AS inward love breeds outward talk, The @3Hound@1 some praise, and some the @3Hawk;@1 Some, better pleas'd with private sport, Use @3Tenis@1; some a @3Mistris@1 court: But these delights I neither wish, Nor envy, while I freely fish. Who @3hunts,@1 doth oft in danger ride; Who @3hauks,@1 lures oft both far & wide; Who uses @3games,@1 may often prove A loser; but who fals in love, Is fettered in fond @3Cupids@1 snare: My Angle breeds me no such care. Of Recreation there is none So free as fishing is alone; All other pastimes do no less Then mind and body both possess; My hand alone my work can do, So I can fish and study too. I care not, I, to fish in seas, Fresh rivers best my mind do please, Whose sweet calm course I contemplate, And seek in life to imitate; In civil bounds I fain would keep And for my past offences weep. And when the timerous @3Trout@1 I wait To take, and he devours my bait, How poor a thing, sometimes I find, Will captivate a greedy mind; And when none bite, I praise the wise Whom vain alurements ne're surprise. But yet, though while I fish I fast; I make good fortune my repast; And thereunto my friend invite, In whom I more then that delight: Who is more welcome to my dish, Then to my Angle was my fish. As well content no prize to take, As use of taken prize to make; For so our Lord was pleased, when He Fishers made Fishers of men; Where (which is in no other game) A man may fish and praise his name. The first men that our Saviour dear Did chuse to wait upon him here, Blest Fishers were; and fish the last Food was, that he on earth did taste: I therefore strive to follow those Whom he to follow him hath chose. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LITTLE BROTHER'S STORY by KATHERINE MANSFIELD VLAMERTINGHE: PASSING THE CHATEAU, JULY 1917 by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN CHANGED by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE SECRETARY; WRITTEN AT THE HAGUE, 1696 by MATTHEW PRIOR THE MAGIC MIRROR by HENRY MILLS ALDEN FROST-WORK by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY - 1918 by JOHN KENDRICK BANGS SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 39. NOT CHRIST, BUT CHRIST'S GOD by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |