1 Spew out thy filth, thy flesh abjure; Let not contingents thee defile. For transients only are impure, And airy things thy soul beguile. 2 Unfelt, unseen let those things be Which to thy spirit were unknown, When to thy blessed infancy The world, thyself, thy God was shown. 3 All that is great and stable stood Before thy purer eyes at first: All that in visibles is good Or pure, or fair, or unaccurst. 4 Whatever else thou now dost see In custom, action, or desire, 'Tis but a part of misery In which all men at once conspire. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE GRAVE OF A POETESS by FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL NEW FRIENDS AND OLD FRIENDS by JOSEPH PARRY THE DRUM: THE NARRATIVE OF THE DEMON OF TEDWORTH by EDITH SITWELL ODES: BOOK 2: ODE 10. TO THOMAS EDWARDS, ON ... POPE'S WORKS by MARK AKENSIDE THRENODY by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH ON THE DEATH OF MRS. JENNINGS by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |