Dos estrofas del Testamento
Paris or die And Helene,
Whoever dies, dies That pain has
he loses wind and breath
His gall to put out its heart,
Then sue God knows what sweat!
And is that its evils the claim: For
child does, not brother sister
Who you be when its Pleiger.
Death does tremble, turn pale,
nose bend, veins tender
Col. swell, soften the flesh,
Seals and nerves to grow and expand.
femenina Corps, which both are tender,
Poly Suef, so precious, it will
Te expect these evils?
Yes or alive're going heaven.
Fragment on Death
Paris And Helen Be it or dying,
Who soever dies, dies With bread.
That He Lacks breath and wind for sighing,
His gall bursts on his heart; and then
He sweats, God knows what sweat!--again,
No man may ease him of his grief;
Child, brother, sister, none were fain
To bail him thence for his relief.
Death makes him shudder, swoon, wax pale,
Nose bend, veins stretch, and breath surrender,
Neck swell, flesh soften, joints that fail
Crack their strained nerves and arteries slender.
O woman's body found so tender,
Smooth, sweet, so precious in men's eyes,
Must thou too bear such count to render?
Yes, or quick pass Into the skies.
XL
And so is Paris and Helena,
who die, die suffering:
on its
heart bursts its own bitterness, lost breath, sweating
after God, what a sweat!
and nobody can help him,
then there
son or brother who wants to exchange the body.
XLI
shaking, pale,
veins will swell, her neck swells,
will loosen the meat, it enlarges
the tendons that connect bones ...
Oh, tender female body!
Shall suffer such torment?
You, polished, fresh and beautiful?
Yes, or live up to the heavens.
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