The Dirge
Vhat is th' Existence of Mans life?
But open war, or slumber'd strife.
Where sickness to his sense presents The combat of the Elements:
And never feels a perfect Peace Till deaths cold hand signs his release.
It is a storm where the hot blood Out-vies in rage the boyling flood;
And each loud Passion of the mind Is like a furious gust of wind,
Which beats his Bark with many a Wave Till he casts Anchor in the Grave.
It is a flower which buds and growes,
And withers as the leaves disclose;
Whose spring and fall faint seasons keep,
Like fits of waking before sleep:
Then shrinks into that fatal mold Where its first being was enroll'd.
It is a dream, whose seeming truth Is moraliz'd in age and youth:
Where all the comforts he can share As wandring as his fancies are;
Till in a mist of dark decay The dreamer vanish quite away.
It is a Diall, which points out The Sun-set as it moves about:
And shadowes out in lines of night The subtile stages of times flight,
Till all obscuring earth hath laid The body in perpetual shade.
It is a weary enterlude Which doth short joyes, long woes include.
The World the Stage, the Prologue tears,
The Acts vain hope, and vary'd fears: The Scene shuts up with loss of breath,
And leaves no Epilogue but Death.
Henry King
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To my dead friend Ben Johnson
I see that wreath which doth the wearer arm 'Gainst the quick strokes of thunder, is no charm To keep off deaths pale dart For, Johnson then Thou hadst been number'd still with living men Times sithe had fear'd thy Lawrel to invade,
A Contemplation upon Flowers
VE flowers—that I could gallant it like you, And be as little vain You come abroad, and make a harmless show, And to your beds of earth again You are not proud: you know your birth: For your embroider'd garments are from earth...
Sic Vita
Like to the falling of a star, Or as the flights of eagles are, Or like the fresh spring's gaudy hue, Or silver drops of morning dew,
The Boyes answer to the Blackmoor
Black Maid, complain not that I fly, When Fate commands Antipathy: Prodigious might that union prove, Where Night and Day together move,