- The Resurrection
- Abraham Cowley
- Exported from Wikisource on 02/15/20
- Not Winds to Voyagers at Sea,
- Nor Showers to Earth more necessary be,
- (Heav'ens vital seed cast on the womb of Earth
- To give the fruitful Year a Birth)
- Then Verse to Virtue, which can do
- The Midwifes Office, and the Nurses too;
- It feeds it strongly, and it cloathes it gay,
- And when it dyes, with comely pride
- Embalms it, and erects a Pyramide
- That never will decay
- Till Heaven it self shall melt away,
- And nought behind it stay.
- Begin the Song, and strike the Living Lyre;
- Lo how the Years to come, a numerous and well-fitted Quire,
- All hand in hand do decently advance,
- And to my Song with smooth and equal measures dance.
- Whilst the dance lasts, how long so e're it be,
- My Musicks voyce shall bear it companie.
- Till all gentle Notes be drown'd
- In the last Trumpets dreadful sound.
- That to the Spheres themselves shall silence bring,
- Untune the Universal String.
- Then all the wide extended Sky,
- And all th' harmonious Worlds on high,
- And Virgils sacred work shall dy.
- And he himself shall see in one Fire shine
- Rich Natures ancient Troy, though built by Hands Divine.
- Whom Thunders dismal noise,
- And all that Prophets and Apostles louder spake,
- And all the Creatures plain conspiring voyce,
- Could not whilst they liv'ed, awake,
- This mightier sound shall make
- When Dead t'arise, And open Tombs, and open Eyes
- To the long Sluggards of five thousand years.
- This mightier Sound shall make its Hearers Ears.
- Then shall the scatter'ed Atomes crowding come
- Back to their Ancient Home,
- Some from Birds, from Fishes some,
- Some from Earth, and some from Seas,
- Some from Beasts, and some from Trees.
- Some descend from Clouds on high,
- Some from Metals upwards fly,
- And where th' attending Soul naked, and shivering stands,
- Meet, salute, and joyn their hands.
- As disperst Souldiers at the Trumpets call,
- Hast to their Colours all.
- Unhappy most, like Tortur'ed Men,
- Their Joynts new set, to be new rackt agen.
- To Mountains they for shelter pray,
- The Mountains shake, and run about no less confus'd then They.
- Stop, stop, my Muse, allay thy vig'orous heat,
- Kindled at a Hint so Great.
- Hold thy Pindarique Pegasus closely in,
- Which does to rage begin,
- And this steep Hill would gallop up with violent course,
- 'Tis an unruly, and a hard-Mouth'd Horse,
- Fierce, and unbroken yet,
- Impatient of the Spur or Bit.
- Now praunces stately, and anon flies o're the place,
- Disdains the servile Law of any settled pace,
- Conscious and proud of his own natural force.
- 'Twill no unskilful Touch endure,
- But flings Writer and Reader too that sits not sure.
- About this digital edition
- This e-book comes from the online library Wikisource[1]. This multilingual digital library, built by volunteers, is committed to developing a free accessible collection of publications of every kind: novels, poems, magazines, letters...
- We distribute our books for free, starting from works not copyrighted or published under a free license. You are free to use our e-books for any purpose (including commercial exploitation), under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported[2] license or, at your choice, those of the GNU FDL[3].
- Wikisource is constantly looking for new members. During the realization of this book, it's possible that we made some errors. You can report them at this page[4].
- The following users contributed to this book:
- Danny~enwikisource
- Zhaladshar
- Pathosbot
- * * *
- ↑ http://wikisource.org
- ↑ http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0
- ↑ http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
- ↑ http://wikisource.org/wiki/Wikisource:Scriptorium