TAKE the world as it is! -- there are good and bad in it, And good and bad will be from now to the end; And they who expect to make saints in a minute, Are in danger of marring more hearts than they'll mend. If ye wish to be happy ne'er seek for the faults, Or you're sure to find something or other amiss; 'Mid much that debases, and much that exalts, The world's not a bad one if left as it is. Take the world as it is! -- if the surface be shining, Ne'er rake up the sediment hidden below! There's wisdom in this, but there's none in repining O'er things which can rarely be mended, we know. There's beauty around us, which let us enjoy; And chide not, unless it may be with a kiss; Though Earth's not the heaven we thought when a boy, There's something, to live for, if ta'en as it is. Take the world as it is! -- with its smiles and its sorrows, Its love and its friendship, -- its falsehood and truth, Its schemes that depend on the breath of tomorrow, Its hopes which pass by like the dreams of our youth: Yet, oh! whilst the light of affections may shine, The heart in itself hath a fountain of bliss; In the worst there's some spark of nature divine, And the wisest and best take the world as it is. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONGS ON THE VOICES OF BIRDS; SEA-MEWS IN WINTER TIME by JEAN INGELOW ADONAIS; AN ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF JOHN KEATS by PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY THE OLD MAN'S COMFORTS AND HOW HE GAINED THEM by ROBERT SOUTHEY MY BEAUTIFUL LADY by THOMAS WOOLNER |