Sonnet 54

Of this worlds theatre in which we stay
My love like the spectator ydly sits
Beholding me that all the pageants play,
Disguysing diversly my troubled wits.

Sometimes I joy when glad occasion fits,
And mask in myrth lyke to a comedy:
Soone after when my joy to sorrow flits,
I waile and make my woes a tragedy.

Yet she, beholding me with constant eye,
Delights not in my merth nor rues my smart:
But when I laugh she mocks, and when I cry
She laughs and hardens evermore her heart.

What then can move her? if not merth nor mone,
She is no woman, but a sencelesse stone.

Edmund Spenser