Complete Works of Matthew Prior

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by Matthew Prior


  Shortness of night and penury of shade,

  That ere our wearied limbs are justly bless’d

  With wholesome sleep and necessary rest,

  Another sun demands return of care,

  The remnant toil of yesterday to bear?

  Whilst, when the solar beams salute their sight,

  Bold and secure in half a year of light,

  Uninterrupted voyages they take

  To the remotest wood and farthest lake,

  Manage the fishing, and pursue the course

  With more extended nerves and more continued force;

  And when declining day forsakes their sky,

  When gathering clouds speak gloomy winter nigh,

  With plenty for the coming season bless’d,

  Six solid months (an age) they live, released

  From all the labour, process, clamour, wo,

  Which our sad scenes of daily action know;

  They light the shining lamps, prepare the feast,

  And with full mirth receive the welcome guest,

  Or tell their tender loves (the only care

  Which now they suffer) to the listening fair,

  And raised in pleasure, or reposed in ease,

  (Grateful alternates of substantial peace)

  They bless the long nocturnal influence shed

  On the crown’d goblet and the genial bed.

  In foreign isles which our discoverers find,

  Far from this length of continent disjoin’d,

  The rugged bear’s or spotted lynx’s brood

  Frighten the valleys and infest the wood,

  The hungry crocodile and hissing snake

  Lurk in the troubled stream and fenny brake;

  And man untaught, and ravenous as the beast,

  Does valley, wood, and brake, and stream infest;

  Derived these men and animals their birth

  From trunk of oak or pregnant womb of earth?

  Whence then the old belief, that all began

  In Eden’s shade and one created man?

  Or grant this progeny was wafted o’er

  By coasting boats from next adjacent shore,

  Would those, from whom we will suppose they spring,

  Slaughter to harmless lands and poison bring?

  Would they on board or bears or lynxes take,

  Fed the she-adder and the brooding snake?

  Or could they think the new-discover’d isle

  Pleased to receive a pregnant crocodile?

  And since the savage lineage we must trace

  From Noah saved and his distinguish’d race,

  How should their fathers happen to forget

  The arts which Noah taught, the rules he set,

  To sow the glebe, to plant the generous vine,

  And load with grateful flames the holy shrine?

  While the great sire’s unhappy sons are found,

  Unpress’d their vintage, and untill’d their ground,

  Straggling o’er dale and hill in quest of food,

  And rude of arts, of virtue, and of God.

  How shall we next o’er earth and seas pursue

  The varied forms of every thing we view;

  That all is changed, though all is still the same

  Fluid the parts, yet durable the frame?

  Of those materials which have been confess’d

  The pristine springs and parents of the rest,

  Each becomes other. Water stopp’d gives birth

  To grass and plants, and thickens into earth;

  Diffused it rises in a higher sphere,

  Dilates its drops, and softens into air:

  Those finer parts of air again aspire,

  Move into warmth, and brighten into fire;

  That fire once more, by thicker air o’ercome,

  And downward forced in earth’s capacious womb,

  Alters its particles, is fire no more,

  But lies resplendent dust and shining ore;

  Or, running through the mighty mother’s veins,

  Changes its shape, puts off its old remains;

  With watery parts its lessen’d force divides,

  Flows into waves, and rises into tides.

  Disparted streams shall from their channels fly,

  And deep surcharged by sandy mountains lie

  Obscurely sepulchred. By beating rain

  And furious wind, down to the distant plain

  The hill that hides his head above the skies

  Shall fall: the plain by slow degrees shall rise

  Higher than erst had stood the summit hill;

  For Time must Nature’s great behest fulfil.

  Thus by a length of years and change of fate

  All things are light or heavy, small or great;

  Thus Jordan’s waves shall future clouds appear,

  And Egypt’s pyramids refine to air;

  Thus later age shall ask for Pison’s flood,

  And travellers inquire where Babel stood.

  Now, where we see these changes often fall,

  Sedate we pass them by as natural;

  Where to our eye more rarely they appear,

  The pompous name of prodigy they bear:

  Let active thought these close meanders trace,

  Let human wit their dubious boundaries place.

  Are all things miracle, or nothing such?

  And prove we not too little or too much?

  For that a branch cut off, a wither’d rod,

  Should at a word pronounced revive and bud,

  Is this more strange than that the mountain’s brow,

  Stripp’d by December’s frost, and white with snow,

  Should push in spring ten thousand thousand buds,

  And boast returning leaves and blooming woods?

  That each successive night from opening heaven

  The food of angels should to man be given?

  Is this more strange than that with common bread

  Our fainting bodies every day are fed?

  Than that each grain and seed consumed in earth,

  Raises its store, and multiplies its birth!

  And from the handful which the tiller sows

  The labour’d fields rejoice, and future harvest flows?

  Then from whate’er we can to sense produce

  Common and plain, or wondrous and abstruse,

  From Nature’s constant or eccentric laws,

  The thoughtful soul this general influence draws,

  That an effect must pre-suppose a cause;

  And while she does her upward flight sustain,

  Touching each link of the continued chain,

  At length she is obliged and forced to see

  A first, a source, a life, a Deity;

  What has for ever been, and must for ever be.

  This great existence thus by reason found,

  Bless’d by all power, with all perfection crown’d,

  How can we bind or limit his decree

  By what our ear has heard, or eye may see?

  Say then is all in heaps of water lost,

  Beyond the islands and the midland coast?

  Or has that God who gave our world its birth

  Severed those waters by some other earth,

  Countries by future ploughshares to be torn,

  And cities raised by nations yet unborn!

  Ere the progressive course of restless age

  Performs three thousand times its annual stage,

  May not our power and learning be suppress’d,

  And arts and empire learn to travel west?

  Where, by the strength of this idea charm’d,

  Lighten’d with glory, and with rapture warm’d,

  Ascends my soul! what sees she white and great

  Amidst subjected seas? An isle, the seat

  Of power and plenty, her imperial throne,

  For justice and for mercy sought and known;

  Virtues sublime, great attri
butes of heaven,

  From thence to this distinguish’d nation given:

  Yet farther west the western isle extends

  Her happy fame; her armed fleets she sends

  To climates folded yet from human eye,

  And lands which we imagine wave and sky;

  From pole to pole she hears her acts resound,

  And rules an empire by no ocean bound;

  Knows her ships anchor’d, and her sails unfurl’d,

  In other Indies and a second world.

  Long shall Britannia (that must be her name)

  Be first in conquest, and preside in fame:

  Long shall her favour’d monarchy engage

  The teeth of Envy and the force of Age;

  Revered and happy, she shall long remain

  Of human things least changeable, least vain;

  Yet all must with the general doom comply,

  And this great glorious power though last must die.

  Now let us leave this earth, and lift our eye

  To the large convex of yon azure sky:

  Behold it like an ample curtain spread,

  Now streak’d and glowing with the morning red;

  Anon at noon in flaming yellow bright,

  And choosing sable for the peaceful night.

  Ask Reason now whence light and shade were given,

  And whence this great variety of heaven?

  Reason our guide, what can she more reply,

  Than that the sun illuminates the sky?

  Than that night rises from his absent ray,

  And his returning lustre kindles day?

  But we expect the morning red in vain,

  ’Tis hid in vapours or obscured in rain;

  The noontide yellow we in vain require,

  ’Tis black in storm, or red in lightning fire.

  Pitchy and dark the night sometimes appears,

  Friend to our wo, and parent of our fears;

  Our joy and wonder sometimes she excites,

  With stars unnumber’d and eternal lights.

  Send forth, ye wise, send forth your labouring thought,

  Let it return, with empty notions fraught

  Of airy columns every moment broke,

  Of circling whirlpools, and of spheres of smoke;

  Yet this solution but once more affords

  New change of terms and scaffolding of words;

  In other garb my question I receive,

  And take the doubt the very same I gave.

  Lo! as a giant strong, the lusty sun

  Multiplied rounds in one great round does run,

  Two-fold his course, yet constant his career,

  Changing the day, and finishing the year:

  Again, when his descending orb retires,

  And earth perceives the absence of his fires,

  The moon affords us her alternate ray,

  And with kind beams distributes fainter day,

  Yet keeps the stages of her monthly race.

  Various her beams, and changeable her face;

  Each planet shining in his proper sphere

  Does with just speed his radiant voyage steer;

  Each sees his lamp with different lustre crown’d;

  Each knows his course with different periods bound,

  And in his passage through the liquid space,

  Nor hastens nor retards his neighbour’s race.

  Now shine these planets with substantial rays?

  Does innate lustre gild their measured days?

  Or do they (as your schemes I think have shown)

  Dart furtive beams and glory not their own,

  All servants to that source of light, the sun?

  Again: I see ten thousand thousand stars,

  Nor cast in lines, in circles, nor in squares,

  (Poor rules with which our bounded mind is fill’d

  When we would plant, or cultivate, or build)

  But shining with such vast, such various light,

  As speaks the hand that form’d them infinite.

  How mean the order and perfection sought

  In the best product of the human thought,

  Compared to the great harmony that reigns

  In what the Spirit of the world ordains!

  Now if the sun to earth transmits his ray,

  Yet does not scorch us with too fierce a day,

  How small a portion of his power is given

  To orbs more distant and remoter heaven?

  And of those stars which our imperfect eye

  Has doom’d and fix’d to one eternal sky,

  Each by native stock of honour great,

  Itself a sun and with transmissive light

  Enlivens worlds denied to human sight;

  Around the circles of their ancient skies

  New moons may grow or wane, may set or rise,

  And other stars may to those suns be earths,

  Give their own elements their proper births,

  Divide their climes, or elevate their pole,

  See their lands flourish, and their oceans roll;

  Yet these great orbs, thus radically bright,

  Primitive founts, and origins of light,

  May each to other (as their different sphere

  Makes or their distance or their height appear

  Be seen a nobler or inferior star,

  Myriads of earths, and moons, and suns may lie

  Unmeasured, and unknown by human eye.

  In vain we measure this amazing sphere,

  And find and fix its centre here or there,

  Whilst its circumference, scorning to be brought

  E’en into fancied space, illudes our vanquish’d thought.

  Where then are all the radiant monsters driven

  With which your guesses fill’d the frighten’d heaven?

  Where will their fictious images remain?

  In paper schemes, and the Chaldean’s brain?

  This problem yet, this offspring of a guess,

  Let us for once a child of Truth confess;

  That these fair stars, these objects of delight

  And terror to our searching dazzled sight,

  Are worlds immense, unnumber’d, infinite;

  But do these worlds display their beams, or guide

  Their orbs, to serve thy use, to please thy pride?

  Thyself but dust, thy stature but a span,

  A moment thy duration, foolish man?

  As well may the minutest emmet say

  That Caucasus was raised to pave his way;

  That snail, that Lebanon’s extended wood

  Was destined only for his walk and food;

  The vilest cockle gaping on the coast,

  That rounds the ample seas, as well may boast

  The craggy rock projects above the sky,

  That he in safety at its foot may lie;

  And the whole ocean’s confluent waters swell,

  Only to quench his thirst, or move and blanch his shell,

  A higher flight the venturous goddess tries,

  Leaving material worlds and local skies;

  Inquires what are the beings, where the space,

  That form’d and held the angels’ ancient race?

  For rebel Lucifer with Michael fought,

  (I offer only what Tradition taught)

  Embattled cherub against cherub rose,

  Did shield to shield and power to power oppose;

  Heaven rung with triumph, hell was fill’d with woes.

  What were these forms, of which your volumes tell

  How some fought great, and others recreant fell?

  These bound to bear an everlasting load,

  Durance of chain, and banishment of God;

  By fatal turns their wretched strength to tire,

  To swim in sulphurous lakes, or land on solid fire;

  While those, exalted to primeval light,

  Excess of blessing, and supreme delight,

  Only pe
rceive some little pause of joys,

  In those great moments when their god employs

  Their ministry to pour his threaten’d hate

  On the proud king or the rebellious state;

  Or to reverse Jehovah’s high command,

  And speak the thunder falling from his hand,

  When to his duty the proud king returns,

  And the rebellious state in ashes mourns?

  How can good angels be in heaven confined,

  Or view that Presence which no space can bind?

  Is God above, beneath, or yon’, or here?

  He who made all, is he not every where?

  Oh! how can wicked angels find a night

  So dark to hide them from that piercing light

  Which form’d the eye, and gave the power of sight?

  What mean I now of angel, when I near

  Firm body, spirit pure, or fluid air?

  Spirits, to action spiritual confined,

  Friends to our thought, and kindred to our mind,

  Should only act and prompt us from within,

  Nor by external eye be ever seen.

  Was it not therefore to our fathers known

  That these had appetite, and limb, and bone?

  Else how could Abram wash their wearied feet,

  Or Sarah please their taste with savoury meat?

  Whence should they fear? or why did Lot engage

  To save their bodies from abusive rage?

  And how could Jacob, in a real fight,

  Feel or resist the wrestling angel’s might?

  How could a form its strength with matter try?

  Or how a spirit touch a mortal’s thigh?

  Now are they air condensed, or gather’d rays?

  How guide they then our prayer or keep our ways,

  By stronger blasts still subject to be toss’d,

  By tempests scatter’d, and in whirlwinds lost?

  Have they again (as sacred song proclaims)

  Substances real, and existing frames?

  How comes it, since with them we jointly share

  The great effect of one Creator’s care,

  That whilst our bodies sicken and decay,

  Theirs are for ever healthy, young, and gay?

  Why, whilst we struggle in this vale beneath

  With want and sorrow, with disease and death,

  Do they more bless’d perpetual life employ

  On songs of pleasure and in scenes of joy?

  Now, when my mind has all this world survey’d,

  And found that nothing by itself was made;

 

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