FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   >>  
r have no sense of pain? The youngest in the morning are not sure That till the night their life they can secure; Their age stands more exposed to accidents Than ours, nor common care their fate prevents: Death's force (with terror) against Nature strives, 709 Nor one of many to ripe age arrives. From this ill fate the world's disorders rise, For if all men were old, they would be wise; Years and experience our forefathers taught, Them under laws and into cities brought: Why only should the fear of death belong To age, which is as common to the young? Your hopeful brothers, and my son, to you (Scipio) and me, this maxim makes too true: But vig'rous youth may his gay thoughts erect To many years, which age must not expect. 720 But when he sees his airy hopes deceived, With grief he says, Who this would have believed? We happier are than they, who but desired To possess that which we long since acquired. What if our age to Nestor's could extend? 'Tis vain to think that lasting which must end; And when 'tis past, not any part remains Thereof, but the reward which virtue gains. Days, months, and years, like running waters flow, Nor what is past, nor what's to come, we know: 730 Our date, how short soe'er, must us content. When a good actor doth his part present, In every act he our attention draws, That at the last he may find just applause; So (though but short) yet we must learn the art Of virtue, on the stage to act our part; True wisdom must our actions so direct, Not only the last plaudit to expect; Yet grieve no more, though long that part should last, Than husbandmen, because the spring is past. 740 The spring, like youth, fresh blossoms doth produce, But autumn makes them ripe and fit for use: So age a mature mellowness doth set On the green promises of youthful heat. All things which Nature did ordain, are good, And so must be received and understood. Age, like ripe apples, on earth's bosom drops, While force our youth, like fruits untimely, crops; The sparkling flame of our warm blood expires, As when huge streams are pour'd on raging fires; 750 But age unforced falls by her own consent, As coals to ashes, when the spirit's spent; Therefore to death I with such joy resort, As seamen from a tempest to their port. Yet to that port ourselves we must not force, Before our pilot, Nature, steers o
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   >>  



Top keywords:

Nature

 
spring
 

expect

 
virtue
 
common
 

Therefore

 

actions

 

grieve

 
husbandmen
 
plaudit

wisdom
 

spirit

 

direct

 

steers

 

Before

 

content

 

present

 

seamen

 
applause
 
resort

tempest

 

attention

 

apples

 

understood

 

received

 

ordain

 
fruits
 
streams
 

expires

 
sparkling

raging

 
untimely
 

unforced

 
autumn
 
produce
 

consent

 
blossoms
 

youthful

 

promises

 
things

mature

 

mellowness

 

Nestor

 

experience

 

forefathers

 

disorders

 
taught
 

belong

 

hopeful

 

cities