FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71  
72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   >>  
s for the eyes Of vulgar folk; and gives them masks to play Their several parts--not wisely, as we see; For impious men too oft we canonise, And kill the saints; while spurious lords array Their hosts against the real nobility. XV. _THE TRUE KINGS._ _Neron fu Re._ Nero was king by accident in show; But Socrates by nature in good sooth; By right of both Augustus; luck and truth Less perfectly were blent in Scipio. The spurious prince still seeks to extirpate The seed of natures born imperial-- Like Herod, Caiaphas, Meletus, all Who by bad acts sustain their stolen state. Slaves whose souls tell them that they are but slaves, Strike those whose native kinghood all can see: Martyrdom is the stamp of royalty. Dead though they be, these govern from their graves: The tyrants fall, nor can their laws remain; While Paul and Peter rise o'er Rome to reign. XVI. _WHAT MAKES A KING._ _Chi pennelli have e colori._ He who hath brush and colours, and chance-wise Doth daub, befouling walls and canvases, Is not a painter; but, unhelped by these, He who in art is masterful and wise. Cowls and the tonsure do not make a friar; Nor make a king wide realms and pompous wars; But he who is all Jesus, Pallas, Mars, Though he be slave or base-born, wears the tiar. Man is not born crowned like the natural king Of beasts, for beasts by this investiture Have need to know the head they must obey; Wherefore a commonwealth fits men, I say, Or else a prince whose worth is tried and sure, Not proved by sloth or false imagining. XVII. _TO JESUS CHRIST._ _I tuo' seguaci._ Thy followers to-day are less like Thee, The crucified, than those who made Thee die, Good Jesus, wandering all ways awry From rules prescribed in Thy wise charity. The saints now most esteemed love lying lips, Lust, strife, injustice; sweet to them the cry Drawn forth by monstrous pangs from men that die: So many plagues hath not the Apocalypse As these wherewith they smite Thy friends ignored-- Even as I am; search my heart, and know; My life, my sufferings bear Thy stamp and sign. If Thou return to earth, come armed; for lo, Thy foes prepare fresh crosses for Thee, Lord! Not Turks, not Jews, but they who call them Thine. XVIII. _TO DEATH._ _Morte, stipendio della colpa._
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71  
72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   >>  



Top keywords:
beasts
 

prince

 

spurious

 

saints

 

CHRIST

 

seguaci

 
imagining
 

proved

 

vulgar

 

wandering


crucified

 

followers

 

crowned

 

natural

 
investiture
 

Though

 

commonwealth

 

Wherefore

 

charity

 

return


sufferings
 

prepare

 

stipendio

 
crosses
 
search
 

strife

 

injustice

 

Pallas

 

esteemed

 

monstrous


friends

 

wherewith

 

plagues

 

Apocalypse

 

prescribed

 

pompous

 

sustain

 
nobility
 

stolen

 

imperial


Caiaphas

 

Meletus

 
Slaves
 
native
 

Strike

 

kinghood

 
Martyrdom
 

slaves

 
natures
 

nature