Poems
11.03.2010 / 22.49 pm
 
by Lord Brooke Fulke Greville
Rating: 5.00
Votes: 2
Oh, wearisome condition of humanity,
Born under one law, to another bound;
Vainly begot, and yet forbidden vanity,
Created sick, commanded to be sound.
What meaneth nature by these diverse laws?
Passion and reason self-division cause.
It is the mark or majesty of power
To make offences that it may forgive;
Nature herself doth her own self deflower,
To hate those errors she herself doth give.
For how should man think that he may not do,
If nature did not fail and punish too?
Tyrant to others, to herself unjust,
Only commands things difficult and hard,
Forbids us all things which it knows is lust,
Makes easy pains, unpossible reward.
If nature did not take delight in blood,
She would have made more easy ways to good.
We that are bound by vows and by promotion,
With pomp of holy sacrifice and rites,
To teach belief in good and still devotion,
To preach of heaven's wonders and delights:
Yet when each of us in his own heart looks
He finds the God there far unlike his books.


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Votes: 1
 
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Upon The Circumcision

Ye flaming Powers, and wingd Warriors bright,
That erst with music, and triumphant song,
Rating: 0.00
Votes: 0
 

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1 I came from Alabama
2 wid my ban jo on my knee,
Rating: 0.00
Votes: 0
 

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1
When the world turns completely upside down
Rating: 3.00
Votes: 1
 

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Rating: 0.00
Votes: 0
 

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Beside the ungathered rice he lay,
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Rating: 0.00
Votes: 0
 








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