CANST be idle? canst thou play, Foolish soul, who sinn'd to day? Rivers run, and springs each one Know their home, and get them gone: Hast thou tears, or hast thou none? If, poore soul, thou hast no tears, Would thou hadst no faults or fears! Who hath these, those ill forbears. Windes still work: it is their plot, Be the season cold or hot: Hast thou sighs, or hast thou not? If thou hast no signs or grones, Would thou hadst no flesh and bones! Lesser pains scape greater ones. But if yet thou idle be, Foolish soul, who di'd for thee? Who did leave his Fathers throne, To assume thy flesh and bone? Had he life, or had he none? If he had not liv'd for thee, Thou hadst di'd most wretchedly; And two deaths had been thy fee. He so farre thy good did plot, That his own self he forgot. Did he die, or did he not? If he had not di'd for thee, Thou hadst liv'd in miserie. Two lives worse than ten deaths be. And hath any space of breath 'Twixt his sinnes and Saviours death? He that loseth gold, though drosse, Tells to all he meets, his crosse: He that sinnes, hath he no losse? He that findes a silver vein, Thinks on it, and thinks again: Brings thy Saviours death no gain? Who in heart not ever kneels, Neither sinne nor Saviour feels. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FIRST CYCLE OF LOVE POEMS: 1 by GEORGE BARKER THE RWOSE IN THE DARK by WILLIAM BARNES STANZAS ON THE DEATH OF SIR SAMUEL ROMILLY by BERNARD BARTON MISTRESS FATE by WILLIAM ROSE BENET CLARE'S GHOST by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN NAN'S SONG, FR. MIDSUMMER EVE by GORDON BOTTOMLEY LIFE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE WANDERER: 1. IN ITALY: CONDEMNED ONES by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |