Your ugly token My mind hath broken From worldly lust; For I have discust We are but dust, And die we must. It is generall To be mortall: I have well espied No man may him hide From Death hollow-eyed, With sinews withered And bones shidered, With his worm-eaten maw, And his gastly jaw Gasping aside, Naked of hide, Neither flesh nor fell. Then by me councell, Look that ye spell With this gospell: For whereso we dwell Death doth us quell, And with us mell. For all our pampered paunches, There may be no fraunchise, Nor worldly bliss, Redeem us from this: Our days be dated, To be checkmated With draughtes of death, Stopping our breath, Our eyen sinking, Our gummes grinning, Our soules brinning. To whom, then shall we sue, For to have rescue, But to sweet Jesu, On us for to rue? O goodly child. Of Mary mild, Then be our shield! That we be not exiled To the dine dale Of bootless bale, Nor to the lake Of fiendes black. But grant us grace To see thy face, And to purchase Thine heavenly place, And thy palace, Full of solace, Above the sky That is so high; Eternally To behold and see The Trinity! Amen. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET: 29 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE E TENEBRIS [FROM THE SHADOWS] by OSCAR WILDE THE HARLOT'S HOUSE by OSCAR WILDE SONNET by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH SONNET: 13 by RICHARD BARNFIELD UNVEILING THE MONUMENT by LEVI BISHOP SABBATH HYMN ON THE MOUNTAINS by JOHN STUART BLACKIE |