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Ode to Duty

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Stern Daughter of the Voice of God!    O Duty! if that name thou love    Who art a light to guide, a rod    To check the erring, and reprove;    Thou, who art victory and law    When empty terrors overawe;    From vain temptations dost set free;    And calm'st the weary strife of frail humanity!    There are who ask not if thine eye   Be on them; who, in love and truth,   Where no misgiving is, rely   Upon the genial sense of youth:   Glad Hearts! without reproach or blot;   Who do thy work, and know it not:   Oh! if through confidence misplaced   They fail, thy saving arms, dread Power! around them cast.   Serene will be our days and bright,   And happy will our nature be,   When love is an unerring light,   And joy its own security.   And they a blissful course may hold   Even now, who, not unwisely bold,   Live in the spirit of this creed;   Yet seek thy firm support, according to their need.   I, loving freedom, and untried;   No sport of every random gust,   Yet being to myself a guide,   Too blindly have reposed my trust:   And oft, when in my heart was heard   Thy timely mandate,

I deferred   The task, in smoother walks to stray;   But thee I now would serve more strictly, if I may.   Through no disturbance of my soul,   Or strong compunction in me wrought,   I supplicate for thy control;   But in the quietness of thought:   Me this unchartered freedom tires;   I feel the weight of chance-desires:   My hopes no more must change their name,   I long for a repose that ever is the same.   Stern Lawgiver! yet thou dost wear   The Godhead's most benignant grace;   Nor know we anything so fair   As is the smile upon thy face:   Flowers laugh before thee on their beds   And fragrance in thy footing treads;   Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong;   And the most ancient heavens, through Thee, are fresh and strong.   To humbler functions, awful Power!   I call thee:

I myself commend   Unto thy guidance from this hour;   Oh, let my weakness have an end!   Give unto me, made lowly wise,   The spirit of self-sacrifice;   The confidence of reason give;   And in the light of truth thy Bondman let me live!

Jam non consilio bonus, sed more eo perductus, ut non tantum recte facere possim, sed nisi recte facere non possim""I am no longer good through deliberate intent, but by long habit have reached a point where I am not only able to do right, but am unable to do anything but what is right."    (Seneca,

Letters 130.10)Composition Date:before April 18041.

An early form of the poem, without a title and first stanza, was completed before April 1804.

Wordsworth said that his literary model for the poem was Gray's Ode to Adversity.

Cf.

Paradise Lost IX, 652-53: "God so commanded, and left that command/Sole daughter of his voice...."47-48.

Cf.

II Peter 3: 5: ". . . by the word of God the heavens were of old...."

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William Wordsworth

William Wordsworth (7 April 1770 – 23 April 1850) was an English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romantic …

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