I die of thirst beside the fountain's brim, As hot as fire, with my teeth chattering, In my own land a stranger, a pilgrim; Beside a brazier I stand shivering, Bare as a worm, in rich appareling; I laugh in tears, while waiting hopeless here And taking comfort of my sad despair; Rejoicing, although pleasure I have none, Powerful, with nothing that I can or dare Welcomed by all, and he whom all men shun. Nothing is sure to me except a whim, Obscure, except the clear and obvious thing, Only in certainties my faith is dim, And knowledge has an adventitious ring; I am the loser, gaining everything; At dawn I bid good evening, and I fear, While lying prone, lest I should fall from there; I'm rich, and have no coin beneath the sun, Expect a legacy, though no man's heir, Welcomed by all, and he whom all men shun. I care for nothing; taking care to trim My course for profit, claim no single thing; The man who flatters most, I'm vexed with him; Who speaks most true is most dissembling; He is my friend who has me crediting Of each white swan that it's a raven here; Who thinks to help me brings disaster near; Jesting and truth, to me they are all one. Remembering all, I yet see nothing clear Welcomed by all, and he whom all men shun. Kind prince, I pray you that it please you hear That I know much, yet have no sense to spare, Am partisan, yet all laws bear me down. What then? Make me once more your pensioner- Welcomed by all, and he whom all men shun. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BOLDNESS IN LOVE by THOMAS CAREW MERCURY; ON LOSING MY POCKET MILTON AT LUSS NEAR BEN LOMOND by ROBERT ANDREWS UNREASONABLE REASON by JOSEPH BEAUMONT GEORGE WASHINGTON by LAURA REW BIXBY THE MUSIC OF THE SEA by QUINTIN BONE BEYOND THE BARS by GEORGE E. BOWEN |