50 - How heavy do I
journey on the way
Sonnet 51
- Thus can my love
excuse the slow offence
Sonnet 52
- So am I as the
rich, whose blessed key
Sonnet 53
- What is your
substance, whereof are you made
Sonnet 54
- O, how much more
doth beauty beauteous seem
Sonnet 55
- Not marble, nor the
gilded monuments
Sonnet 56
- Sweet love, renew
thy force; be it not said
Sonnet 57
- Being your slave,
what should I do but tend
Sonnet 58
- That god forbid
that made me first your slave
Sonnet 59
- If there be nothing
new, but that which is
Sonnet 60
- Like as the waves
make towards the pebbled shore
Sonnet 61
- Is it thy will, thy image
should keep open
Sonnet 62 -
Sin of self-love possesseth
all mine eye
Sonnet 63
- Against my love shall be
as I am now
Sonnet
64 - When I have seen by
Time's fell hand defac'd
Sonnet 65 -
Since brass, nor stone, nor
earth, nor boundless sea
Sonnet 66 - Tired with all
these, for restful death I
cry
Sonnet 67 - Ah! wherefore
with infection should he
live
Sonnet 68 - Thus is his
cheek the map of days
outworn
Sonnet
69 - Those parts of thee
that the world's eye doth
view
Sonnet 70 - That thou art
blamed shall not be thy
defect
Sonnet 71
- No longer mourn for
me when I am dead
Sonnet 72
- O, lest the world
should task you to recite
Sonnet 73
- That time of year
thou mayst in me behold
Sonnet 74
- But be contented:
when that fell arrest
Sonnet 75
- So are you to my
thoughts as food to life
Sonnet 76
- Why is my verse so
barren of new pride
Sonnet 77
- Thy glass will show
thee how thy beauties wear
Sonnet 78
- So oft have I
invoked thee for my Muse
Sonnet 79
- Whilst I alone did
call upon thy aid
Sonnet 80
- O, how I faint when
I of you do write
Sonnet 81
- Or I shall live
your epitaph to make
Sonnet 82
- I grant thou wert
not married to my Muse
Sonnet 83
- I never saw that
you did painting need
Sonnet 84
- Who is it that says
most? which can say more
Sonnet 85
- My tongue-tied Muse
in manners holds her still
Sonnet 86
- Was it the proud
full sail of his great verse
Sonnet 87
- Farewell! thou art
too dear for my possessing
Sonnet 88
- When thou shalt be
disposed to set me light
Sonnet 89
- Say that thou didst
forsake me for some fault
Sonnet 90
- Then hate me when
thou wilt; if ever, now
Sonnet 91
- Some glory
in their birth, some in
their skill
Sonnet 92
- But do thy
worst to steal thyself
away
Sonnet 93
- So shall I
live, supposing thou art
true
Sonnet 94
- They that
have power to hurt and
will do none
Sonnet 95
- How sweet
and lovely dost thou
make the shame
Sonnet 96
- Some say
thy fault is youth, some
wantonness
Sonnet 97
- How like a
winter hath my absence
been
Sonnet 98
- From you
have I been absent in
the spring
Sonnet 99
- The forward
violet thus did I chide
Sonnet 100
- Where art
thou, Muse, that thou forget'st so long
Sonnet
101 - O truant Muse,
what shall be thy amends
Sonnet 102 - My love is strengthen'd, though
more weak in seeming
Sonnet 103 - Alack, what
poverty my Muse brings
forth
Sonnet 104 - To me, fair
friend, you never can be
old
Sonnet 105
- Let not my love be called idolatry
Sonnet 106 - When in the
chronicle of wasted time
Sonnet 107 - Not mine
own fears, nor the
prophetic soul
Sonnet 108 - What's in
the brain that ink may
character
Sonnet 109
-
O, never say that I was false of heart
Sonnet 110 - Alas, 'tis
true I have gone here
and there
Sonnet 111 - O, for my
sake do you with Fortune
chide
Sonnet 112 - Your love
and pity doth the
impression fill
Sonnet 113 - Since I
left you, mine eye is in
my mind
Sonnet 114 - Or whether
doth my mind, being crown'd with you
Sonnet 115 - Those lines
that I before have writ
do lie
Sonnet 116
- Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Sonnet 117 - Accuse me
thus: that I have
scanted all
Sonnet 118 - Like as, to
make our appetites more
keen
Sonnet 119 - What
potions have I drunk of
Siren tears
Sonnet 120 - That you
were once unkind
befriends me now
Sonnet 121
- 'Tis better
to be vile than vile
esteem'd
Sonnet 122
- Thy gift,
thy tables, are within
my brain
Sonnet 123
- No, Time,
thou shalt not boast
that I do change
Sonnet 124
- If my dear
love were but the child
of state
Sonnet 125
- Were 't
aught to me I bore the
canopy
Sonnet 126
- O thou, my
lovely boy, who in thy
power
Sonnet 127
- In the old
age black was not
counted fair
Sonnet 128
- How oft,
when thou, my music,
music play'st
Sonnet 129
- The expense
of spirit in a waste of
shame
Sonnet 130
- My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun
Sonnet 131 - Thou art as
tyrannous, so as thou
art
Sonnet 132 - Thine eyes
I love, and they, as
pitying me
Sonnet 133
- Beshrew
that heart that makes my
heart to groan
Sonnet 134
- So, now I
have confess'd that he
is thine
Sonnet 135 - Whoever
hath her wish, thou hast
thy 'Will,'
Sonnet 136
- If thy soul
cheque thee that I come
so near
Sonnet 137 - Thou blind
fool, Love, what dost
thou to mine eyes
Sonnet 138
- When my love swears that she is made of
truth
Sonnet 139 - O, call not
me to justify the wrong
Sonnet 140
- Be wise as
thou art cruel; do not
press
Sonnet 141 - In faith, I
do not love thee with
mine eyes
Sonnet 142
- Love is my
sin and thy dear virtue
hate
Sonnet 143 - Lo! as a
careful housewife runs
to catch
Sonnet 144 - Two loves I
have of comfort and
despair
Sonnet 145 - Those lips
that Love's own hand did
make
Sonnet 146 - Poor soul,
the centre of my sinful
earth
Sonnet 147
- My love is as a fever, longing still
Sonnet 148
- O ME! what eyes hath love put in my head,
Sonnet 149
- Canst thou,
O cruel! say I love thee
not
Sonnet 150 - O, from
what power hast thou
this powerful might
Sonnet 151 - Love is too
young to know what
conscience is
Sonnet 152
- In loving
thee thou know'st I am
forsworn
Sonnet 153
- Cupid laid by his brand, and fell asleep:
Sonnet 154
- The little Love-god lying once asleep