O NIGHT! dark Night! wrapped round with Stygian gloom! Thy riding-hood opaque, wrought by the hands Of Clotho and of Atropos:those hands Which spin my thread of life!so near its end. Ah wherefore, silent goddess, dost thou now Alarm with terrors?Silence sounds alarms To me, and darkness dazzles my weak mind! Hark, 'tis the death-watch! Posts themselves can speak His awful language. Stop, insatiate worm! I feel thy summons:to my fellow-worms Thou bidd'st me hasten!I obey thy call, For wherefore should I live?Vain life to me Is but a tattered garment, a patched rag, That ill defends me from the cold of age. Cramped are my faculties! my eyes grow dim; No music charms my earno meats my taste; The females fly meand my very wife, Poor woman! knows me not!_____ Ye fluttering, idle vanities of life, Where are you flown?The birds that used to sing Amidst my spreading branches now forsake The lifeless trunk, and find no shelter there. What's life?What's death?thus coveted and feared: Life is a fleeting shadow:death no more! Death's a dark lantern, life a candle's end Stuck on a save-all, soon to end in stink. The grave's a privy; life the alley green Directing therewhere 'chance on either side A sweetbriar hedge, or shrubs of brighter hue, Amuse us, and their treach'rous sweets dispense. Death chases life, and stops it ere it reach The topmost round of Fortune's restless wheel. Wheel! Life's a wheel, and each man is the ass That turns it round, receiving in the end But water or rank thistles for his pains! And yet, Lorenzo, if considered well, A life of labour is a life of ease; Pain gives true joy, and want is luxury. Pleasure not chaste is like an opera tune, Makes man not man, and castrates real joy. Would you be merry? Search the charnel-house, Where Death inhabits,give the king of fears A midnight ball, and lead up Holben's dance. How weak, yet strong, how easy, yet severe, Are Laughter's chains! which thrall a willing world. The noisy idiot shakes her bells at all, Nor e'en the Bible or the poet spares. Fools banter heav'n itself, O Young!and thee! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE POWER OF ART by GEORGE SANTAYANA THE WANDER-LOVERS by RICHARD HOVEY ON VISITING THE TOMB OF BURNS by JOHN KEATS A DEAD HARVEST (IN KENSINGTON GARDENS) by ALICE MEYNELL OVERHEARD ON A SALTMARSH by HAROLD MONRO UNDERWOODS: BOOK 1: 22. THE CELESTIAL SURGEON by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON JUNE BRACKEN AND HEATHER by ALFRED TENNYSON |