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Robert Southwell

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 141


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

Look home

Retirëd  thoughts  enjoy  their  own  delights,
As  beauty  doth  in  self-beholding  eye  ;
Man's  mind  a  mirror  is  of  heavenly  sights,
A  brief  wherein  all  marvels  summëd  lie,
Of  fairest  forms  and  sweetest  shapes  the  store,
Most  graceful  all,  yet  thought  may  grace  them  more.

The  mind  a  creature  is,  yet  can  create,
To  nature's  patterns  adding  higher  skill  ;
Of  finest  works  with  better  could  the  state
If  force  of  wit  had  equal  power  of  will.
Device  of  man  in  working  hath  no  end,
What  thought  can  think,  another  thought  can  mend.

Man's  soul  of  endless  beauty  image  is,
Drawn  by  the  work  of  endless  skill  and  might  ;
This  skillful  might  gave  many  sparks  of  bliss
And,  to  discern  this  bliss,  a  native  light  ;
To  frame  God's  image  as  his  worths  required
His  might,  his  skill,  his  word  and  will  conspired.

All  that  he  had  his  image  should  present,
All  that  it  should  present  it  could  afford,
To  that  he  could  afford  his  will  was  bent,
His  will  was  followed  with  performing  word.
Let  this  suffice,  by  this  conceive  the  rest,—
He  should,  he  could,  he  would,  he  did,  the  best.

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