RACISM

In 1958 when I was a fourth grader our family moved to Quonset Point, Rhode Island where my dad was soon promoted to lead HS-11, one of the Navy jet-helicopter squadrons defending the east coast from attack by Russian submarines.

We moved to Quonset Point with some trepidation because Hoskins Park — the housing project for military families in those days (now sold, redeveloped, and renamed Wickford Point) — had a long waiting list; we didn’t know where we would live or if we could afford off-base housing.

As it turned out, we got a lucky break. A Navy Lieutenant — who was a Negro — moved his family into Hoskins Park. Some white officers found out and decided their families weren’t going to live in non-segregated housing. As a result, vacancies popped-up, and we got in; we moved-in next door to the Negro officer and his family.


In 1958, my family moved to Quonset Point, Rhode Island. Inexpensive on-base housing was overcrowded. We didn’t know where we would live, or if we could afford to live anywhere.

Lieutenant Brown, his wife and two daughters, lived in the two-story, condo-style apartment on the other side of a thin concrete wall from us.

Despite the custom that white and black families didn’t fraternize in those days, eventually I had encounters, conversations, and interactions with all the members of the Brown family.

Over time, I came to understand how traumatized they were, each in their own way, living in a country that, basically, isolated and mistreated them.


Guess-Whos-Coming-to-Dinner
My parents accepted an invitation to the Brown’s for dinner — an event that had all the drama of the movie, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, released nine years later, in 1967.

One encounter involved my parents. The Browns invited them for dinner to get acquainted, and after agonizing about it, Mom and Dad accepted.  I think Dad wanted to check them out; to make sure his kids would be “safe” living next door.

After the meal, Dad reported that the Lieutenant’s wife, Jean (Alston), was a good cook, but he couldn’t shake a queasy feeling in his stomach, which spoiled his appetite. He had never interacted with negroes, except servants (everyone called black people negroes in the 1950s); he certainly had not eaten food at the same table. And, unlike my dad, Mr. Brown was a graduate of the Naval Academy.

In that sense, the lieutenant kind of outranked him. According to dad, Academy graduates favored one another and worked hard to help each other achieve promotions. They put non-Academy graduates (like dad) to great disadvantage in the competition for rank, which was fierce inside the Navy.

A black Academy graduate presented a dilemma. Brown was a graduate of the elite Naval Academy with all its privileges and protections; at the same time, he belonged to a race that was, to put it politely, undervalued both by the Navy and the country at large. It was unfamiliar terrain for dad and made him uncomfortable. I remember my parents writing a thank-you note to the Brown’s for their hospitality but as far as I know, they didn’t return an invitation.

Another incident occurred a few weeks later that changed the way I thought about people and what they sometimes go through. It happened on a day when my fourth-grade teacher decided to punish me for violation of good-citizenship. I sassed her, she claimed, because I insisted — in a loud voice before classmates — she couldn’t tell me what to do! She wasn’t my parent!

In my mind, it made sense. To show how wrong I was, she kept me after school to clean the blackboard. She forced me to practice my reading. I left school an hour late.

When I arrived home, I saw Billie — Lieutenant Brown’s sixth-grade daughter — standing on her porch a few feet from ours, crying, and shifting back and forth on her feet in a puddle of — I took a second look to be sure — her own pee. I couldn’t believe it; I didn’t know what to say or do. I ran inside our condo to tell mom.

I wish I could say that Mom brought Billie into our place, helped her clean-up, and gave her a secure place to wait until her mom got home with a key. But mother did nothing like that. Instead, she became animated and began to marvel about how such an embarrassing calamity could befall a sweet girl like Billie. I became annoyed. Why didn’t she ask us?  I interrupted. We would have let her use our bathroom!

Maybe she was afraid to ask, mom said. Maybe she was afraid we would say, no.

So afraid she let her stomach burst? I yelled.


Little Rock 9 segregation racism black suffering
1957. Daisy Bates tries to enter Central High in Little Rock, Arkansas. President Eisenhower sent the 101st Airborne Division to rescue her and eight other students from angry whites. It was the following year that our family moved to Quonset Point, Rhode Island.

Some weeks after, I stood alone in the playground behind our building when Billie walked up. We didn’t speak but sat down together on the ground to draw pictures in the gray clay beneath us — clay the housing complex we shared was built on.

It didn’t seem right to sit with someone and not talk but I couldn’t think of anything to say. Billie was a couple of years older. We had little in common, it seemed. We concentrated for a while, in silence, on our art.

Then, she looked up. She fixed her eyes on mine. I didn’t look away. I tried to hold her gaze. Finally, she whispered. She said simply, I hate being colored.

I felt the blood drain from my face. Hate was a bad word. We didn’t use the word hate in our family.

To hear Billie whisper, hate, about herself — hate about something she had no control over or responsibility for, which she couldn’t change, wish away, or escape — upended my internal world. In that moment, the ground shifted beneath my feet.

Somehow, hearing her speak those words — and the mental image I had created in my memory of the day she danced in a pool of her own urine — conflated in my mind. As Billie waded ankle-deep in her own bodily fluids, I heard her screaming.  I hate being colored!!!  I hate it!!  I hate it!  I hate it. 

In my imagination, I took my place beside her. I raged against God and all the earth for making her colored; for allowing white people to be so insensitive, so mean, so un-caring, so ill-tempered, so prejudiced. 

—————

Billie’s father supervised a motor-pool near, but outside, the Quonset Point military base. According to friends of my mom, he was some kind of gas-station attendant. One warm day, he saw me playing outside and asked if I wanted to take a ride with him in his new convertible. I said sure.

He said he wanted to show me something. He was in charge of something and wanted to show me what it was. He wanted to show me what he did. At his work. 

I thought, this is a crazy request. After all, I didn’t know what my own dad did. He’d never taken me to work or showed me anything having to do with what he was about when he wasn’t home.

So, I climbed into Mr. Brown’s convertible, top down, and off we went. It turned out that he was good at small talk. I listened happily to his resonant voice and enjoyed the sun and warm breezes as we rambled along. We passed through some old guard shacks, a few barbed-wire-topped chain-link fences, and entered an area so remote and wild, it was hard to believe we were still in Rhode Island.

We drove through a dense grove of trees and up onto a hill. Mr. Brown slowed the car and stopped. The sun blazed into the open convertible. Look, he said. He frowned, then nudged my shoulder and pointed. Look down there. 


M113a
There were more military vehicles under Navy Lieutenant Brown’s command than I imagined there were cars in the entire world.  This photo of a military motor-pool in a western state reminds me of what I saw in Rhode Island.

Below us for as far as my eyes could see, in a valley that stretched to the very edge of Earth, sat thousands of green and gray trucks and jeeps; armored personnel carriers and tanks; military vehicles of every stripe and size, all neatly parked in long straight lines. As a naive fourth grader, I found the view hard to take in. There lay spread below us more vehicles than I imagined existed in the entire world. 

It was the second time a member of the Brown family stunned me. I was speechless. Then I said, you’re in charge of all of those trucks?  Navy Lieutenant Brown smiled, sadly, I thought, then looked at me like Billie had.

I am, he said.

Billy Lee

Editor’s Postscript:  This story is grounded in the memories of a fourth grader of events that occurred almost sixty years ago. The make of Mr. Brown’s car and the nature of the installation visited may or may not be accurate. 

After writing this article, Billy Lee learned that Mr. Brown, sadly, passed away on May 22, 2012, at age 85 from cancer. After reading old press releases, he discovered that historian Robert J. Schneller had published a book in 2005 about Mr. Brown’s experiences at the Naval Academy called Breaking the Color Barrier. In 1949, it turns out, Midshipman Brown became the school’s first black graduate. 

Unknown to Billy Lee, Wesley Brown had become an historical figure. Billy Lee has asked the Editors to add biographical notes to his post.

In 1958, neither Billy Lee nor Mr. Brown’s neighbors knew that the young Naval officer owned the distinction of being the first black midshipman to graduate from the Naval Academy. In the racial climate of the 1950’s, an achievement like Mr. Brown’s would have been seen as the exception that proved the rule: Negroes were inferior. It would have been bad taste in polite society to call attention to Lieutenant Brown’s achievement. 

None of Wesley’s neighbors, Billy Lee recalls, had any idea of the hell he went through to become a Naval officer. In any event, white people in 1958 were so blinded by racism that they would have thought, had they known: Wesley’s accomplishment was of no consequence; it was not worth mentioning or even thinking about. 

It’s hard to believe now, but white Americans in 1958 didn’t know their country had a race problem.


esley Brown was the first black graduate of the Naval Academy. During his four years at the Academy, where he studied engineering, he lived alone. He said he didn't want a roommate. I believe he yearned for one, but no one would share a room with him. Wesley was gracious and had too much class to call attention to the racism of his mates who were the best and brightest young men in the USA at that time. Prevented by racists from joining the Academy choir, he joined the track team where an upperclassman, the future President Jimmy Carter, befriended him.
Wesley Brown was the first black graduate of the Naval Academy.  Because no white midshipmen would share a room with him, he lived alone during the four years it took to earn his engineering degree. When classmates blocked his admission to the academy choir, Wesley joined the cross-country track team where future President and upperclassman, Jimmy Carter, befriended him.

wesley brown


Wesley Brown became the first black American to survive the racial hazing at the Naval Academy and graduate. I knew him to be a happy person with a charitable attitude toward all people. He was a kind and gentle neighbor who, during the year of 1958, made me feel good each time I saw or spent time with him.

His wife, Jean (Alston), led our church choir and taught me to sing. We did a television show under her direction. His daughter, Willetta (Billie), transformed my view of the world with a single sentence. I read somewhere that Carol, the youngest daughter, did well in life.

After our families parted ways, Wesley’s family grew to include sons. Eventually, Wesley Brown and Jean divorced; Wesley married Crystal Malone in 1963. He rose to the rank of Lieutenant Commander before retiring in 1969 to pursue other interests.

As my story tells, it was racism in the Navy that made it possible for me to know the Browns. Midshipman Wesley Brown changed America for the better. He suffered to accomplish it, but he kept his pain to himself and his closest friends.

I am proud to say that once, I knew Wesley Brown and he knew me.

Billy Lee

ELECTION 2014

In an effort to bring common sense to government, citizens of the United States voted yesterday to restore control of the Senate and House of Representatives to the Republican Party. Barack Hussein Obama, the Kenyan usurper — the first modern president to misplace his birth certificate called the vote, idiotic.


Kenyan Usurper Barack Obama (KUBO)

Republicans have vowed to quickly demonstrate their ability to lead by promising to impeach both President Obama and VP Joe Biden so that sobbing John Boehner — the House Majority Leader (and next in line) — can ascend to the Oval Office.

Boehner, for his part, pledged to repeal the Affordable Care Act and return health-care in America to what it has always been — unaffordable.


Sobbing John Boehner
Sobbing John Boehner

The Grand Old Party promised to eliminate taxes on anyone earning over one-million dollars per year to “free up the economy” and bring prosperity to America — like was done in 2008, at the end of the Bush administration.


St Andrews
The GOP pledged to improve racial segregation by offering low cost loans to gated communities, exclusive golf resorts, and home-schoolers.

Triumphant GOP honchos guaranteed they will annihilate ISIS, totally eradicate diseases like Ebola and the dreaded GAY, and make Ted Cruz a household name. They pledged to intensify the national campaign to improve racial segregation by offering low-interest loans to gated-communities, private golf-resorts and home-schools.

And — in a bold election year tip-of-the-hat to Alaska, Wisconsin and Michigan — they swore to raise the temperature of planet Earth to a more comfortable setting by ignoring silly scientists who are always belly-aching about global warming.


GOP leader promised mandatory firearms training for preschoolers.
GOP leaders agreed to work with Democrats to fund firearms training for preschoolers.

GOP paladins vowed to construct a half-mile wide oil-filled ignite-able moat (you know, the kind they dig around castles) to stop the huddled Mexican masses yearning to breathe free from ever crossing the border into the United States again.

Last (but not least) they agreed to work with Democrats to fund firearms training for preschoolers.

happy-Jesus
Not Jesus.

Christian leaders praised today’s election results: it pleased Jesus, it really did, to learn that responsible, rich people with good values were finally going to fix things in America.

No more Muslim presidents, GOP preachers asserted confidently.  Nor brown-skinned, another giggled.

Billy Lee

SHAKESPEARE SONNET GEMSTONES

ShakespeareI know almost nothing about the man, William (Will) Shakespeare. Over the centuries, scholars have questioned many of the details of his life including his birth, circumstances of his death, his sexuality, and his authorship of various works. It seems it might not be possible for any modern person to know anything they can fully trust about the man himself.

I’ve yet to take a college course on Shakespeare or perform in one of his plays. I have attended theatrical performances and watched movie enactments. Mostly, I’ve read his plays and his poetry, not much more. His work is suffused in unique hues, which easily identify his authorship. When reading Shakespeare, my interest is always in his unusual use of language, which appeals to me more than that of any other English-speaking writer or poet.

Shakespeare, whoever he was, had a gift for language which seems to have seduced nearly every person of letters I’ve ever met. He had a talent for drawing attention to the nuances of meaning through a peculiar juxtaposition of his singular syntax with unexpected context.

Shakespeare’s pen tugs and pulls on the corroded wires in our brains to make new schematics. His ink flushes out the rust and lubricates the synapses to enable fresh and completely radical transformations of our internal world. Best of all, his complex literary architecture provides a grand space where readers can safely explore many of the raw subtleties of life, love, power, sorrow, decline and death.

I love Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s language thrills me. I agree with Poet Laureate, Donald Hall, who once observed that Shakespeare’s writing is among the most densely strewn (with gems) of any literature in the world.

shakespeare sonnetsIn this article are collected — from Shakespeare’s Sonnets — over one-hundred and fifty of his brightest jewels and most dazzling gemstones. I don’t much care about the size or carat of a crystal — or its clarity. Color and cut are what fascinate me. If the excerpt doesn’t sparkle, it isn’t on my list. 

The scintillas in this sample are in order of their appearance in the Sonnets. They make up a kind of Reader’s Digest abridgement, which should enable readers to glean some of Shakespeare’s best lines without having to spend several hours reading all one-hundred and fifty-four chapters.


From Shakespeare’s Sonnets:

…making a famine where abundance lies, thyself thy foe, to thy sweet self too cruel.

When forty winters shall besiege thy brow, and dig deep trenches in thy beauty’s field, thy youth’s proud livery, so gazed on now, will be a tatter’d weed, of small worth held.

Thou art thy mother’s glass, and she in thee calls back the lovely April of her prime.

Die single, and thine image dies with thee.

…sap check’d with frost and lusty leaves quite gone, beauty o’ersnow’d and bareness everywhere: then, were not summer’s distillation left, a liquid prisoner pent in walls of glass…

…thou art much too fair to be death’s conquest and make worms thine heir.

Sweets with sweets war not…


shakespeare sonnet
Is it for fear to wet a widow’s eye that thou consumes thyself in single life?

Is it for fear to wet a widow’s eye that thou consumes thyself in single life?

The world will be thy widow and still weep…

But beauty’s waste hath in the world an end, and kept unused, the user so destroys it.

For thou art so possess’d with murderous hate that ‘gainst thyself thou stick’st not to conspire, seeking that beauteous roof to ruinate which to repair should be thy chief desire.

Make thee another self, for love of me.

…violet past prime, and sable curls all silver’d o’re with white…

…barren rage of death’s eternal cold…

Thy end is truth’s and beauty’s doom and date.

…wasteful Time debateth with Decay to change your day of youth to sullied night…

…my verse…is but as a tomb which hides your life and shows not half your parts.

Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines…

Pluck the keen teeth from the fierce tiger’s jaws, and burn the long-lived phoenix in her blood…

Yet, do thy worst, old Time: despite thy wrong, my love shall in my verse ever live young.

An eye more bright than theirs, less false in rolling, gilding the object whereupon it gazeth; a man in hue, all hues in his controlling, which steals men’s eyes and women’s souls amazeth.

With sun and moon, with earth and sea’s rich gems…

…not so bright as those gold candles fix’d in heaven’s air…

For all that beauty that doth cover thee is but the seemly raiment of my heart…

For at a frown they in their glory die.  The painful warrior famoused for fight, after a thousand victories once foil’d, is from the book of honor razed quite, and all the rest forgot for which he toil’d.


aquatic couple embracing underwater
…thy soul’s thought, all naked… …puts apparel on my tatter’d loving.

…thy soul’s thought, all naked…  …puts apparel on my tatter’d loving, to show me worthy of thy sweet respect…

And keep my drooping eyelids open wide, looking on darkness which the blind do see…

…like a jewel hung in ghastly night, makes black night beauteous and her old face new…

But day by night, and night by day, oppress’d?  And each, though enemies to either’s reign, do in consent shake hands to torture me…

For thy sweet love remember’d such wealth brings that then I scorn to change my state with kings.

Then can I drown an eye, unused to flow, for precious friends hid in death’s dateless night, and weep afresh love’s long since cancell’d woe, and moan the expense of many a vanish’d sight…

Thou are the grave where buried love doth live…

Though thou repent, yet I have still the loss: the offender’s sorrow lends but weak relief to him that bears the strong offence’s cross.  Ah! but those tears are pearl which thy love sheds, and they are rich and ransom all ill deeds.


101220-NASA-eclipse01
…clouds and eclipses stain both moon and sun…

Roses have thorns, and silver fountains mud; clouds and eclipses stain both moon and sun, and loathsome canker lives in sweetest bud.

I do forgive thy robbery, gentle thief, although thou steal thee all my poverty; and yet, love knows, it is a greater grief to bear love’s wrong than hate’s known injury.

Lascivious grace, in whom all ill well shows, kill me with spites; yet we must not be foes.

…thy beauty and thy straying youth, who lead thee in their riot even there where thou are forced to break a twofold truth; hers by thy beauty tempting her to thee; thine, by thy beauty being false to me.

If I lose thee, my loss is my love’s gain, and losing her, my friend hath found that loss; both find each other, and I lose both twain, and both for my sake lay on me this cross; but here’s the joy; my friend and I are one; sweet flattery! then she loves but me alone.

And darkly bright are bright in dark directed.

When to unseeing eyes thy shade shines so!

All days are nights to see till I see thee, and nights bright days when dreams do show thee me.

For nimble thought can jump both sea and land.

These present-absent with swift motion slide.

A closet never pierced with crystal eyes…

Mine eye’s due is thy outward part, and my heart’s right thy inward love of heart.

Or heart in love with sighs himself doth smother…


gems 2
…my jewels trifles are…

But thou, to whom my jewels trifles are, most worthy of comfort, now my greatest grief, thou, best of dearest and mine only care, art left the prey of every vulgar thief.

Against that time when thou shalt strangely pass and scarcely greet me with that sun, thine eye…

To leave poor me thou hast the strength of laws, since why to love I can allege no cause.

For that same groan doth put this in my mind; my grief lies onward and my joy behind.

So am I as the rich, whose blessed key can bring him to his sweet up-locked treasure, the which he will not every hour survey, for blunting the fine point of seldom pleasure?

The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem for that sweet odor which doth in it live.

They live unwoo’d and unrespected fade, die to themselves.  Sweet roses do not so; of their sweet deaths are sweetest odors made…

So true a fool is love that in your will, though you do any thing, he thinks no ill.

I am to wait, though waiting so be hell; not blame your pleasure, be it ill or well.


antique_photo_album_closure
…show me your image in some antique book…

O, that record could with a backward look, even of five hundred courses of the sun, show me your image in some antique book…

Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore, so do our minutes hasten to their end; each changing place with that which goes before, in sequent toil all forwards do contend.

Time doth transfix the flourish set on youth and delves the parallels in beauty’s brow, feeds on the rarities of nature’s truth, and nothing stands but for his scythe to mow…

O, no! thy love, though much, is not so great: it is my love that keeps mine eye awake…

Sin of self-love possesseth all mine eye and all my soul and all my every part; and for this sin there is no remedy, it is so grounded in my heart.

But when my glass shows me myself indeed, beated and chopp’d with tann’d antiquity…

And all those beauties whereof now he’s king are vanishing or vanish’d out of sight, stealing away the treasure of his spring…

…against confounding ages cruel knife, that he should never cut from memory my sweet love’s beauty, though my lover’s life…


beach
When I have seen the hungry ocean gain advantage on the kingdom of the shore…

When I have seen the hungry ocean gain advantage on the kingdom of the shore, and the firm soil win of the watery main, increasing store with loss and loss with store…

Ruin hath taught me thus to ruminate, that Time will come and take my love away.

Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea, but sad mortality o’ersways their power, how with this rage shall beauty hold a plea, whose action is no stronger than a flower?

O, how shall summer’s honey breath hold out against the wreckful siege of battering days, when rocks impregnable are not so stout, nor gates of steel so strong, but Time decays?

O, none, unless this miracle have might, that in black ink my love may still shine bright.

…right perfection wrongly disgraced…

Why should false painting imitate his cheek and steal dead seeing of his living hue?

They look into the beauty of thy mind, and that, in guess, they measure by thy deeds; then, churls, their thoughts, although their eyes were kind, to thy fair flower add the rank smell of weeds…

For slander’s mark was ever yet the fair; the ornament of beauty is suspect, a crow that flies in heaven’s sweetest air.

When I perhaps compounded am with clay, do not so much as my poor name rehearse, but let your love even with my life decay…

For I am shamed by that which I bring forth, and so should you, to love things nothing worth.


cold yellow leaves with snow
…when yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang upon those boughs which shake against the cold…

…when yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang upon those boughs which shake against the cold…

…as after sunset fadeth in the west, which by and by black night doth take away, Death’s second self, that seals up all in rest.

…the coward conquest of a wretch’s knife…

The worth of that is that which it contains, and that is this, and this with thee remains.

…for the peace of you I hold such strife as ‘twixt a miser and his wealth is found…

Why is my verse so barren of new pride, so far from variation or quick change?  Why with the time do I not glance aside to new-found methods and to compounds strange?

Thou by thy dial’s shady stealth mayst know time’s thievish progress to eternity.

Thine eyes that taught the dumb on high to sing and heavy ignorance aloft to fly…

…being wreck’d, I am a worthless boat…

When all the breathers of this world are dead; you still shall live — such virtue hath my pen — where breath most breathes, even in the mouths of men.

…making their tomb the womb wherein they grew…

…upon thy side against myself I’ll fight, and prove thee virtuous…


shakespeare sonnets ladyfair
Thy love is better than high birth to me…

Thy love is better than high birth to me, richer than wealth, prouder than garments’ cost, of more delight than hawks or horses be; and having thee, of all men’s pride I boast: wretched in this alone, that thou mayst take all this away and me most wretched make.

But what’s so blessed-fair that fears no blot?  Thou mayst be false, and yet I know it not.

In many’s looks the false heart’s history is writ in moods and frowns and wrinkles strange…

How like Eve’s apple doth thy beauty grow…

They that have the power to hurt and will do none…

…who, moving others, are themselves as stone, unmoved, cold, and to temptation slow…

They are the lords and owners of their faces…

Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds.

O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins enclose!

O, what a mansion have those vices got which for their habitation chose out thee, where beauty’s veil doth cover every blot…

The hardest knife ill-used doth lose his edge.

As on the finger of a throned queen the basest jewel will be well esteemed…

How many lambs might the stern wolf betray, if like a lamb he could his looks translate!

The teeming autumn, big with rich increase, bearing the wanton burden of the prime, like widow’d wombs after their lord’s decease…

…hope of orphans and unfather’d fruit…

…roses fearfully on thorns did stand…


Medieval couple love
…eternal love in love’s fresh case…

Give my love fame faster than Time wastes life…

The mortal moon hath her eclipse endured…

So that eternal love in love’s fresh case weighs not the dust and injury of age, nor gives to necessary wrinkles place, but makes antiquity for aye his page…

…mine eye is in my mind…

My most true mind thus makes mine eye untrue.

Such cherubins as your sweet self resemble, creating every bad a perfect best…

If it be poison’d, ’tis the lesser sin that mine eye loves it and doth first begin.

But reckoning time, whose million’d accidents creep in ‘twixt vows and change decrees of kings, tan sacred beauty, blunt the sharp’st intents, divert strong minds to the course of altering things…

Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds…

Love’s not Time’s fool, though rosy lips and cheeks within his bending sickle’s compass come: love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, but bears it out even to the edge of doom.

Bring me within the level of your frown, but shoot not at me with your waken’d hate…

…to prevent our maladies unseen, we sicken to shun sickness when we purge…

…drugs poison him that so fell sick of you.

What potions have I drunk of Siren tears, distill’d from limbecks foul as hell within…

O benefit of ill!  Now I find true that better is by evil still made better; and ruin’d love, when it is built anew, grows fairer than at first, more strong, far greater.

For if you were by my unkindness shaken as I by yours, you’ve pass’d a hell of time…

…how hard true sorrow hits…

‘Tis better to be vile than vile esteem’d…

For why should others’ false adulterate eyes give salutation to my sportive blood?  Or on my frailties why are frailer spies, which in their wills count bad what I think good?

Unless this general evil they maintain, all men are bad, and in their badness reign.

Our dates are brief, and therefore we admire what thou dost foist upon us that is old…

To this I witness call the fools of time, which die for goodness, who have lived for crime.

…black beauty’s successive heir…

…fairing the foul with art’s false borrow’d face…


eve offers apple Forbidden_Fruit_by_kusokurae
…none knows well to shun the heaven that leads men to this hell.

The expense of spirit in a waste of shame is lust in action…

…as a swallowed bait on purpose laid to make the taker mad…

Before, a joy proposed; behind, a dream.  All this the world well knows; yet none knows well to shun the heaven that leads men to this hell.

And in some perfumes is there more delight than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.

Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art, as those whose beauties proudly make them cruel…

…a torment thrice threefold thus to be cross’d.

The sea, all water, yet receives rain still…

…thus far for love my love-suit, sweet, fulfil.

Make but my name thy love, and love that still, and then thou lovest me, for my name is Will.

…to put fair truth upon so foul a face…

When my love swears that she is made of truth I do believe her, though I know she lies…

And wherefore say not I that I am old?  O, love’s best habit is in seeming trust, and age in love loves not to have years told: therefore I lie with her and she with me, and in our faults by lies we flatter’d be.

…the manner of my pity-wanting pain…

As testy sick men, when their deaths be near, no news but health from their physicians know…

Only my plague thus far I count my gain, that she that makes me sin awards me pain.


cupid's fire
…my female evil tempteth my better angel from my side…

Two loves I have of comfort and despair, which like two spirits do suggest me still: the better angel is a man right fair, the worser spirit a woman color’d ill.  To win me soon to hell, my female evil tempteth my better angel from my side, and would corrupt my saint to be a devil, wooing his purity with her foul pride.

Yet this  shall I ne’re know, but live in doubt, till my bad angel fire my good one out.

Those lips that Love’s own hand did make breathed forth the sound that said I hate.

I hate from hate away she threw, and saved my life, saying not you.

So shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men, and Death once dead, there’s no more dying then.

For I have sworn thee fair and thought thee bright, who art as black as hell, as dark as night.

O, how can Love’s eye be true, that is so vex’d with watching and with tears?

The sun itself sees not till heaven clears.

…all my best doth worship thy defect, commanded by the motion of thine eyes…

But, love, hate on, for now I know thy mind; those that can see thou lovest, and I am blind.

Who taught thee how to love thee more the more I hear and see just cause of hate?


cupid bird bath
…the bath for my help lies where Cupid got new fire…

For all my vows are oaths but to misuse thee…

For I have sworn thee fair; more perjured I, to swear against the truth so foul a lie.

I, sick, withal, the help of bath desired … but found no cure: the bath for my help lies where Cupid got new fire — my mistress’ eyes.

Billy Lee