Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
SonnetXXXVIII. George Wither
Bereau’d of comfort, lies in thrall,
Doe thou, my soul, begin to thriue,
And vnto honie turne this gall;
So shall we both, through outward wo,
The way to inward comfort know.
Doth keepe in me this mortall breath;
So souls on meditations liue,
And shunne thereby immortall death:
Nor art thou euer neerer rest
Than when thou find’st me most opprest.
That take a pleasure in my care,
And to procure these outward woes,
Haue thus enwrapt me vnaware,
Thou should’st by much more carefull bee,
Since greater foes lay waite for thee.
Minding those ioyes mine eyes do misse,
Thou find’st no torment thou dost feele
So grieuous as privation is;
Muse how the damn’d in flames that glow
Pine in the loss of bliss they know.
To some that are but clay as I,
Their very anger can affright;
Which if in any thou espie,
Thus thinke: if mortal’s frownes strike feare,
How dreadfull will God’s wrath appeare!
Consider those that firmer bee;
And make the freedome I have lost
A meanes that may remember thee;
Had Christ not thy redeemer bin,
What horrid thrall thou hadst been in!
Which other poore offenders griend,
The wants and cares which they do feele
May bring some greater thing to mind;
For by their griefe thou shalt doe well
To thinke upon the paines of hell.
Condemned vnto a mortall death,
How sad he lookes, how pale, how wan,
Drawing with fear his panting breath;
Thinke if in that such griefe thou see,
How sad will, Go, yee cursed! bee.
Past hope, doth see his pardon brought,
Reade but the joy that’s in his eye,
And then conuey it to thy thought;
There thinke betwixt my heart and thee
How sweet will, Come, yee blessed! bee.
My bondage I shall deem the lesse;
I neither shall have cause to feare,
Nor yet bewaile my sad distresse:
For whether liue, or pine, or dye,
We shall haue blisse eternally.
And if they do not suffer too much wrong,
Will teach them sweeter descants than the wood.
Beleeu’t! I like the subiect of thy song,
It showes thou art in no distempered mood;
But cause to heare the residue I long,
My sheep to-morrow I will nearer bring,
And spend the day to heare thee talk and sing.
Of whom thou learn’dst to make such songs as these;
I neuer yet heard any shepheard’s reede
Tune in mishap a straine that more could please.
Surely thou dost inuoke at this thy need
Some power that we neglect in other layes:
For here’s a name and words that but few swaines
Haue mentioned at their meeting on the plaines.
That doe so much neglect it in their songs;
For thence proceedeth such a worthy fame
As is not subject vnto enue’s wrongs;
That is the most to be respected name
Of our true Pan, whose worth sits on all tongues,
And what the ancient shepheards vse to prayse
In sacred anthems sung on holy dayes.
Was that sweet shepheard who, vntill a king,
Kept sheepe upon the hony, milky plaine,
That is inricht by Jordan’s watering:
He in his troubles eased the bodie’s paines
By measures raised to the soule’s rauishing;
And his sweet numbers onely, most diuine,
Gaue first the being to this song of mine.
That I might hear such musicke every day.
Yet sure ’tis late, thy weather rings his bell,
And swaines to fold or homeward drive away.
I’le make his sheepe for me a little stay;
And if thou thinke it fit I’ll bring him too
Next morning hither.***