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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 6
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




William Shakespeare

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 683


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

A FUNERAL ELEGY

TO  MASTER  JOHN  PETER
of  Bowhay  in  Devon,  Esquire.
The  love  I  bore  to  your  brother,  and  will  do  to  his  memory,  hath  craved  from  me  this  last  duty  of  a  friend;  I  am  herein  but  a  second  to  the  privilege  of  truth,  who  can  warrant  more  in  his  behalf  than  I  undertook  to  deliver.  Exercise  in  this  kind  I  will  little  affect,  and  am  less  addicted  to,  but  there  must  be  miracle  in  that  labor  which,  to  witness  my  remembrance  to  this  departed  gentleman,  I  would  not  willingly  undergo.  Yet  whatsoever  is  here  done,  is  done  to  him  and  to  him  only.  For  whom  and  whose  sake  I  will  not  forget  to  remember  any  friendly  respects  to  you,  or  to  any  of  those  that  have  loved  him  for  himself,  and  himself  for  his  deserts.
W.  S.
A  FUNERAL  ELEGY.
Since  time,  and  his  predestinated  end,  
Abridged  the  circuit  of  his  hopeful  days,  
Whiles  both  his  youth  and  virtue  did  intend  
The  good  endeavors  of  deserving  praise,  
What  memorable  monument  can  last  
Whereon  to  build  his  never-blemished  name  
But  his  own  worth,  wherein  his  life  was  graced.  .  .  
Sith  as  that  ever  he  maintained  the  same?  
Oblivion  in  the  darkest  day  to  come,  
When  sin  shall  tread  on  merit  in  the  dust,  
Cannot  rase  out  the  lamentable  tomb  
Of  his  short-lived  deserts;  but  still  they  must,  
Even  in  the  hearts  and  memories  of  men,  
Claim  fit  respect,  that  they,  in  every  limb  
Remembering  what  he  was,  with  comfort  then  
May  pattern  out  one  truly  good,  by  him.  
For  he  was  truly  good,  if  honest  care  
Of  harmless  conversation  may  commend  
A  life  free  from  such  stains  as  follies  are,  
Ill  recompensed  only  in  his  end.  
Nor  can  the  tongue  of  him  who  loved  him  least  
(If  there  can  be  minority  of  love  
To  one  superlative  above  the  rest  
Of  many  men  in  steady  faith)  reprove  
His  constant  temper,  in  the  equal  weight  
Of  thankfulness  and  kindness:  Truth  doth  leave  
Sufficient  proof,  he  was  in  every  right  
As  kind  to  give,  as  thankful  to  receive.  
The  curious  eye  of  a  quick-brained  survey  
Could  scantly  find  a  mote  amidst  the  sun  
Of  his  too-shortened  days,  or  make  a  prey  
Of  any  faulty  errors  he  had  done.  
Not  that  he  was  above  the  spleenful  sense  
And  spite  of  malice,  but  for  that  he  had  
Warrant  enough  in  his  own  innocence  
Against  the  sting  of  some  in  nature  bad.  
Yet  who  is  he  so  absolutely  blest  
That  lives  encompassed  in  a  mortal  frame,  
Sometime  in  reputation  not  oppressed  
By  some  in  nothing  famous  but  defame?  
Such  in  the  bypath  and  the  ridgeway  lurk  
That  leads  to  ruin,  in  a  smooth  pretense  
Of  what  they  do  to  be  a  special  work  
Of  singleness,  not  tending  to  offense;  
Whose  very  virtues  are,  not  to  detract  
Whiles  hope  remains  of  gain  (base  fee  of  slaves),  
Despising  chiefly  men  in  fortunes  wracked.  
But  death  to  such  gives  unremembered  graves.  
Now  therein  lived  he  happy,  if  to  be  
Free  from  detraction  happiness  it  be.  
His  younger  years  gave  comfortable  hope  
To  hope  for  comfort  in  his  riper  youth,  
Which,  harvest-like,  did  yield  again  the  crop  
Of  education,  bettered  in  his  truth.  
Those  noble  twins  of  heaven-infused  races,  
Learning  and  wit,  refined  in  their  kind  
Did  jointly  both,  in  their  peculiar  graces,  
Enrich  the  curious  temple  of  his  mind;  
Indeed  a  temple,  in  whose  precious  white  
Sat  reason  by  religion  overswayed,  
Teaching  his  other  senses,  with  delight,  
How  piety  and  zeal  should  be  obeyed.  
Not  fruitlessly  in  prodigal  expense  
Wasting  his  best  of  time,  but  so  content  
With  reason's  golden  mean  to  make  defense  
Against  the  assault  of  youth's  encouragement;  
As  not  the  tide  of  this  surrounding  age  
(When  now  his  father's  death  had  freed  his  will)  
Could  make  him  subject  to  the  drunken  rage  
Of  such  whose  only  glory  is  their  ill.  
He  from  the  happy  knowledge  of  the  wise  
Draws  virtue  to  reprove  secured  fools  
And  shuns  the  glad  sleights  of  ensnaring  vice  
To  spend  his  spring  of  days  in  sacred  schools.  
Here  gave  he  diet  to  the  sick  desires  
That  day  by  day  assault  the  weaker  man,  
And  with  fit  moderation  still  retires  
From  what  doth  batter  virtue  now  and  then.  
But  that  I  not  intend  in  full  discourse  
To  progress  out  his  life,  I  could  display  
A  good  man  in  each  part  exact  and  force  
The  common  voice  to  warrant  what  I  say.  
For  if  his  fate  and  heaven  had  decreed  
That  full  of  days  he  might  have  lived  to  see  
The  grave  in  peace,  the  times  that  should  succeed  
Had  been  best-speaking  witnesses  with  me;  
Whose  conversation  so  untouched  did  move  
Respect  most  in  itself,  as  who  would  scan  
His  honesty  and  worth,  by  them  might  prove  
He  was  a  kind,  true,  perfect  gentleman.  
Not  in  the  outside  of  disgraceful  folly,  
Courting  opinion  with  unfit  disguise,  
Affecting  fashions,  nor  addicted  wholly  
To  unbeseeming  blushless  vanities,  
But  suiting  so  his  habit  and  desire  
As  that  his  virtue  was  his  best  attire.  
Not  in  the  waste  of  many  idle  words  
Cared  he  to  be  heard  talk,  nor  in  the  float  
Of  fond  conceit,  such  as  this  age  affords,  
By  vain  discourse  upon  himself  to  dote;  
For  his  becoming  silence  gave  such  grace  
To  his  judicious  parts,  as  what  he  spake  
Seemed  rather  answers  which  the  wise  embrace  
Than  busy  questions  such  as  talkers  make.  
And  though  his  qualities  might  well  deserve  
Just  commendation,  yet  his  furnished  mind  
Such  harmony  of  goodness  did  preserve  
As  nature  never  built  in  better  kind;  
Knowing  the  best,  and  therefore  not  presuming  
In  knowing,  but  for  that  it  was  the  best,  
Ever  within  himself  free  choice  resuming  
Of  true  perfection,  in  a  perfect  breast;  
So  that  his  mind  and  body  made  an  inn,  
The  one  to  lodge  the  other,  both  like  framed  
For  fair  conditions,  guests  that  soonest  win  
Applause;  in  generality,  well  famed,  
If  trim  behavior,  gestures  mild,  discreet  
Endeavors,  modest  speech,  beseeming  mirth,  
True  friendship,  active  grace,  persuasion  sweet,  
Delightful  love  innated  from  his  birth,  
Acquaintance  unfamiliar,  carriage  just,  
Offenseless  resolution,  wished  sobriety,  
Clean-tempered  moderation,  steady  trust,  
Unburthened  conscience,  unfeigned  piety;  
If  these,  or  all  of  these,  knit  fast  in  one  
Can  merit  praise,  then  justly  may  we  say,  
Not  any  from  this  frailer  stage  is  gone  
Whose  name  is  like  to  live  a  longer  day.  .  .  
Though  not  in  eminent  courts  or  places  great  
For  popular  concourse,  yet  in  that  soil  
Where  he  enjoyed  his  birth,  life,  death,  and  seat  
Which  now  sits  mourning  his  untimely  spoil.  
And  as  much  glory  is  it  to  be  good  
For  private  persons,  in  their  private  home,  
As  those  descended  from  illustrious  blood  
In  public  view  of  greatness,  whence  they  come.  
Though  I,  rewarded  with  some  sadder  taste  
Of  knowing  shame,  by  feeling  it  have  proved  
My  country's  thankless  misconstruction  cast  
Upon  my  name  and  credit,  both  unloved  
By  some  whose  fortunes,  sunk  into  the  wane  
Of  plenty  and  desert,  have  strove  to  win  
Justice  by  wrong,  and  sifted  to  embane  
My  reputation  with  a  witless  sin;  
Yet  time,  the  father  of  unblushing  truth,  
May  one  day  lay  ope  malice  which  hath  crossed  it,  
And  right  the  hopes  of  my  endangered  youth,  
Purchasing  credit  in  the  place  I  lost  it.  
Even  in  which  place  the  subject  of  the  verse  
(Unhappy  matter  of  a  mourning  style  
Which  now  that  subject's  merits  doth  rehearse)  
Had  education  and  new  being;  while  
By  fair  demeanor  he  had  won  repute  
Amongst  the  all  of  all  that  lived  there,  
For  that  his  actions  did  so  wholly  suit  
With  worthiness,  still  memorable  here.  
The  many  hours  till  the  day  of  doom  
Will  not  consume  his  life  and  hapless  end,  
For  should  he  lie  obscured  without  a  tomb,  
Time  would  to  time  his  honesty  commend;  
Whiles  parents  to  their  children  will  make  known,  
And  they  to  their  posterity  impart,  
How  such  a  man  was  sadly  overthrown  
By  a  hand  guided  by  a  cruel  heart,  
Whereof  as  many  as  shall  hear  that  sadness  
Will  blame  the  one's  hard  fate,  the  other's  madness;  
Whiles  such  as  do  recount  that  tale  of  woe,  
Told  by  remembrance  of  the  wisest  heads,  
Will  in  the  end  conclude  the  matter  so,  
As  they  will  all  go  weeping  to  their  beds.  
For  when  the  world  lies  wintered  in  the  storms  
Of  fearful  consummation,  and  lays  down  
Th'  unsteady  change  of  his  fantastic  forms,  
Expecting  ever  to  be  overthrown;  
When  the  proud  height  of  much  affected  sin  
Shall  ripen  to  a  head,  and  in  that  pride  
End  in  the  miseries  it  did  begin  
And  fall  amidst  the  glory  of  his  tide;  
Then  in  a  book  where  every  work  is  writ  
Shall  this  man's  actions  be  revealed,  to  show  
The  gainful  fruit  of  well-employed  wit,  
Which  paid  to  heaven  the  debt  that  it  did  owe.  
Here  shall  be  reckoned  up  the  constant  faith,  
Never  untrue,  where  once  he  love  professed;  
Which  is  a  miracle  in  men,  one  saith,  
Long  sought  though  rarely  found,  and  he  is  best  
Who  can  make  friendship,  in  those  times  of  change,  
Admired  more  for  being  firm  than  strange.  
When  those  weak  houses  of  our  brittle  flesh  
Shall  ruined  be  by  death,  our  grace  and  strength,  
Youth,  memory  and  shape  that  made  us  fresh  
Cast  down,  and  utterly  decayed  at  length;  
When  all  shall  turn  to  dust  from  whence  we  came  
And  we  low-leveled  in  a  narrow  grave,  
What  can  we  leave  behind  us  but  a  name,  
Which,  by  a  life  well  led,  may  honor  have?  
Such  honor,  O  thou  youth  untimely  lost,  
Thou  didst  deserve  and  hast;  for  though  thy  soul  
Hath  took  her  flight  to  a  diviner  coast,  
Yet  here  on  earth  thy  fame  lives  ever  whole,  
In  every  heart  sealed  up,  in  every  tongue  
Fit  matter  to  discourse,  no  day  prevented  
That  pities  not  thy  sad  and  sudden  wrong,  
Of  all  alike  beloved  and  lamented.  
And  I  here  to  thy  memorable  worth,  
In  this  last  act  of  friendship,  sacrifice  
My  love  to  thee,  which  I  could  not  set  forth  
In  any  other  habit  of  disguise.  
Although  I  could  not  learn,  whiles  yet  thou  wert,  
To  speak  the  language  of  a  servile  breath,  
My  truth  stole  from  my  tongue  into  my  heart,  
Which  shall  not  thence  be  sundered,  but  in  death.  
And  I  confess  my  love  was  too  remiss  
That  had  not  made  thee  know  how  much  I  prized  thee,  
But  that  mine  error  was,  as  yet  it  is,  
To  think  love  best  in  silence:  for  I  sized  thee  
By  what  I  would  have  been,  not  only  ready  
In  telling  I  was  thine,  but  being  so,  
By  some  effect  to  show  it.  He  is  steady  
Who  seems  less  than  he  is  in  open  show.  
Since  then  I  still  reserved  to  try  the  worst  
Which  hardest  fate  and  time  thus  can  lay  on  me.  
T'  enlarge  my  thoughts  was  hindered  at  first,  
While  thou  hadst  life;  I  took  this  task  upon  me,  
To  register  with  mine  unhappy  pen  
Such  duties  as  it  owes  to  thy  desert,  
And  set  thee  as  a  president  to  men,  
And  limn  thee  to  the  world  but  as  thou  wert.  .  .  
Not  hired,  as  heaven  can  witness  in  my  soul,  
By  vain  conceit,  to  please  such  ones  as  know  it,  
Nor  servile  to  be  liked,  free  from  control,  
Which,  pain  to  many  men,  I  do  not  owe  it.  
But  here  I  trust  I  have  discharged  now  
(Fair  lovely  branch  too  soon  cut  off)  to  thee,  
My  constant  and  irrefragable  vow,  
As,  had  it  chanced,  thou  mightst  have  done  to  me.  .  .  
But  that  no  merit  strong  enough  of  mine  
Had  yielded  store  to  thy  well-abled  quill  
Whereby  t'  enroll  my  name,  as  this  of  thine,  
How  s'ere  enriched  by  thy  plenteous  skill.  
Here,  then,  I  offer  up  to  memory  
The  value  of  my  talent,  precious  man,  
Whereby  if  thou  live  to  posterity,  
Though  't  be  not  as  I  would,  'tis  as  I  can:  
In  minds  from  whence  endeavor  doth  proceed,  
A  ready  will  is  taken  for  the  deed.  
Yet  ere  I  take  my  longest  last  farewell  
From  thee,  fair  mark  of  sorrow,  let  me  frame  
Some  ampler  work  of  thank,  wherein  to  tell  
What  more  thou  didst  deserve  than  in  thy  name,  
And  free  thee  from  the  scandal  of  such  senses  
As  in  the  rancor  of  unhappy  spleen  
Measure  thy  course  of  life,  with  false  pretenses  
Comparing  by  thy  death  what  thou  hast  been.  
So  in  his  mischiefs  is  the  world  accursed:  
It  picks  out  matter  to  inform  the  worst.  
The  willful  blindness  that  hoodwinks  the  eyes  
Of  men  enwrapped  in  an  earthy  veil  
Makes  them  most  ignorantly  exercise  
And  yield  to  humor  when  it  doth  assail,  
Whereby  the  candle  and  the  body's  light  
Darkens  the  inward  eyesight  of  the  mind,  
Presuming  still  it  sees,  even  in  the  night  
Of  that  same  ignorance  which  makes  them  blind.  
Hence  conster  they  with  corrupt  commentaries,  
Proceeding  from  a  nature  as  corrupt,  
The  text  of  malice,  which  so  often  varies  
As  'tis  by  seeming  reason  underpropped.  
O,  whither  tends  the  lamentable  spite  
Of  this  world's  teenful  apprehension,  
Which  understands  all  things  amiss,  whose  light  
Shines  not  amidst  the  dark  of  their  dissension?  
True  'tis,  this  man,  whiles  yet  he  was  a  man,  
Soothed  not  the  current  of  besotted  fashion,  
Nor  could  disgest,  as  some  loose  mimics  can,  
An  empty  sound  of  overweening  passion,  
So  much  to  be  made  servant  to  the  base  
And  sensual  aptness  of  disuni  oned  vices,  
To  purchase  commendation  by  disgrace,  
Whereto  the  world  and  heat  of  sin  entices.  
But  in  a  safer  contemplation,  
Secure  in  what  he  knew,  he  ever  chose  
The  ready  way  to  commendation,  
By  shunning  all  invitements  strange,  of  those  
Whose  illness  is,  the  necessary  praise  
Must  wait  upon  their  actions;  only  rare  
In  being  rare  in  shame  (which  strives  to  raise  
Their  name  by  doing  what  they  do  not  care),  
As  if  the  free  commission  of  their  ill  
Were  even  as  boundless  as  their  prompt  desires;  
Only  like  lords,  like  subjects  to  their  will,  
Which  their  fond  dotage  ever  more  admires.  
He  was  not  so:  but  in  a  serious  awe,  
Ruling  the  little  ordered  commonwealth  
Of  his  own  self,  with  honor  to  the  law  
That  gave  peace  to  his  bread,  bread  to  his  health;  
Which  ever  he  maintained  in  sweet  content  
And  pleasurable  rest,  wherein  he  joyed  
A  monarchy  of  comfort's  government,  
Never  until  his  last  to  be  destroyed.  
For  in  the  vineyard  of  heaven-favored  learning  
Where  he  was  double-honored  in  degree,  
His  observation  and  discreet  discerning  
Had  taught  him  in  both  fortunes  to  be  free;  
Whence  now  retired  home,  to  a  home  indeed  
The  home  of  his  condition  and  estate,  
He  well  provided  'gainst  the  hand  of  need,  
Whence  young  men  sometime  grow  unfortunate;  
His  disposition,  by  the  bonds  of  unity,  
So  fastened  to  his  reason  that  it  strove  
With  understanding's  grave  immunity  
To  purchase  from  all  hearts  a  steady  love;  
Wherein  not  any  one  thing  comprehends  
Proportionable  note  of  what  he  was,  
Than  that  he  was  so  constant  to  his  friends  
As  he  would  no  occasion  overpass  
Which  might  make  known  his  unaffected  care,  
In  all  respects  of  trial,  to  unlock  
His  bosom  and  his  store,  which  did  declare  
That  Christ  was  his,  and  he  was  friendship's  rock:  
A  rock  of  friendship  figured  in  his  name,  
Foreshowing  what  he  was,  and  what  should  be,  
Most  true  presage;  and  he  discharged  the  same  
In  every  act  of  perfect  amity.  
Though  in  the  complemental  phrase  of  words  
He  never  was  addicted  to  the  vain  
Of  boast,  such  as  the  common  breath  affords;  
He  was  in  use  most  fast,  in  tongue  most  plain,  
Nor  amongst  all  those  virtues  that  forever  
Adorned  his  reputation  will  be  found  
One  greater  than  his  faith,  which  did  persever,  
Where  once  it  was  protested,  alway  sound.  
Hence  sprung  the  deadly  fuel  that  revived  
The  rage  which  wrought  his  end,  for  had  he  been  
Slacker  in  love,  he  had  been  longer  lived  
And  not  oppressed  by  wrath's  unhappy  sin.  .  .  
By  wrath's  unhappy  sin,  which  unadvised  
Gave  death  for  free  good  will,  and  wounds  for  love.  
Pity  it  was  that  blood  had  not  been  prized  
At  higher  rate,  and  reason  set  above  
Most  unjust  choler,  which  untimely  drew  
Destruction  on  itself;  and  most  unjust,  
Robbed  virtue  of  a  follower  so  true  
As  time  can  boast  of,  both  for  love  and  trust:  
So  henceforth  all  (great  glory  to  his  blood)  
Shall  be  but  seconds  to  him,  being  good.  
The  wicked  end  their  honor  with  their  sin  
In  death,  which  only  then  the  good  begin.  
Lo,  here  a  lesson  by  experience  taught  
For  men  whose  pure  simplicity  hath  drawn  
Their  trust  to  be  betrayed  by  being  caught  
Within  the  snares  of  making  truth  a  pawn;  
Whiles  it,  not  doubting  whereinto  it  enters,  
Without  true  proof  and  knowledge  of  a  friend,  
Sincere  in  singleness  of  heart,  adventers  
To  give  fit  cause,  ere  love  begin  to  end:  
His  unfeigned  friendship  where  it  least  was  sought,  
Him  to  a  fatal  timeless  ruin  brought;  
Whereby  the  life  that  purity  adorned  
With  real  merit,  by  this  sudden  end  
Is  in  the  mouth  of  some  in  manner  scorned,  
Made  questionable,  for  they  do  intend,  
According  to  the  tenor  of  the  saw  
Mistook,  if  not  observed  (writ  long  ago  
When  men  were  only  led  by  reason's  law),  
That  "Such  as  is  the  end,  the  life  proves  so."  
Thus  he,  who  to  the  universal  lapse  
Gave  sweet  redemption,  offering  up  his  blood  
To  conquer  death  by  death,  and  loose  the  traps  
Of  hell,  even  in  the  triumph  that  it  stood:  
He  thus,  for  that  his  guiltless  life  was  spilt  
By  death,  which  was  made  subject  to  the  curse,  
Might  in  like  manner  be  reproved  of  guilt  
In  his  pure  life,  for  that  his  end  was  worse.  
But  O  far  be  it,  our  unholy  lips  
Should  so  profane  the  deity  above  
As  thereby  to  ordain  revenging  whips  
Against  the  day  of  judgment  and  of  love.  
The  hand  that  lends  us  honor  in  our  days  
May  shorten  when  it  please,  and  justly  take  
Our  honor  from  us  many  sundry  ways,  
As  best  becomes  that  wisdom  did  us  make.  
The  second  brother,  who  was  next  begot  
Of  all  that  ever  were  begotten  yet,  
Was  by  a  hand  in  vengeance  rude  and  hot  
Sent  innocent  to  be  in  heaven  set.  
Whose  fame  the  angels  in  melodious  choirs  
Still  witness  to  the  world.  Then  why  should  he,  
Well-profited  in  excellent  desires,  
Be  more  rebuked,  who  had  like  destiny?  
Those  saints  before  the  everlasting  throne  
Who  sit  with  crowns  of  glory  on  their  heads,  
Washed  white  in  blood,  from  earth  hence  have  not  gone  
All  to  their  joys  in  quiet  on  their  beds,  
But  tasted  of  the  sour-bitter  scourge  
Of  torture  and  affliction  ere  they  gained  
Those  blessings  which  their  sufferance  did  urge,  
Whereby  the  grace  fore-promised  they  attained.  
Let  then  the  false  suggestions  of  the  froward,  
Building  large  castles  in  the  empty  air,  
By  suppositions  fond  and  thoughts  untoward  
(Issues  of  discontent  and  sick  despair)  
Rebound  gross  arguments  upon  their  heart  
That  may  disprove  their  malice,  and  confound  
Uncivil  loose  opinions  which  insert  
Their  souls  into  the  roll  that  doth  unsound  
Betraying  policies,  and  show  their  brains,  
Unto  their  shame,  ridiculous;  whose  scope  
Is  envy,  whose  endeavors  fruitless  pains,  
In  nothing  surely  prosperous,  but  hope.  .  .  
And  that  same  hope,  so  lame,  so  unprevailing,  
It  buries  self-conceit  in  weak  opinion;  
Which  being  crossed,  gives  matter  of  bewailing  
Their  vain  designs,  on  whom  want  hath  dominion.  
Such,  and  of  such  condition,  may  devise  
Which  way  to  wound  with  defamation's  spirit  
(Close-lurking  whisper's  hidden  forgeries)  
His  taintless  goodness,  his  desertful  merit.  
But  whiles  the  minds  of  men  can  judge  sincerely,  
Upon  assured  knowledge,  his  repute  
And  estimation  shall  be  rumored  clearly  
In  equal  worth--time  shall  to  time  renew  't.  
The  grave,  that  in  his  ever-empty  womb  
Forever  closes  up  the  unrespected,  
Who  when  they  die,  die  all,  shall  not  entomb  
His  pleading  best  perfections  as  neglected.  
They  to  his  notice  in  succeeding  years  
Shall  speak  for  him  when  he  shall  lie  below;  
When  nothing  but  his  memory  appears  
Of  what  he  was,  then  shall  his  virtues  grow.  
His  being  but  a  private  man  in  rank  
(And  yet  not  ranked  beneath  a  gentleman)  
Shall  not  abridge  the  commendable  thank  
Which  wise  posterity  shall  give  him  then;  
For  nature,  and  his  therein  happy  fate.  
Ordained  that  by  his  quality  of  mind  
T'  ennoble  that  best  part,  although  his  state  
Were  to  a  lower  blessedness  confined.  
Blood,  pomp,  state,  honor,  glory  and  command,  
Without  fit  ornaments  of  disposition,  
Are  in  themselves  but  heathenish  and  profaned,  
And  much  more  peaceful  is  a  mean  condition  
Which,  underneath  the  roof  of  safe  content,  
Feeds  on  the  bread  of  rest,  and  takes  delight  
To  look  upon  the  labors  it  hath  spent  
For  its  own  sustenance,  both  day  and  night;  
Whiles  others,  plotting  which  way  to  be  great,  
How  to  augment  their  portion  and  ambition,  
Do  toil  their  giddy  brains,  and  ever  sweat  
For  popular  applause  and  power's  commission.  
But  one  in  honors,  like  a  seeled  dove  
Whose  inward  eyes  are  dimmed  with  dignity,  
Does  think  most  safety  doth  remain  above,  
And  seeks  to  be  secure  by  mounting  high:  
Whence,  when  he  falls,  who  did  erewhile  aspire,  
Falls  deeper  down,  for  that  he  climbed  higher.  
Now  men  who  in  lower  region  live  
Exempt  from  danger  of  authority  
Have  fittest  times  in  reason's  rules  to  thrive,  
Not  vexed  with  envy  of  priority,  
And  those  are  much  more  noble  in  the  mind  
Than  many  that  have  nobleness  by  kind.  
Birth,  blood,  and  ancestors,  are  none  of  ours,  
Nor  can  we  make  a  proper  challenge  to  them  
But  virtues  and  perfections  in  our  powers  
Proceed  most  truly  from  us,  if  we  do  them.  
Respective  titles  or  a  gracious  style,  
With  all  what  men  in  eminence  possess,  
Are,  without  ornaments  to  praise  them,  vile:  
The  beauty  of  the  mind  is  nobleness.  
And  such  as  have  that  beauty,  well  deserve  
Eternal  characters,  that  after  death  
Remembrance  of  their  worth  we  may  preserve,  
So  that  their  glory  die  not  with  their  breath.  
Else  what  avails  it  in  a  goodly  strife  
Upon  this  face  of  earth  here  to  contend,  
The  good  t'  exceed  the  wicked  in  their  life,  
Should  both  be  like  obscured  in  their  end?  
Until  which  end,  there  is  none  rightly  can  
Be  termed  happy,  since  the  happiness  
Depends  upon  the  goodness  of  the  man,  
Which  afterwards  his  praises  will  express.  
Look  hither  then,  you  that  enjoy  the  youth  
Of  your  best  days,  and  see  how  unexpected  
Death  can  betray  your  jollity  to  ruth  
When  death  you  think  is  least  to  be  respected!  
The  person  of  this  model  here  set  out  
Had  all  that  youth  and  happy  days  could  give  him,  
Yet  could  not  all-encompass  him  about  
Against  th'  assault  of  death,  who  to  relieve  him  
Strook  home  but  to  the  frail  and  mortal  parts  
Of  his  humanity,  but  could  not  touch  
His  flourishing  and  fair  long-lived  deserts,  
Above  fate's  reach,  his  singleness  was  such.  
So  that  he  dies  but  once,  but  doubly  lives,  
Once  in  his  proper  self,  then  in  his  name;  
Predestinated  time,  who  all  deprives,  
Could  never  yet  deprive  him  of  the  same.  
And  had  the  genius  which  attended  on  him  
Been  possibilited  to  keep  him  safe  
Against  the  rigor  that  hath  overgone  him,  
He  had  been  to  the  public  use  a  staff,  
Leading  by  his  example  in  the  path  
Which  guides  to  doing  well,  wherein  so  few  
The  proneness  of  this  age  to  error  hath  
Informed  rightly  in  the  courses  true.  
As  then  the  loss  of  one,  whose  inclination  
Stove  to  win  love  in  general,  is  sad,  
So  specially  his  friends,  in  soft  compassion  
Do  feel  the  greatest  loss  they  could  have  had.  
Amongst  them  all,  she  who  those  nine  of  years  
Lived  fellow  to  his  counsels  and  his  bed  
Hath  the  most  share  in  loss;  for  I  in  hers  
Feel  what  distemperature  this  chance  hath  bred.  
The  chaste  embracements  of  conjugal  love,  
Who  in  a  mutual  harmony  consent,  
Are  so  impatient  of  a  strange  remove  
As  meager  death  itself  seems  to  lament,  
And  weep  upon  those  cheeks  which  nature  framed  
To  be  delightful  orbs  in  whom  the  force  
Of  lively  sweetness  plays,  so  that  ashamed  
Death  often  pities  his  unkind  divorce.  
Such  was  the  separation  here  constrained  
(Well-worthy  to  be  termed  a  rudeness  rather),  
For  in  his  life  his  love  was  so  unfeigned  
As  he  was  both  an  husband  and  a  father.  .  .  
The  one  in  firm  affection  and  the  other  
In  careful  providence,  which  ever  strove  
With  joint  assistance  to  grace  one  another  
With  every  helpful  furtherance  of  love.  
But  since  the  sum  of  all  that  can  be  said  
Can  be  but  said  that  "He  was  good"  (which  wholly  
Includes  all  excellence  can  be  displayed  
In  praise  of  virtue  and  reproach  of  folly).  
His  due  deserts,  this  sentence  on  him  gives,  
"He  died  in  life,  yet  in  his  death  he  lives."  
Now  runs  the  method  of  this  doleful  song  
In  accents  brief  to  thee,  O  thou  deceased!  
To  whom  those  pains  do  only  all  belong  
As  witnesses  I  did  not  love  thee  least.  
For  could  my  worthless  brain  find  out  but  how  
To  raise  thee  from  the  sepulcher  of  dust,  
Undoubtedly  thou  shouldst  have  partage  now  
Of  life  with  me,  and  heaven  be  counted  just  
If  to  a  supplicating  soul  it  would  
Give  life  anew,  by  giving  life  again  
Where  life  is  missed;  whereby  discomfort  should  
Right  his  old  griefs,  and  former  joys  retain  
Which  now  with  thee  are  leaped  into  thy  tomb  
And  buried  in  that  hollow  vault  of  woe,  
Expecting  yet  a  more  severer  doom  
Than  time's  strict  flinty  hand  will  let  'em  know.  
And  now  if  I  have  leveled  mine  account  
And  reckoned  up  in  a  true  measured  score  
Those  perfect  graces  which  were  ever  wont  
To  wait  on  thee  alive,  I  ask  no  more  
(But  shall  hereafter  in  a  poor  content  
Immure  those  imputations  I  sustain,  
Learning  my  days  of  youth  so  to  prevent  
As  not  to  be  cast  down  by  them  again);  
Only  those  hopes  which  fate  denies  to  grant  
In  full  possession  to  a  captive  heart  
Who,  if  it  were  in  plenty,  still  would  want  
Before  it  may  enjoy  his  better  part:  
From  which  detained,  and  banished  in  th'  exile  
Of  dim  misfortune,  has  none  other  prop  
Whereon  to  lean  and  rest  itself  the  while  
But  the  weak  comfort  of  the  hapless,  "hope."  
And  hope  must  in  despite  of  fearful  change  
Play  in  the  strongest  closet  of  my  breast,  
Although  perhaps  I  ignorantly  range  
And  court  opinion  in  my  deep'st  unrest.  
But  whether  doth  the  stream  of  my  mischance  
Drive  me  beyond  myself,  fast  friend,  soon  lost,  
Long  may  thy  worthiness  thy  name  advance  
Amongst  the  virtuous  and  deserving  most,  
Who  herein  hast  forever  happy  proved:  
In  life  thou  lived'st,  in  death  thou  died'st  beloved.

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