THE man, whose days of youth and ease In Nature's calm enjoyments pass'd, Will want no monitors, like these, To torture and alarm his last. The gloomy grot, the cypress shade, The zealot's list of rigid rules, To him are merely dull parade, The tragic pageantry of fools. What life affords he freely tastes, When Nature calls, resigns his breath; Nor age in weak repining wastes, Nor acts alive the farce of death. Not so the youths of Folly's train, Impatient of each kind restraint Which parent Nature fix'd, in vain, To teach us man's true bliss, content. For something still beyond enough, With eager impotence they strive, 'Till appetite has learn'd to loathe The very joys by which we live. Then, fill'd with all which sour disdain To disappointed vice can add, Tir'd of himself, man flies from man, And hates the world he made so bad. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE MAN WITH THE WOODEN LEG by KATHERINE MANSFIELD THE HAWK by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS A PORTRAIT by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING ASPATIA'S SONG, FR. THE MAID'S TRAEGDY by JOHN FLETCHER SONNET TO MASTER GABRIELL HARVEY, DOCTOR OF LAWES by EDMUND SPENSER |