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Home  »  The Book of Restoration Verse  »  Abraham Cowley (1618–1667)

William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. The Book of Restoration Verse. 1910.

Brutus

Abraham Cowley (1618–1667)

EXCELLENT Brutus, of all human race,

The best till nature was improved by grace,

Till men above themselves faith raised more

Then reason above beasts before.

Virtue was thy life’s centre, and from thence

Did silently and constantly dispense

The gentle vigorous influence

To all the wide and fair circumference:

And all the parts upon it leaned so easily,

Obey’d the mighty force so willingly

That none could discord or disorder see

In all their contrariety.

Each had his motion natural and free,

And the whole no more moved then the whole world could be.

From thy strict rule some think that thou didst swerve

(Mistaken honest men!) in Cæsar’s blood;

What mercy could the tyrant’s life deserve,

From him who kill’d himself rather than serve?

Th’ heroic exaltations of good

Are so far from understood,

We count them vice: alas, our sight’s so ill,

That things which swiftest move seem to stand still.

We look not upon virtue in her height,

On her supreme idea, brave and bright,

In the original light:

But as her beams reflected pass

Through our own nature or ill-custom’s glass.

And ’tis no wonder so,

If with dejected eye

In standing pools we seek the sky,

That stars, so high above, should seem to us below.

Can we stand by and see

Our mother robbed, and bound, and ravish’d be,

Yet not to her assistance stir,

Pleas’d with the strength and beauty of the ravisher?

Or shall we fear to kill him, if before

The cancell’d name of friend he bore?

Ingrateful Brutus do they call?

Ingrateful Cæsar who could Rome enthral!

An act more barbarous and unnatural

(In th’ exact balance of true virtue tried)

Than his successor Nero’s parricide!

There’s none but Brutus could deserve

That all men else should wish to serve,

And Cæsar’s usurped place to him should proffer;

None can deserv’t but he who would refuse the offer.

Ill fate assumed a body thee t’affright,

And wrapt itself i’ th’ terrors of the night,

‘I’ll meet thee at Philippi,’ said the spright;

‘I’ll meet thee there,’ saidst thou,

With such a voice, and such a brow,

As put the trembling ghost to sudden flight,

It vanish’d, as a taper’s light

Goes out when spirits appear in sight.

One would have thought t’had heard the morning crow,

Or seen her well-appointed star

Come marching up the eastern hill afar.

Nor durst it in Philippi’s field appear,

But unseen attacked thee there.

Had it presumed in any shape thee to oppose,

Thou wouldst have forced it back upon thy foes:

Or slain’t like Cæsar, though it be

A conqueror and a monarch mightier far than he.

What joy can human things to us afford,

When we see perish thus by odd events,

Ill men, and wretched accidents,

The best cause and best man that ever drew a sword?

When we see

The false Octavius, and wild Anthony,

God-like Brutus, conquer thee?

What can we say but thine own tragic word,

That virtue, which had worshipped been by thee

As the most solid good, and greatest deity,

By this fatal proof became

An idol only, and a name?

Hold, noble Brutus! and restrain

The bold voice of thy generous disdain:

These mighty gulfs are yet

Too deep for all thy judgment and thy wit.

The time’s set forth already which shall quell

Stiff reason, when it offers to rebel.

Which these great secrets shall unseal,

And new philosophies reveal.

A few years more, so soon hadst thou not died,

Would have confounded human virtue’s pride,

And shew’d thee a God crucified.