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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 1
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Ben Jonson

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 158


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

AN ELEGY ON THE LADY JANE PAWLET, MARCHIONESS OF WINTON.

What  gentle  ghost,  besprent  with  April  dew,  
Hails  me  so  solemnly  to  yonder  yew,  
And  beckoning  woos  me,  from  the  fatal  tree  
To  pluck  a  garland  for  herself  or  me?  
I  do  obey  you,  beauty!  for  in  death  
You  seem  a  fair  one.  O  that  you  had  breath  
To  give  your  shade  a  name!    Stay,  stay,  I  feel  
A  horror  in  me,  all  my  blood  is  steel;  
Stiff,  stark!    my  joints  'gainst  one  another  knock!  
He's  good  as  great.  I  am  almost  a  stone,  
And  ere  I  can  ask  more  of  her,  she's  gone!  –  
Alas,  I  am  all  marble!  write  the  rest  
Thou  would'st  have  written,  Fame,  upon  my  breast:  
It  is  a  large  fair  table,  and  a  true,  
And  the  disposure  will  be  something  new,  
When  I,  who  would  the  poet  have  become,  
At  least  may  bear  the  inscription  to  her  tomb.  
She  was  the  Lady  Jane,  and  marchionisse  
Of  Winchester;  the  heralds  can  tell  this.  
Earl  Rivers'  grand-child  –  'serve  not  forms,  good  Fame,  
Sound  thou  her  virtues,  give  her  soul  a  name.  
Had  I  a  thousand  mouths,  as  many  tongues,  
And  voice  to  raise  them  from  my  brazen  lungs,  
I  durst  not  aim  at  tha  ;  the  dotes  were  such  
Thereof,  no  notion  can  express  how  much  
Their  caract  was:  I  or  my  trump  must  break,  
But  rather  I,  should  I  of  that  part  speak;  
It  is  too  near  of  kin  to  heaven,  the  soul,  
To  be  described!  Fame's  fingers  are  too  foul  
To  touch  these  mysteries:  we  may  admire  
The  heat  and  splendor,  but  not  handle  fire.  
What  she  did  here,  by  great  example,  well,  
T'  inlive  posterity,  her  Fame  may  tell;  
And  calling  Truth  to  witness,  make  that  good  
From  the  inherent  graces  in  her  blood!  
Else  who  doth  praise  a  person  by  a  new  
But  a  feign'd  way,  doth  rob  it  of  the  true.  
Her  sweetness,  softness,  her  fair  courtesy,  
Her  wary  guards,  her  wise  simplicity,  
Were  like  a  ring  of  Virtues  'bout  her  set,  
And  Piety  the  centre  where  all  met.  
A  reverend  state  she  had,  an  awful  eye,  
A  dazzling,  yet  inviting,  majesty:  
What  Nature,  Fortune,  Institution,  Fact  
Could  sum  to  a  perfection,  was  her  act!  
How  did  she  leave  the  world,  with  what  contempt!  
Just  as  she  in  it  lived,  and  so  exempt  
From  all  affection!  when  they  urg'd  the  cure  
Of  her  disease,  how  did  her  soul  assure  
Her  sufferings,  as  the  body  had  been  away  !  
And  to  the  torturers,  her  doctors,  say,  
Stick  on  your  cupping-glasses,  fear  not,  put  
Your  hottest  caustics  to,  burn,  lance,  or  cut:  
'Tis  but  a  body  which  you  can  torment,  
And  I  into  the  world  all  soul  was  sent.  
Then  comforted  her  lord,  and  blest  her  son,  
Cheer'd  her  fair  sisters  in  her  race  to  run,  
With  gladness  temper'd  her  sad  parents'  tears,  
Made  her  friends  joys  to  get  above  their  fears,  
And  in  her  last  act  taught  the  standers-by  
With  admiration  and  applause  to  die!  
     Let  angels  sing  her  glories,  who  did  call  
Her  spirit  home  to  her  original;  
Who  saw  the  way  was  made  it,  and  were  sent  
To  carry  and  conduct  the  compliment  
'Twixt  death  and  life,  where  her  mortality  
Became  her  birth-day  to  eternity!  
And  now  through  circumfused  light  she  looks,  
On  Nature's  secret  there,  as  her  own  books:  
Speaks  heaven's  language,  and  discourseth  free  
To  every  order,  every  hierarchy!  
Beholds  her  Maker,  and  in  him  doth  see  
What  the  beginnings  of  all  beauties  be;  
And  all  beatitudes  that  thence  do  flow:  
Which  they  that  have  the  crown  are  sure  to  know!  
     Go  now,  her  happy  parents,  and  be  sad,  
If  you  not  understand  what  child  you  had.  
If  you  dare  grudge  at  heaven,  and  repent  
T'  have  paid  again  a  blessing  was  but  lent,  
And  trusted  so,  as  it  deposited  lay  
At  pleasure,  to  be  call'd  for  every  day!  
If  you  can  envy  your  own  daughter's  bliss,  
And  wish  her  state  less  happy  than  it  is;  
If  you  can  cast  about  your  either  eye,  
And  see  all  dead  here,  or  about  to  die!  
The  stars,  that  are  the  jewels  of  the  night,  
And  day,  deceasing,  with  the  prince  of  light,  
The  sun,  great  kings,  and  mightiest  kingdoms  fall;  
Whole  nations,  nay  mankind!  the  world,  with  all  
That  ever  had  beginning  there,  t'  have  end!  
With  what  injustice  should  one  soul  pretend  
T'  escape  this  common  known  necessity?  
When  we  were  all  born,  we  began  to  die;  
And,  but  for  that  contention,  and  brave  strife  
The  Christian  hath  t'  enjoy  the  future  life,  
He  were  the  wretched'st  of  the  race  of  men:  
But  as  he  soars  at  that,  he  bruiseth  then  
The  serpent's  head;  gets  above  death  and  sin,  
And,  sure  of  heaven,  rides  triùmphing  in.


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