BE, like a noble prince, in love with fame! Live glorious days, and win a deathless name Achieving deeds that history shall tell, Like those of Charles the Great, and Charles Martel! Let not the nobles wrong the Third Estate; Let not the populace displease the great. Manage thy revenues with canny sense; The Prince who cannot govern his expense, And rule his wife, his children, his estate, Will surely fail to govern well the state. . . . But be more miserly of friends than gold; Kings without friends were wretched from of old. . . . Never appear in pompous vesturing; Virtue alone can fitly clothe a king. Let all thy body shine with virtues bright, And not thy raiment with rich pearls bedight. . . . And, Sire, since no man born may punish kings For any wrong, with strict examinings Chastise thyself, in fear lest finally God's justice, higher than thou, should punish thee. . . . | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A BIT OF SKY by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON FIFTH AVENUE-SPRING AFTERNOON by LOUIS UNTERMEYER OH, SWEET CONTENT by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES THE TRAGEDY OF VALENTINIAN: THE POWER OF LOVE by JOHN FLETCHER THE HOUR OF DEATH by FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS LUCASIA, ROSANIA, AND ORINDA PARTING AT A FOUNTAIN by KATHERINE PHILIPS WINTER RAIN by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI SONNET TO MASTER GABRIELL HARVEY, DOCTOR OF LAWES by EDMUND SPENSER |