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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 15
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




Alfred the Great

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 356


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

THE LAYS OF BOETHIUS

PRELUDE
Thus  the  old  tale  Alfred  told  us,
West  Saxons'  king.  He  showed  the  cunning,
The  craft  of  songmen.  Keenly  he  longed
Unto  the  people  to  put  forth  songs
To  make  men  merry,  manifold  stories,
Lest  a  weariness  should  ward  away
The  man  self-filled,  that  small  heed  takes
Of  such  in  his  pride.  Again  I  must  speak,
Take  up  my  singing,  the  tale  far  known
Weave  for  mortals;  let  who  will  listen.


LAYS

I

Twas  long  ago  when  the  eastern  Goths
Sent  from  Scythia  their  swarms  of  shieldmen,
With  multitudes  harried  many  a  nation.
Two  tribes  triumphant  tramped  to  the  south.
The  Goths  in  greatness  grew  year  by  year;
Akin  to  the  clansmen  kings  were  there  twain,
Raedgod  and  Aleric;  they  ruled  in  power.
Over  Jove's  mountain  came  many  a  Goth
Gorged  with  glory,  greedy  to  wrestle
In  fight  with  foemen.  The  banner  flashing
Fluttered  on  the  staff.  Freely  the  heroes
All  Italy  over  were  eager  to  roam,
The  wielders  of  bucklers,  bearing  onward
Even  from  Jove's  mount  on  to  ocean,
Where  in  sea-streams  Sicily  lies,
That  mighty  island,  most  famous  of  lands.
Rudely  the  Roman  rule  was  shattered;
The  shieldmen  sacked  the  glorious  city
Rome  was  ravaged;  Raedgod  and  Aleric
Carried  the  fortress.  Away  fled  the  Caesar,
Yes,  and  his  princes,  off  to  the  Greeks.
The  luckless  left  ones,  losing  the  combat,
To  the  Gothic  foemen  gave  up  all,
Unwilling  forfeited  their  fathers'  treasures,
Their  holy  allegiance  hard  was  the  loss!
The  hearts  of  the  heroes  held  with  the  Greeks,
If  they  dared  follow  the  folk's  foemen.
Thus  things  stood  the  folk  was  stressed
Many  a  winter,  till  Weird  appointed
That  Theodoric  the  thanes  and  nobles
Should  lord  it  over.  This  leader  of  them
Was  claimed  by  Christ,  the  king  himself
Brought  to  baptism  a  blessed  day
For  the  sons  of  Rome.  They  sought  right  soon
Help  from  the  high  one;  he  then  vowed
To  give  the  Romans  all  rights  olden,
Safe  to  sojourn  in  their  wealthy  city,
While  God  him  granted  the  Goths'  dominion
To  own  and  possess.  All  this  the  prince  broke.
Oath  after  oath;  Arian  error
He  loved  better  than  the  law  of  the  Lord.
The  good  Pope  John  he  judged  in  his  anger,
Robbed  of  his  head;  a  heinous  deed!
Countless  wrongs  were  likewise  wrought
By  the  Gothic  leader  on  each  of  the  good.
In  those  days  a  leader  in  Rome  was  living,
A  high-born  chieftain,  cherishing  his  lord,
While  that  the  high-seat  was  held  by  the  Greeks;
A  man  most  righteous.  He  was  'mid  the  Romans
A  giver  of  treasure  glorious  ever,
Wise  toward  this  world,  wishful  of  honour,
Learned  in  booklore;  Boethius  the  name  was
That  this  hero  had,  that  so  highly  was  famed.
Time  after  time  he  turned  in  his  mind
The  evil  and  insult  by  alien  princes
Grievously  given.  To  the  Greeks  he  was  true,
Remembering  the  honours  and  ancient  rights
By  his  fathers  aforetime  fully  enjoyed,
Their  love  and  kindness.  Then  with  cunning
He  planned  and  brooded  how  he  might  bring
The  Greeks  to  his  country,  that  once  more  the  Caesar
Might  have  full  power  over  his  people.
Then  to  their  former  lords  letters  of  embassy
He  sent  in  secret,  summoning  them  by  God,
By  their  former  faith,  forthwith  to  him
To  speed  Romewards;  Greek  senators
Should  rule  the  Romans,  their  rights  render
Free  to  the  folk.  When  he  found  this  out,
Theodoric  the  Amuling,  the  thane  he  had  seized,
Charging  the  braves  that  did  his  bidding
To  hold  fast  the  hero;  fierce  was  his  heart,
The  chieftain  dreading.  Deep  in  a  dungeon
Bolted  and  barred  he  bade  them  cast  him.
Then  was  the  man's  mood  mightily  troubled,
The  mind  of  Boethius.  Long  had  he  borne
High  state  worldly;  the  harder  it  was
Bravely  to  bear  this  bitter  fortune.
Sad  was  the  hero  he  hoped  for  no  mercy,
Locked  in  prison;  past  all  comfort
On  the  floor  he  fell  with  his  face  downwards,
Woefully  spread,  his  sorrow  speaking,
Hopeless  utterly,  ever  thinking
He  should  linger  in  fetters.  He  called  on  the  Lord
With  cheerless  voice,  and  thus  he  chanted.

II

Ah!  many  a  lay  once  so  merrily
I  sang  in  my  joy.  Now  must  I  sighing,
Worn  with  weeping,  a  woeful  outcast,
Sing  words  of  sorrow.  Me  has  this  sobbing
And  this  wailing  dazed,  so  that  no  more  little  songs
Can  I  compose  so  impressively,  though  many  tales
Once  I  wove,  when  I  was  happy.
Often  now  I  find  not  the  words  familiar,
I  that  in  old  times  often  made  strange  ones.
Me,  nearly  blind,  have  these  worldly  blessings
Drawn  in  my  folly  to  this  dim  cavern,
And  robbed  me  entirely  of  reason  and  comfort
With  their  false  faith,  when  I  had  fain  ever
To  them  trusted.  To  me  they  have  turned
Their  backs,  oh!  cruelly,  and  kept  joy  from  me.
Ah!  why  were  you  minded,  my  friends  of  this  world,
In  speech  or  in  song  to  say  I  was  happy
Here  in  this  world?  The  words  are  not  true  ones.
For  worldly  blessings  abide  not  always.

III

Ah!  it  is  fearful  and  fathomless  deep,
The  murky  pit  where  the  mind  toils,
When  the  blasts  of  tempests  beat  against  it
Of  worldly  afflictions;  then  in  its  fighting
Its  own  true  light  it  leaves  behind  it,
And  in  woe  forgets  the  weal  eternal.
It  dashes  onward  into  this  world's  darkness,
Weary  with  sorrows.  So  has  it  now
This  soul  befallen,  for  now  it  nought  knows
Of  good  before  God,  but  great  grief
From  the  world  unfriendly;  it  wants  comfort.

IV

O  You  Creator  of  bright  constellations,
Of  heaven  and  earth;  You  on  the  high-seat
Eternal  reign  and  the  round  heaven
All  swiftly  move,  and  through  Your  holy  might
The  lights  of  heaven  make  to  hear  You,
Even  as  the  sun  scatters  darkness
Of  the  dark  night  time  through  Your  strong  power,
And  with  her  pale  beams  the  bright  stars
The  moon  does  humble,  through  Your  might's  moving;
At  whiles  too  she  robs  the  radiant  sun
Of  his  full  light,  when  it  befalls
That  they  come  together  by  close  compulsion.
So  too  the  glorious  star  of  morning,
That  we  by  its  other  name  star  of  evening
Often  hear  called,  You  constrain
To  follow  the  way  where  the  sun  goes
Every  year  he  must  ever  travel,
Fare  before  him.  O  Father,  You  send
Long  days  in  summer  with  heat  sultry;
To  the  winter  also  wondrous  short  days
Have  You  granted.  To  the  trees  You  give
South-west  breezes,  when  the  black  tempest
Sprung  from  the  north-east  had  utterly  stript  them
Of  every  leaf  with  its  loathly  wind.
Behold,  all  creatures  in  the  earth's  compass
Obey  Your  hests;  the  same  do  they  in  heaven
With  mind  and  main,  save  man  only;
He  oftenest  works  in  despite  of  Your  will.
Ah!  You  Eternal  and  You  Almighty
Author  and  Ruler  of  all  creation,
Pity  the  offspring  of  Your  poor  world,
Even  this  race  of  men,  through  Your  mighty  power.
Why,  O  God  Eternal,  grant  You  ever
That  Fate  at  the  will  of  wicked  mortals
Should  turn  herself  on  earth  so  swiftly?
Often  to  the  guiltless  great  harm  she  works.
The  wicked  are  seated  in  worldly  kingdoms
Upon  their  high-seats,  trampling  the  holy
Under  their  feet;  no  man  may  find  out
Why  Fate  falls  so  foully  awry.
So  also  are  hidden  here  in  this  world
In  many  a  borough  brightest  virtues,
Whereas  the  sinful  in  every  season
Treat  most  evilly  all  those  others
That  are  more  righteous,  to  rule  more  worthy.
False-faced  guile  long  has  gone
Wrapt  up  in  wiles.  Now  here  in  the  world
Oaths  basely  broken  bring  no  scathe.
If  You,  O  Chieftain,  will  not  check  Fate,
But  suffer  her  in  self-will  to  remain,
Then  this  do  I  know,  that  nations  will  doubt
Far  over  earth's  fields,  all  but  a  few.
O  my  Sovereign,  You  that  see
All  worldly  creatures,  with  eyes  of  kindness
Look  on  mortals,  for  they  are  moiling,
Battling  here  in  the  world's  billows,
Poor  folk  of  the  earth;  pity  them  therefore.

V

You  may  by  the  sun  see  most  clearly,
And  by  each  of  the  other  orbs  of  heaven
That  shine  most  brightly  over  the  boroughs,
If  a  dark  cloud  comes  before  them
They  cannot  give  forth  such  a  bright  gleam
Till  the  thick  mist  grow  thinner  before  them.
So  too  the  south  breeze  fiercely  stirs
The  calm  grey  ocean  clear  as  glass;
Then  mighty  billows  mingle  the  waters,
Stir  the  whale-sea;  fierce  waxes  ocean
That  but  shortly  before  was  blithe  to  look  on.
Often  too  the  well-spring  is  wont  to  trickle
From  the  hoar  cliff,  cool  and  sparkling,
And  onward  flowing  a  straight  course  follows,
To  its  home  fleets,  till  there  falls  upon  it
A  rock  from  the  mountain,  that  lies  in  its  midst
Rolled  from  the  peak;  parted  in  twain
The  rill  is  broken,  the  brook's  clear  water
Stirred  and  clouded;  the  stream  is  turned
Away  from  its  course,  cleft  into  runnels.
So  now  the  darkness  that  dims  your  heart
Wishes  to  turn  back  the  light  of  my  teaching,
And  sorely  trouble  your  spirit's  thoughts.
But  if  you  are  willing,  as  well  you  may  be,
The  light  of  the  truth  clearly  to  learn,
The  brightness  of  faith,  then  shall  you  forsake
Vain  surfeit  of  pleasure,  profitless  joys.
You  shall  too  forsake  the  evil  fear
Of  worldly  afflictions,  nor  wax  ever  for  them
Utterly  hopeless;  no,  nor  have  yourself
Weakened  with  wealth,  lest  with  it  you  be
Brought  to  sorrow  through  the  sin  of  pride,
And  too  puffed  up  by  prosperous  fortune,
By  joys  of  the  world.  Nor  again  too  feebly
Lose  all  your  faith  in  future  good,
When  in  this  world  the  weight  of  afflictions
Bears  on  you  sorely,  and  you  are  beset
With  utter  terror;  for  ever  it  tides
That  a  man's  breast  is  bound  most  firmly
With  dire  confusion  if  either  of  these  dangers
Here  may  trouble  him,  torture  his  spirit.
For  both  these  hardships  hand  in  hand,
A  mist  misleading  draw  over  the  mind,
So  that  the  sun  eternal  its  light  may  not  send  forth
For  the  black  mists  until  these  be  blown  away.

VI

Then  Wisdom  again  unlocked  her  word-hoard.
Her  tale  of  sooth  sang  in  these  words:
'While  the  bright  sun  most  clear  is  beaming,
Gleaming  in  heaven,  gloom  enwraps
Over  the  world  all  other  bodies;
For  their  light  is  nought,  nothing  at  all,
When  set  against  the  sun's  great  brightness.
When  softly  blows  from  south  and  west
The  wind  beneath  heaven,  then  soon  wax
The  flowers  of  the  field,  fain  to  be  able.
But  the  stiff  storm-wind,  when  it  strongly  blows
From  out  of  the  north-east,  how  soon  it  nips
The  rose's  beauty!  By  the  northern  blast
The  spacious  ocean  is  helpless  spurned
Till  strongly  heaving  it  strikes  the  beach.
Alas,  that  in  the  world  nothing  wears
Firm  and  lasting  long  on  this  earth.

VII

Then  did  Wisdom  follow  her  wont,
Glee-words  chanted,  changed  song  for  speech,
Of  tales  of  sooth  sang  yet  another:
'Never  on  high  hill  had  she  ever  heard
That  any  of  men  might  make  to  stand
A  roof-fast  hall;  nor  need  any  hope
To  have  the  wit  to  mingle  wisdom,
To  put  it  together  with  pride  overweening.
Heard  you  ever  that  any  of  mortals
On  hills  of  sand  his  house  could  establish
Firm  to  last  him?  Nor  can  any  mortal
Build  up  wisdom,  where  the  hill-side
Is  spread  with  covetise.  Quickly  the  rain
Is  sucked  by  the  sand;  so  do  the  great  ones,
With  their  bottomless  greed  of  goods  and  glory.
They  drink  to  the  dregs  this  dross  so  fleeting,
Yet  the  thirst  of  their  craving  is  never  cooled.
A  man  may  not  build  a  house  on  a  mountain
That  may  long  tarry;  soon  the  tempest
Swift  on  it  sweeps.  Sand  is  useless
In  deluge  of  rain  to  him  that  dwells
In  the  house  as  master;  it  melts  away,
In  the  rain  sinks.  So  with  every  man;
His  inmost  mind  is  mightily  shaken,
Stirred  from  its  station,  when  the  strong  winds,
Of  earthly  troubles  toss  and  tease  it,
Or  when  the  ruthless  rain  of  affliction,
Boundless  distress,  dashes  upon  it.
But  he  that  ever  wishes  to  own
True  joy  eternal  must  turn  and  flee
This  world's  beauty.  Then  let  him  build
The  house  of  his  soul  so  that  he  find
The  Rock  of  Humility,  hard  and  fastest,
Sure  foundation;  he  shall  not  slip
Though  that  the  tempest  of  worldly  troubles
Or  flood  of  worries  fiercely  assail  it.
For  in  that  Vale  of  the  Lowly  the  Lord  Himself
Ever  abides,  owns  His  Home;
And  there  too  Wisdom  in  memory  waits.
A  life  without  sorrow  he  always  leads
That  chooses  wisdom;  it  never  changes,
Since  he  disdains  delights  of  the  world,
From  every  evil  utterly  free;
He  hopes  in  eternity  hereafter  to  come.
Him  then  everywhere  God  Almighty
Keeps  always,  ever  unceasing,
Fast  abiding  in  the  blessed  joys
Of  his  own  mind,  through  the  Master's  grace,
Though  often  the  winds  of  worldly  troubles
Batter  and  bruise  him,  or  never  bating
Cares  be  fretting,  when  the  fierce  gusts
Of  worldly  blessings  blow  unkindly,
Though  him  ever  the  endless  worry
Of  earthly  fortune  sore  confound  him.'

VIII

After  Wisdom  these  words  had  spoken,
Clearly  set  forth,  soon  she  began
Sooth  words  to  sing,  and  thus  she  spoke
'Oh!  the  ancient  days  for  all  earth-dwellers
Throughout  the  world  were  ever  the  best.
Then  was  each  man  ever  contented
With  fruits  of  the  earth;  'tis  otherwise  now.
Not  then  in  the  world  were  wealthy  homes,
Nor  many  kinds  of  meat  and  drink;
Nor  anything  of  raiment  recked  men  then,
In  these  days  to  men  of  all  things  dearest;
For  then  such  was  not  seen  as  yet,
Never  the  sea-folk  had  seen  it  at  all.
No,  nor  anywhere  of  it  had  heard.
Ah!  then  the  sin  of  lust  they  longed  not  to  do,
But  in  degree  they  duly  followed
The  call  of  nature  as  Christ  appointed.
But  one  meal  daily  they  always  made
Of  the  earth's  increase,  at  hour  of  even,
Of  plants  of  the  wood.  No  wine  they  drank
Bright  from  the  bowl;  none  could  boast
Skill  to  mingle  drink  with  his  meat,
Water  with  honey,  nor  to  fashion  by  sewing
Clothing  of  silk;  nor  had  they  cunning
In  costly  stuffs;  nor  stood  there  halls
Cleverly  planned;  but  it  was  their  custom
In  every  season  to  sleep  in  the  open
In  the  deep  tree-shade.  They  drank  burn-water
Cool  from  the  spring.  Never  did  chapman
See  over  the  sea-surge  the  shore  of  strange  land;
Nor  had  men  heard  of  the  harrying  ship-host
No,  nor  was  fighting  familiar  to  mortals.
Not  as  yet  was  the  earth  anywhere  stained
With  the  blood  of  a  man  nor  the  dye  of  the  blade,
Nor  even  one  wounded  had  any  man  witnessed
Under  the  sun.  So  too  none  was  worthy
Held  in  the  world  if  his  will  seemed
Evil  unto  men;  by  all  was  he  loathed.
Oh!  were  it  true,  or  would  God  but  grant
That  here  on  earth  in  our  days  now,
Over  the  wide  world,  man's  wont  was  such
Under  the  sun!  But  now  'tis  more  sinful,
For  covetous  greed  so  clogs  the  soul
Of  every  man  that  he  heeds  not  other  things.
And  in  the  mind  boiling  it  burns  ever,
This  curse  of  covetise,  never  contented,
Black  and  bottomless  blazes  smouldering,
Even  as  the  mountain  that  mortals  call
By  name  of  Etna;  this  on  an  island,
Even  Sicily,  with  sulphur  burns,
Hell-fire  widely  hight  by  mortals,
For  unceasing  it  smoulders  ever,
And  all  around  it  the  rest  of  the  land
It  fiercely  blasts  with  blaze  consuming.
Ah!  who  was  the  first  that  filled  with  greed
Dwelt  in  the  world,  and  dug  the  ground
In  quest  of  gold  and  curious  jewels?
Wealth  did  he  find,  fatal  to  many,
In  the  world  hidden  in  water  or  earth.

IX

We  all  have  heard  what  hateful  deeds
Far  and  near  Nero  wrought,
King  of  the  Romans,  when  that  his  rule
Was  first  under  heaven,  fatal  to  many.
The  fierce  one's  madness  men  widely  knew,
His  lawless  lust  and  laches  unnumbered,
His  sins  and  murders,  misdeeds  many,
The  cursed  wiles  of  that  wicked  one.
He  bade  for  his  sport  with  fire  destroy
The  city  of  Rome  that  was  the  seat
Of  full  dominion,  for  in  his  folly
He  fain  would  try  whether  the  fire,
Flaming  brightly,  would  burn  as  long,
Would  rage  as  red,  as  the  Romans  told
That  Troy  town  was  of  old  overtaken
By  the  brightest  of  flames  that  longest  burned
In  homes  under  heaven.  A  hideous  thing,
To  take  his  pleasure  in  such  perilous  sport.
Nought  else  gaining,  this  only  regarding,
To  make  his  power  far  over  peoples
Widely  renowned,  over  the  nations.
It  likewise  betided  once  on  a  time
That  this  same  man  sent  to  murder
All  the  rulers  of  the  Senate  of  Rome,
And  all  the  best  by  birth  as  well
That  he  could  find  among  his  folk;
And  his  own  brother  besides  he  bade,
Yes,  and  his  mother,  be  murdered  with  swords,
Killed  with  blade-edge.  He  himself  butchered
His  bride  with  the  brand,  and  ever  was  blither,
Gayer  of  mood,  the  more  of  such  murder,
Such  hateful  wrong,  he  wrought  on  mortals.
Nought  did  he  heed  whether  hereafter
The  mighty  Master  would  mete  out  vengeance,
Wreak  on  the  wicked  their  wrongful  deeds,
But  in  his  soul  was  glad  of  his  guile  and  sins,
Bloodthirsty  ever.  But  notwithstanding,
He  governed  all  of  this  glorious  world,
Where  air  and  sea  encircle  the  land
And  the  deep  sea  enrings  this  realm  of  mortals,
The  seats  of  men,  south,  east  and  west,
Right  to  the  northmost  nesses  of  earth.
All  bowed  to  Nero,  for  need  or  pleasure
None  was  there  of  men  but  must  obey  him.
When  his  pride  was  highest  ‘twas  a  pretty  jest
How  the  kings  of  the  earth  he  killed  and  harried!
Do  you  gainsay  that  God  Almighty
Could  most  readily  wrest  his  power
From  the  boastful  scourge,  and  strip  him  bare
Of  all  dominion  through  the  might  eternal,
Or  utterly  curb  the  course  of  his  sins?
Oh,  that  He  would  only,  as  He  easily  might,
All  such  felony  fain  forbid  him!
Oh,  'twas  no  light  yoke  which  that  lord  planted,
A  grievous  annoy,  on  the  necks  of  his  thanes,
Of  all  his  lieges  that  in  his  lifetime
Over  this  brittle  world  were  fated  to  bide
He  with  the  gore  of  guiltless  men
Fouled  his  sword-blade,  full  many's  the  time.
Thus  we  see  clearly,  as  we  have  often  said,
That  dominion  can  do  no  good
If  he  that  has  gained  it  have  no  good  will.

X

If  any  living  man  longs  for  glory,
And  fame  without  gain  would  fain  have  for  his  own,
Then  with  my  words  would  I  beseech  him
On  all  sides  about  him  far  out  to  spy,
Clearly  to  look,  south,  east,  and  west,
And  consider  how  broad  with  the  clouds  all  about
Is  the  vault  of  the  sky.  So  may  the  wise  man
Easily  deem  this  earth  of  ours
By  the  side  of  that  other  wondrously  small,
Though  to  the  witless  wide  it  seems,
To  straying  men  strong  in  its  place.
Yet  may  the  sage  deep  in  his  spirit
Feel  great  shame  for  the  lust  of  glory,
When  the  thirst  for  fame  fiercely  presses,
Although  he  may  not  make  it  to  spread,
In  no  wise  whatever,  over  these  narrow
Quarters  of  earth.  How  idle  is  glory!
Why  ever,  O  proud  ones,  take  you  pleasure
To  bow  your  own  necks  beneath  the  yoke
Heavy  and  grievous,  glad  that  you  may?
Why  do  you  labour  so  long  in  vain,
Aim  to  possess  fame  in  the  world,
Over  the  nations,  more  than  you  need?
Though  it  befell  that  southward  and  north
The  uttermost  denizens,  dwellers  of  earth,
In  many  a  tongue  intoned  your  praises;
Though  you  were  known  for  noblest  birth,
Worshipped  for  wealth,  waxing  in  splendour,
Dear  for  your  valour;  Death  heeds  these  not
When  heaven's  Governor  gives  him  leave.
But  the  wealthy  man,  and  the  wanting  in  goods,
Death  makes  equal,  in  all  things  alike.
Where  now  are  the  wise  one's,  Weland's  bones,
The  worker  in  gold,  once  greatest  in  glory?
I  ask  where  the  bones  of  Weland  are  buried
For  never  any  that  on  earth  lives
May  lose  any  virtue  lent  him  by  Christ;
Nor  may  one  poor  wretch  be  robbed  with  more  ease
Of  his  soul's  virtue,  than  may  the  sun
Be  swung  from  his  path,  or  the  swift  heavens
Moved  from  their  courses  by  the  might  of  a  man.
Who  now  is  aware  of  wise  Weland's  bones,
In  what  barrow  lying  they  litter  the  ground?
Where  is  the  senator  so  mighty  of  Rome,
The  bold  champion  of  whom  we  chant,
Head  of  their  army,  he  that  the  name
Amid  the  burghers,  of  Brutus  bore?
Where  is  the  wise  one  that  wished  for  fame,
The  people's  shepherd,  steadfast  of  purpose,
That  was  a  sage  in  each  thing  several,
Keen  and  the  cunning,  Cato  was  called?
Many  long  days  ago  these  men  departed;
No  man  knows  now  where  they  be.
What  is  left  of  them  but  their  fame  alone?
Too  slight  is  the  glory  of  such  teachers.
For  they  were  worthy,  were  those  heroes,
Of  more  in  the  world.  But  worse  it  is  now,
When  over  the  earth,  in  every  quarter,
They  and  those  like  them  are  little  spoken  of,
And  some  not  a  few  are  clean  forgotten,
And  their  fame  cannot  keep  them  longer
Known  to  all  men,  noble  heroes.
Though  you  now  deem,  desire  strongly,
That  long  in  the  land  your  life  may  last,
How  ever  the  better  can  you  be  or  seem?
For  Death  no  man  leaves,  though  long  it  seem,
His  life-days  told,  if  the  Lord  it  allows.
But  what  profit  does  a  mortal  possess
In  this  world's  glory,  if  he  be  gripped
By  death  everlasting  after  this  life?

XI

There  is  one  Creator,  we  cannot  doubt,
And  He  controls  every  creature
Of  heaven  and  of  earth,  and  of  the  high  seas,
And  all  the  things  that  therein  dwell,
Of  those  unseen,  and  likewise  of  such
As  with  our  eyes  we  are  able  to  see,
Of  all  creation;  Almighty  is  He.
Him  humbly  court  all  things  created
That  of  their  service  have  any  knowledge,
And  none  the  less  of  those  that  know  not
That  they  minister  unto  the  Master.
In  us  He  created  ways  and  customs,
And  for  all  His  creatures  peace  unaltered,
Never  ceasing  in  its  nature,
When  that  He  wished  whatever  pleased  Him,
As  long  as  He  liked  should  live  and  last.
So  it  shall  be,  and  for  ever  abide;
For  never  they  may,  the  moving  creatures,
Cease  from  their  motion,  sink  into  rest,
Swerve  from  the  way  that  the  Warden  of  heaven
Has  appointed  for  all  in  order  unchanging.
The  King  of  all  things  has  His  creation
Bound  with  His  bridle;  both  has  He  done,
Governed  each  one  and  guided  them  too,
So  that  they  may  not  against  the  Master's  will
Ever  cease  moving,  nor  ever  again
Go  any  more  than  the  Guarder  of  glory
Will  grant  unto  them  His  reins  of  guidance.
He  has  with  His  bridle  bound  earth  and  heaven,
And  the  whole  circle  of  deep  sea-waters.
Thus  has  He  curbed,  the  King  of  heaven,
With  His  control,  all  of  His  creatures,
So  that  the  one  strives  with  other,
And  loath  to  his  fellow  fast  does  cleave,
Firm  upholds,  fast  enclasps,
Lest  they  dash  asunder.  For  ever  their  duty
Again  to  circle  on  the  self-same  journey
That  at  the  first  the  Father  appointed,
And  ever  renewed  again  to  revive.
So  is  it  fashioned,  the  framework  ancient,
That  warring  in  hate  the  hostile  creatures
Fast  and  for  ever  firm  peace  maintain.
Thus  fire  and  water,  firm  land  and  ocean,
And  things  many  more,  in  just  the  same  manner
Over  the  wide  world  are  warring  together;
Yet  can  they  keep  their  course  of  service,
Fellowship  holding  firm  and  abiding.
Nor  is  it  merely  matter  of  wonder
That  things  full  of  hate  fare  together,
Remaining  fellows;  more  fit  for  marvel
That  none  of  them  ever  can  live  without  other,
But  every  thing  made  his  opposite  meets
Under  the  heavens,  that  humbles  his  pride
Before  that  it  grow  too  great  to  be  borne.
He  has,  the  Almighty,  to  every  creature
Appointed  its  course  that  it  must  keep
Growth  for  plants,  green  for  leaves
That  in  autumn  later  languish  and  fall.
Winter  brings  very  cold  weather;
Swift  are  its  winds;  summer  then  comes,
The  warm  weather;  Lo!  the  wan  night
Is  lit  by  the  moon,  till  the  morn  is  brought
To  men  by  the  sun  over  this  spacious  world.
He  has,  the  same  God,  to  sea  and  land
Their  boundaries  fixed;  the  flood  dares  not
Over  earth's  borders  her  sway  to  broaden
For  the  tribe  of  fishes,  without  the  Lord's  favour;
Nor  may  she  ever  the  threshold  of  earth
Lightly  overtread;  nor  may  the  tides  either
Bear  the  water  over  earth's  borders.
These  are  the  commands  that  the  glorious  King,
The  Bright  Life-Giver,  does  let  while  He  will
Keep  within  bounds  His  noble  creatures;
But  when  the  Eternal  and  the  Almighty
Looses  the  reins  that  rule  all  creatures,
Even  the  bridle  wherewith  He  bound
All  that  He  fashioned  at  the  first  creation
(By  the  bridle  we  speak  of  we  seek  to  betoken
The  case  where  things  are  all  conflicting):
If  the  Lord  lets  the  bridle  loosen,
Forthwith  they  all  leave  love  and  peace,
The  friendly  uni  on  of  their  fellowship.
All  things  whatever  their  own  will  follow,
All  world-creatures  shall  war  together,
Till  this  our  earth  utterly  perish,
And  so  also  other  things,  in  the  same  fashion,
By  their  own  nature  become  as  nought.
But  the  same  God  that  governs  all  things,
Brings  together,  many  folk  binds,
And  firmly  unites  in  friendship's  bonds;
He  links  in  wedlock  the  love  that  is  pure
In  peaceful  mateship.  So  too  the  Mighty  One
Fellow  to  fellow  firmly  joins,
So  that  their  friendship  forth  and  for  ever
They  hold,  and  their  faith  fast  undoubting,
Their  peace  unvarying.  O  God  of  victory,
Most  happy  indeed  were  mankind's  lot,
If  but  their  hearts  could  hold  their  course
Steadily  steered  by  Your  strong  might,
And  evenly  ordered  as  the  others  are  also,
The  world's  creatures!  Yes,  it  were  truly
Right  merry  for  men,  might  it  so  be!

XII

Whoso  fertile  land  fain  would  till,
Let  him  promptly  pluck  from  the  field
Fern  and  thorn,  and  farze-bush  also,
The  weeds,  in  all  places  eager  to  injure
The  wheat  clean-sprinkled,  lest  it  sproutless
Should  lie  on  the  land.  To  all  folk  likewise
This  next  example  no  less  suits:
The  comb  of  the  honey  cannot  but  seem
To  each  son  of  men  sweeter  by  half,
If  he  have  tasted  before  the  honey
Anything  that  is  bitter.  Even  thus  also
To  every  mortal  more  welcome  by  far
Is  gentle  weather,  when  just  before
Storms  have  assailed  him,  and  the  stiff  wind
Out  of  the  north-east.  No  man  would  reckon
Daylight  a  blessing  if  the  dark  night
Had  not  for  mortals  mustered  terrors.
So  of  earth-dwellers  to  each  it  seems
That  blessedness  true  is  ever  the  better,
More  pleasant  by  far,  the  more  he  of  woe,
Of  cruel  hardships,  here  endures.
So  you  the  sooner  may  in  your  soul
The  truest  of  blessings  trace  more  clearly,
And  to  their  source  soonest  arrive,
If  first  and  foremost  forth  from  your  breast,
Root  and  branch,  you  upwrench
Happiness  false,  even  as  the  farmer
From  his  field  plucks  ill  weeds  a  plenty.
Then,  I  warrant  you,  you  will  clearly
Forthwith  recognize  real  blessings,
And  you  will  never  have  heed  for  anything  else,
When  all  plainly  you  do  perceive  them.

XIII

In  song  will  I  again  send  forth  the  tidings,
How  the  Almighty,  all  things'  Ruler,
With  bridle  urges,  bends  at  will
His  creatures  with  might  and  due  measure,
Marvellous  well  makes  them  hold.
The  Wielder  of  heaven  has  welded  together,
Wrapt  all  his  creatures  round  and  about,
Fixed  with  fetters,  so  that  they  fail  ever
To  find  any  road  to  wrest  themselves  free.
And  yet  every  creature  courses  along,
Onward  bending,  bound  for  its  goal,
Seeking  the  kind  that  the  King  of  angels,
The  Father  at  first,  firmly  appointed.
So  now  all  things  are  thitherward  moving,
The  spacious  creation,  save  certain  angels,
Save  man  also.  Many,  too  many
Dwellers  in  the  world  war  with  their  nature!
Though  you  a  she-lion  should  meet  in  the  land,
A  pleasant  creature  wondrously  tame,
Loving  her  master  with  lively  affection,
And  yet  every  day  dreading  him  also,
If  it  befall  that  savour  of  blood
She  ever  tastes,  truly  none  needs
Ever  to  hope  that  she  will  hold  fast
To  her  tameness  after;  well  do  I  think,
New  as  it  is,  no  more  she  will  heed  it,
But  her  wild  wont  will  soon  remember,
The  way  of  her  fathers.  Fierce  she  begins
To  rend  her  fetters,  to  roar  and  growl,
And  first  she  bites,  before  all  others,
Her  own  house-master,  and  hastily  thereafter
Each  single  man  that  she  may  meet
Naught  she  leaves  that  owns  life,
Nor  beast  nor  man,  mangling  all  she  finds.
Thus  too  the  wood-birds,  wondrous  gentle,
Truly  tame,  if  they  come  to  the  trees
In  the  heart  of  the  holt,  soon  they  heed  not
Those  that  taught  them,  who  long  time  before
Trained  them  and  tamed  them.  Wild  in  the  trees
Ever  thereafter  their  ancient  nature
They  gladly  follow,  though  fain  would  their  teachers
With  cunning  tricks  offer  them  tempting
Even  the  food  that  in  former  days
To  tameness  enticed;  the  twigs  so  pleasant
Seem  to  their  minds,  the  meat  they  heed  not,
So  pleasant  for  them  when  woodland  sounds,
When  they  can  hear  the  piping  choir
Of  other  song-birds;  then  do  they  send
Their  own  notes  forth.  All  together
The  sweet  song  raise;  the  wood  is  ringing.
So  too  with  each  tree  whose  nature  'tis
That  in  the  grove  it  grows  highest,
Though  that  you  bend  a  bough  to  the  ground,
It  upward  leaps  when  you  leave
The  wood  to  its  will;  it  goes  to  its  kind.
So  too  the  sun  when  that  it  sinks,
Noon  long  past;  the  shining  lamp
Hastens  sinking,  on  his  unseen  journey
Ventures  by  night;  then  in  the  north-east
To  men  appears,  to  earth-dwellers  brings
Clear-bright  morning,  and  over  men  mounts,
Upward  ever,  until  he  comes
To  the  topmost  station  where  he  highest  stands.
Thus  every  creature  with  all  its  might,
Through  this  wide  world,  goes  and  hastens
With  all  endeavour,  eager  to  come
Once  more  to  its  kind  as  soon  as  it  can.
On  earth  there  now  lives  no  single  creature
That  craves  not  one  day  to  come
Back  to  its  home  whence  it  once  came.
Here  no  care  racks,  here  rest  is  eternal
'Tis  God  Almighty,  as  all  men  know.
Over  the  earth  now  there  lives  no  creature
That  spins  not  round  and  on  itself  turns,
Even  as  a  wheel;  for  it  so  whirls
That  at  last  it  stands  in  its  ancient  station
And  ever  as  soon  as  it  has  spun  round,
When  all  its  round  is  run  to  the  end,
Then  duly  again  it  shall  do  what  it  did,
And  be  yet  again  what  it  was  of  yore.

XIV

What  avails  the  greedy  one  in  earth's  goods  wealthy,
What  boot  for  his  mind,  though  much  he  owns
Of  gold  and  of  gems,  and  every  thing  good,
And  countless  possessions;  and  though  his  ploughs  till
Each  day  for  him  a  thousand  acres?
What  though  this  middle-earth,  and  this  race  of  men,
Under  the  sun,  south,  west,  and  east,
In  his  dominion  are  all  dependent,
When  none  of  his  trappings  can  he  take  away  from  here
Out  of  this  world,  no,  not  one  more
Of  his  hoarded  treasures  than  he  brought  hither?

XV

Though  the  unrighteous  evil  monarch,
Nero  the  king,  decked  him  anew
In  fairest  raiment  in  wondrous  fashion,
With  gold  adorned,  and  goodly  jewels,
Yet  through  the  world  by  all  men  of  wisdom
In  the  days  of  his  life  he  was  loathed  and  scorned,
Filled  with  all  sin.  This  foe  of  men
To  all  his  darlings  dealt  high  favours
Yet  I  cannot  conceive  how  they  could  hold
Themselves  anything  the  better.  Though  for  a  season
He  chose  them  without  virtue,  this  most  witless  king,
Yet  no  wise  man  worshipped  them  the  more.
Though  the  man  of  folly  make  himself  king,
How  can  he  reckon,  the  man  of  right  reason,
That  he  is  anything  better,  or  even  so  seems?

XVI

He  that  seeks  power  must  first  strive
That  he  may  of  himself  in  his  mind  within
Lordship  compass,  lest  he  may  be  ever
To  his  sinful  ways  utterly  subject.
From  out  of  his  spirit  let  him  speedily  pluck
The  manifold  cares  that  carry  no  profit;
Let  him  cease  a  while  his  mournful  sighing
For  his  evil  fortune;  though  all  be  his,
This  world  of  ours,  wherever  begirdled
By  ocean-waters,  to  him  only  given,
As  far  away  as  in  the  west
Outermost  lies  an  isle  in  ocean,
Where  never  is  night  known  in  summer,
Nor  is  the  day  in  winter  divided,
Into  times  parted,  Tile  (Thule)  men  call  it--
Though  that  a  man  be  sole  master
Of  all  this  island,  and  from  thence  onward
Even  to  the  Indies  out  in  the  east
Yes,  though  all  this  be  his  own  to  govern,
How  is  his  might  any  the  more,
If  of  himself  control  he  has  not,
Nor  of  his  thoughts,  nor  thoroughly  strive
Well  to  beware  in  word  and  in  deed
Of  all  the  sins  of  which  we  were  speaking?

XVII

All  earth-dwellers  one  origin  had,
All  men  of  the  land,  one  like  beginning;
From  one  pair  only  all  proceeded,
From  a  man  and  woman,  within  the  world
And  to  this  day  even  all  men  alike,
The  base  and  the  high  ones,  are  born  in  the  world.
Nor  is  that  a  marvel,  for  all  men  know
That  there  is  one  God  of  all  world-creatures,
Lord  of  mankind,  Father  and  Maker.
He  the  sun  lends,  light  out  of  heaven,
To  moon  and  stars;  on  earth  He  made  men,
And  brought  to  the  body  in  the  beginning
The  soul  in  uni  on;  under  the  sky
Folk  He  created  all  fully  equal.
Why  are  you  therefore  yourselves  over  others
Placing  ever,  proud  without  reason,
When  none  you  are  able  to  meet  not  noble?
Why  are  you  boasting  now  of  your  birth?
In  the  mind  only  of  every  man  lies
The  real  nobility  whereof  I  reason,
Not  in  the  flesh  of  the  folk  of  earth.
But  every  mortal  that  is  utterly,
Merely  subject  to  his  sinful  ways,
Soonest  leaves  life's  Creator;
Nor  does  he  heed  his  own  high  nature,
No,  nor  the  Father  that  first  him  fashioned.
For  this  the  Almighty  removes  his  honour,
So  that  henceforth  here  in  the  world
He  goes  dishonoured,  nor  comes  to  glory.

XVIII

Alas!  that  wrongful  unrighteous  desire,
Frenzied  lewdness  leads  to  this,
That  of  all  mankind  it  amazes  the  mind,
Of  each  and  all  men,  nearly  utterly.
Lo!  the  wild  bee  is  wise  of  nature,
Yet  must  perish  all  in  a  moment,
If  in  her  anger  anything  she  stings.
So  too  a  man's  soul  soon  shall  die,
If  that  the  body  becomes  baser
By  carnal  desire,  unless  there  come  first
Regret  to  his  heart  before  he  from  here  goes.

XIX

Oh!  sore  is  the  folly,  consider  it  who  will,
And  full  of  peril  for  every  person,
That  wretched  mortals  utterly  amazes,
And  far  from  the  right  road  rapidly  leads
Have  you  the  will  to  seek  in  the  woodland
Bright  red  gold  among  green  trees?
Well  do  I  know  that  no  wise  man
Will  seek  it  there,  since  there  it  is  not,
Nor  look  in  vineyards  for  lustrous  gems.
Why  do  you  not  hang  nets  on  the  hill-tops
When  you  would  fain  fishes  capture,
Salmon  and  herrings?  It  seems  likely
That  dwellers  on  earth,  all  of  them,  know,
Men  of  sense,  that  such  live  not  there.
Will  you  go  hunting,  with  hounds  follow,
In  the  salt  sea,  when  you  would  seek
Harts  and  hinds?  Have  you  not  knowledge
That  such  as  these  you  must  seek  in  forests
More  often  by  far  than  out  in  ocean?
Marvellous  it  is  that  all  men  know
That  by  the  sea-shore  search  must  be  made,
And  by  river-beaches,  for  brightest  jewels,
White  and  crimson,  and  of  every  colour.
Yes,  they  know  also  where  it  is  needful
Fishes  to  seek,  and  many  such  things,
The  wealth  of  the  world.  Well  they  do  so,
Men  all  yearning,  year's  end  to  year's  end.
But  of  all  things  this  is  most  wretched,
That  fools  have  become  so  utterly  blind,
In  midst  of  error,  that  in  mind  they  cannot
Readily  tell  where  blessings  eternal,
Happiness  true,  are  hidden  away,
For  they  will  not  follow  in  their  footsteps
Nor  seek  the  blessings;  robbed  of  sense,
In  this  frail  life  they  think  to  find  it,
True  Happiness,  God  Himself.
I  know  no  means  whereby  I  may
Within  my  breast  blame  as  severely
Such  men's  folly,  as  fain  I  would  do
Nor  can  I  tell  you  with  full  clearness;
For  they  are  feebler  and  more  foolish,
More  severed  from  blessing,  than  I  can  set  forth.
Wealth  and  possessions,  these  they  wish  for,
And  men's  worship  they  are  eager  to  win.
When  they  have  compassed  what  their  mind  craves,
Then  do  they  witless  think  in  their  folly
That  True  Happiness  they  have  at  last.

XX

O  my  Master,  You  are  Almighty,
Great  and  noble,  in  glory  famous;
And  You  are  wonderful  to  all  with  wisdom!
O  You  God  Eternal  of  all  creation,
You  have  wondrously  well  created
Unseen  creatures,  and  also  those
That  are  seen  of  men!  Softly  You  rule
The  bright  creation  with  Your  craft
And  power  of  wisdom.  You  to  this  world
From  first  beginning  forth  to  the  ending
Have  dealt  out  seasons,  as  it  most  suited,
In  regular  order,  such  that  they  ever
Are  faring  out,  or  else  returning.
You  Your  creatures  that  cannot  move
Unto  Your  will  wisely  compel,
Yourself  abiding  still  and  stirless,
And  unchanging  for  ever  and  ever.
None  is  mightier,  none  more  famous,
Nor  midst  all  creatures  is  Your  match  to  be  found.
And  as  yet  never  have  You  felt  need
Of  all  the  works  which  You  have  wrought,
But  by  Your  will  all  You  have  worked,
And  with  the  power  that  You  possess.
You  have  made  the  world  and  every  creature
Yet  no  need  had  You,  none  whatever,
Of  all  this  grandeur.  'Tis  great,  the  nature
Of  Your  goodness,  regard  it  who  will;
For  they  are  one  only  in  every  wise,
You  and  Your  goodness.  This  is  Your  own,
For  not  from  without  to  You  has  it  come.
But  this  I  guess  surely,  that  Your  goodness  is
Goodness  almighty,  Yourself,  O  God;
It  is  unlike  ours  in  nature;
From  outside  comes  all  we  contain
Of  good  in  the  world,  from  God  Himself.
You  have  no  anger  to  anything  conceived,
For  to  You  nothing  knows  likeness
No,  nor  even  is  anything  more  crafty;
For  You  all  goodness  by  Your  contriving,
Alone  in  Your  counsel  carried  it  out.
Before  You  there  was  not  any  creature
Either  to  do  or  to  leave  undone;
But  without  pattern,  Prince  of  mankind,
God  Almighty,  all  You  wrought,
All  very  good.  You  are  Yourself
The  Highest  Good.  Ah!  You,  holy  Father,
After  Your  will  the  world  created,
This  earth  with  Your  might  made  to  be,
O  Chief  of  hosts,  as  You  did  choose,
And  with  Your  will  wield  all  things.
So  You,  true  God,  Yourself  grant
All  good  that  is;  for  long  ago
You  all  Your  creatures  first  created
Strongly  alike;  yet  some  there  were
Not  like  in  nature.  One  name  You  gave,
One  name  only,  to  all  together,
World  under  sky.  O  God  of  splendour
This  single  name  You  parted  since,
Father,  into  four:  first  the  earth,
Second  water,  part  of  the  world,
Thirdly  fire,  and  fourthly  air;
These  four  together  form  the  world.
Yet  each  of  these  four  has  its  own  birthplace,
Each  possesses  its  proper  station,
Though  each  of  them  be  with  the  other
Much  commingled,  and  with  the  might  also
Of  the  Father  Almighty  firmly  united,
In  harmony  single,  smoothly  together,
By  Your  command,  O  kindly  Father,
So  that  none  of  them  over  another's  bounds
Dares  trespass,  for  dread  of  the  Lord,
But  these  servants  together  suffer  uni  on,
The  King's  champions,  chill  with  heat,
Wet  with  dryness;  yet  are  they  warring.
Water  and  earth  all  increase  bring,
Cold  in  their  ways  the  one  and  the  other
Water  wet  and  cold  round  the  land  winds,
The  all-green  earth,  yet  either  is  cold.
Air  is  a  mixture  in  the  midst  dwelling;
Nought  should  we  wonder  that  it  is  warm  and  cold,
The  wet  cloudbank  by  the  wind  blended;
For  midmost  it  lies,  as  men  hear  tell,
Between  fire  and  earth.  Full  many  know
That  highest  over  earth  of  all  things  created
Fire  lives,  and  land  is  lowest.
Oh,  'tis  wonderful,  Chief  of  war-hosts,
That  with  Your  bare  thought  You  bring  to  pass
That  to  every  creature  with  clear  distinction
You  have  fixed  its  marches,  yet  have  not  mixed  them!
Lo!  for  the  water  wet  and  cold
The  land  as  a  floor  firm  have  You  laid;
For  never  quiet,  to  every  quarter
Far  would  it  flow,  feeble  and  yielding;
It  would  never  be  able,  for  a  truth  do  I  know,
To  stand  by  itself,  but  the  earth  it  supports,
And  some  of  it  also  sucks  adown,
So  that  thereafter  it  may  for  the  soaking
Be  washed  with  showers.  Wherefore  leaf  and  grass
Broad  over  Britain  are  blooming  and  growing,
A  boon  to  mortals.  The  cold  earth  brings
Countless  fruits  of  marvellous  kinds
For  with  the  water  wet  it  becomes.
But  if  this  were  not  so,  then  would  it  certainly
Dry  up  to  dust,  and  then  be  driven
By  the  wind  afar,  as  often  it  befalls
That  over  the  land  ashes  are  blown.
On  earth  nothing  were  able  to  live,
Nor  would  it  any  more  enjoy  the  water,
Nor  dwell  in  it  ever  by  any  device,
For  mere  coldness,  if  You,  King  of  angels,
Somewhat  with  fire  the  land  and  sea-stream
Had  not  mingled,  and  properly  measured
Cold  with  heat  by  Your  cunning  power,
So  that  fire  cannot  lurid  consume
Earth  and  sea,  though  it  be  seated
Firmly  in  either,  the  Father's  old  work.
None  the  less  marvel  to  me  it  seems
That  earth  and  ocean  are  all  unable,
Though  both  cold  creatures,  by  any  contrivance
Fully  to  quench  the  fire  within  them,
Therein  planted  by  the  Lord's  power.
Now  this  is  a  property  possessed  by  waters,
To  live  upon  earth  and  in  the  clouds  also,
And  even  on  high  above  the  heavens.
Then  the  rightful  region  of  fire,
Its  native  home,  is  high  over  all  creatures
That  we  may  behold  over  this  wide  world;
Though  it  is  mingled  with  every  member
Of  world-creatures,  it  cannot  avail
To  deal  to  one  of  them  deadly  damage,
Save  by  the  leave  of  our  Life-Giver,
Even  the  Eternal  Almighty  God.
More  heavy  is  earth  than  other  creatures,
More  stoutly  welded;  for  during  a  space
Beneath  creation  it  nethermost  lay,
Save  only  the  firmament  that  this  broad  fabric
Outside  and  around  each  day  circles,
Yet  never  touches  the  earth  anear,
Nor  may  it  in  one  place  more  than  another
Nearer  reach;  round  it  speeds
Above  and  beneath,  yet  equally  near.
Every  creature  whereof  we  recount
Has  for  itself  its  separate  home;
Yet  is  it  likewise  linked  with  others,
Nor  may  one  live  lonely  ever,
Though  dimly  seen  be  their  dwelling  together.
Thus  earth  in  fire  and  water  is  found;
The  poor  of  wit  have  pains  to  see  it,
But  to  the  wise  well  it  is  known.
So  too  is  fire  fixed  fast  in  water,
And  in  the  stones  still  it  lurks
'Tis  hard  to  see,  'tis  there,  however.
The  Father  of  angels  has  bound  the  fire
So  fast  and  firmly  that  it  cannot  fly
Again  to  the  region  where  the  rest  of  the  fire
High  over  this  world  in  its  home  dwells.
Soon  it  forsakes  this  frail  creation,
Overcome  by  cold,  if  it  seeks  its  country
Yet  every  creature  craves  to  go
Where  its  kin  it  finds  most  crowded  together.
You  have  established  through  Your  strong  might,
King  of  war-hosts,  in  wondrous  wise
The  earth  so  firmly  that  she  inclines
Nought  to  one  side,  nor  may  she  sink
This  way  nor  that  way  more  than  she  was  wont,
By  nought  upheld  of  earthly  nature.
It  is  equally  easy  upward  or  downward
For  this  earth  of  men  to  move  at  will;
This  is  most  like  to  an  egg,  where  lies
The  yolk  in  the  middle,  yet  the  shell  moves
Around  outside;  so  stands  the  world
Still  in  its  station  with  the  streams  round  it,
The  stirring  floods,  the  air  and  stars,
While  the  gleaming  shell  round  all  glides
Every  day,  and  long  has  done  so.
O  God  of  the  nations!  of  threefold  nature
A  soul  You  have  given  us,  that  You  since
Move  and  guide  through  Your  strong  might,
So  that  no  less  thereof  lives
In  a  single  finger,  even  the  smallest,
Than  in  the  whole  body.  But  a  little  ago
I  clearly  sang  that  the  soul  was
In  every  thane  a  threefold  creature,
For  all  sages  this  do  say,
That  three  natures  are  seen  in  every  soul;
Passion  first  comes,  second  desire;
The  third  is  by  nature  nobler  than  the  others,
Reason  we  call  it;  it  causes  no  shame,
For  the  beasts  have  it  not,  but  to  man  it  belongs.
Countless  creatures  contain  the  two  others;
Nearly  every  beast  boasts  desire,
And  likewise  passion  each  possesses
Wherefore  mankind,  over  the  world,
Has  other  creatures  all  surpassed;
For  what  men  have  the  others  have  not,
Even  that  single  virtue  of  which  we  have  sung.
This  mighty  reason  in  every  man
Shall  ever  subdue  desire  to  itself,
And  likewise  passion  hold  in  its  power.
She  with  thought  the  mind  of  a  thane,
And  with  reflection  shall  rule  in  all  things.
She  has  most  might  in  man's  spirit,
And  is  most  perfect  of  all  his  powers.
Lo!  You  the  Soul,  Sender  of  triumph,
High  King  of  nations,  thus  did  create,
So  that  it  turns  and  turns  about,
Round  itself  moving,  even  as  all  moves,
The  swift  firmament  fleetly  whirling,
Every  day,  by  the  Lord's  great  doing,
This  earth  encircling.  So  does  man's  soul
Like  to  a  wheel  she  whirls  round  herself,
Ofttimes  thinking  of  that  which  is  earthly,
The  Lord's  creatures  daily  and  nightly;
Sometimes  in  thought  she  seeks  herself,
At  others  gives  heed  to  God  Eternal,
Her  own  Creator.  In  course  she  goes
Most  like  to  a  wheel,  on  herself  whirling.
When  deeply  she  muses  on  Him  who  made  her,
Then  up  she  is  raised  over  herself;
But  in  her  own  self  she  ever  abides,
When  in  her  fancy  she  follows  herself.
Lastly  she  falls  beneath  herself  far
When  she  admires  these  frail  things  earthly,
And  loves  them  all  more  than  law  eternal.
O  God  of  ages,  You  gave  a  home
in  heaven  to  souls;  You  send  them  freely
Glorious  gifts,  God  Almighty,
In  measure  fitting  the  merits  of  each
These  all  are  beaming  bright  in  the  heavens
In  the  clear  night,  but  nevertheless
Not  equal  in  light  lo!  we  see  often,
When  serene  is  the  night,  the  stars  in  heaven,
Not  all  beaming  with  equal  brightness.
O  God  Everlasting!  You  did  also  unite
A  thing  of  heaven  to  the  earthly  here,
Soul  to  body;  ever  since  they  abide,
Both  the  eternal  and  earthly  together,
The  soul  in  the  flesh.  See,  ever  to  You
They  yearn  to  go  from  here,  for  from  You  hither
They  had  their  source,  and  shall  seek  You  again.
But  the  body  of  man  must  ever  abide
Here  on  the  earth,  for  coming  from  her
He  grew  in  the  world.  Together  they  were
No  longer  nor  less  than  to  them  was  allowed
By  the  Almighty,  who  ages  aforetime
Made  them  comrades;  the  true  King  is  He.
He  fashioned  the  land,  and  filled  it  thereafter
With  manifold  races,  as  men  have  told  me,
And  sorts  of  beasts,  mankind's  Saviour.
Then  did  He  sow  many  a  seed
Of  trees  and  plants  in  the  tracts  of  earth.
Grant  to  our  minds,  God  Eternal,
That  they  may  to  You,  Master  of  all  things,
Through  these  miseries  mount  to  heaven,
And  from  these  cares,  kindly  Father,
Ruler  of  nations,  may  rise  to  You;
That  then  with  eyes  open  we  may  be  able
With  the  eyes  of  the  mind,  through  Your  aid  mighty,
The  fount  to  gaze  on  of  all  goodness,
Yourself  to  view,  victorious  God.
Grant  strong  sight  to  the  gaze  of  our  minds,
That  we  may  on  Yourself  be  able  thereafter
To  fix  them  firmly,  Father  of  angels.
Scatter  the  mist  that  now  for  a  season
Before  the  eyes  of  our  understanding
Thickly  has  hung,  heavy  and  darksome.
Send,  we  pray  You,  to  our  spirits'  eyes
Your  own  light,  Ruler  of  life;
For  You  are  the  brightness,  benign  Father,
Of  the  true  Light;  likewise  You  are  Yourself
The  firm  rest,  Father  Almighty,
Of  all  the  true  ones.  Tenderly  You  suffer
That  they  may  behold  You,  Yes,  Yourself  even.
You  are  of  all  things,  O  nations'  Ruler,
Beginning  and  end.  O  angels'  Father,
Of  all  things  You  bear  the  burden  lightly,
Never  wearied.  Yourself  are  the  Way,
Yes,  and  the  Guide,  of  all  things  living,
And  the  goodly  Bourne  to  which  the  Way  bends.
To  You  all  mortals  are  moving  ever,
All  men  from  below,  in  the  bright  creation.

XXI

O  sons  of  mankind,  over  earth  moving,
Let  each  that  has  freedom  find  out  the  way
To  the  eternal  goodness  whereof  our  speech  is,
And  to  the  blessings  that  are  our  song's  burden.
The  man  that  is  straitly  bound  by  the  sway
Of  the  worthless  love  of  this  world  glorious,
Let  him  right  soon  seek  for  himself
Fullness  of  freedom,  that  forthwith  he  may  come,
Into  the  blessings  of  the  Bidder  of  spirits
For  this  is  the  rest  from  all  our  wrestling,
The  hopeful  haven  for  the  high  vessels
Of  the  minds  of  us  men,  mild  harbour  bright.
This  is  the  only  haven  we  ever  shall  have
After  the  tossing  of  troublous  billows,
After  each  tempest,  truly  peaceful.
This  is  the  sanctuary,  the  sole  comfort
Of  all  weary  mortals,  when  they  are  over,
Our  worldly  troubles;  'tis  the  pleasant  prize
That  shall  be  ours  to  own  after  these  hardships.
But  well  do  I  think,  no  treasure  golden,
No  jewel  of  silver,  no  gem  of  cunning,
No  wealth  of  this  world  will  ever  illumine
The  eyes  of  the  mind;  nor  do  they  amend
Their  keenness  of  sight  so  that  they  spy
Bliss  unfeigned;  but  they  far  more
The  eyes  of  the  mind  of  every  man
Blind  in  his  breast  than  make  them  brighter.
So  each  of  the  things  that  now  on  earth
In  this  their  life  is  loved  by  mankind,
Frail  and  earthly,  fleets  away.
But  they  be  wondrous,  the  Beauty  and  Brightness
That  give  brightness  and  beauty  to  each,
And  possess  ever  after  power  over  all.
It  is  not  the  will  nor  the  wish  of  the  Ruler
That  our  souls  should  perish,  but  He  prefers
With  light  to  fill  them,  life's  Controller.
If  any  creature  therefore  with  his  eyes  undimmed,
The  glance  of  his  spirit,  may  ever  gaze  on
The  clear  brightness  of  the  heavenly  beam,
Then  will  he  say  that  the  sun's  shining
Is  merely  darkness  to  the  mind  of  each  man,
If  it  be  measured  with  the  mighty  light
Of  God  Almighty;  for  every  spirit
'Tis  ceaseless,  eternal,  for  the  souls  of  the  blest.

XXII

He  that  desires  the  Right  in  due  measure,
In  its  inner  nature  anxious  to  track,
And  know  it  fully  so  that  none  be  able
To  drive  it  out,  nor  anything  earthly
Have  power  to  hinder:  first  him  behoves
In  his  own  soul  to  seek  what  he  earlier
During  a  season  sought  from  without.
Then  let  him  bring  it  forth  from  his  bosom,
And  leave  behind,  as  long  as  he  may,
Every  sorrow  that  serves  for  nought;
And  let  him  muster  with  might  and  with  main
Each  thought  within  him  to  that  end  only.
Let  him  say  to  his  mind,  that  it  may  find
Within  itself  only  all  that  it  now
Oftenest  seeks  ever  outside,
Every  goodness.  Then  he  gets  to  know
Things  evil  and  idle,  all  that  he  had,
Hid  in  his  bosom  so  long  before,
Even  as  clearly  as  he  can  the  sun
Behold  with  the  eyes  of  this  present  body
And  he  moreover  his  mind  perceives
Lighter  and  brighter  than  is  the  beaming
Of  the  sun  in  summer,  when  the  sky's  jewel,
Sheer  orb  of  heaven,  shines  brightest.
So  neither  the  sins  nor  laziness  of  the  body,
Nor  its  foul  vices,  are  fully  able
To  wrest  from  the  mind  its  righteous  nature
In  any  mortal.  Though  that  a  man
By  the  sins  of  his  body,  and  by  its  laziness  also,
And  by  vice  be  assailed  for  many  a  season,
And  though  that  his  mind  be  grievously  marred
With  the  foul  curse  of  careless  folly,
And  a  fog  of  error  float  before
The  dreary  spirit  of  the  sons  of  men,
So  that  it  cannot  shine  at  all  so  clearly
As  it  would  do  if  it  were  able,
Yet  there  remains  ever  retained
Some  seed  of  the  truth  in  the  soul  of  man,
So  long  as  united  it  lives  with  body.
This  corn  of  seed  is  ever  quickened
By  means  of  inquiry,  and  afterwards  also
With  good  teaching,  if  it  is  to  grow.
How  may  any  man  make  out  an  answer
To  anything  asked,  by  aid  of  reason,
Though  others  ask  him  after  it  righteously,
Closely  inquiring,  if  he  contains
In  his  own  mind  neither  much  nor  little
Of  righteousness  in  him  nor  anything  of  reason?
Yet  no  man  lives  that  is  so  lacking,
So  utterly  robbed  and  void  of  reason,
That  he  is  unable  the  answer  to  find
Locked  in  his  breast  if  others  beg  him.
For  this  is  true,  the  proverb  that  our  Plato,
The  ancient  sage,  once  said  unto  us:
'Each  man,'  he  said,  'that  is  unmindful,
Of  righteousness  careless,  him  I  counsel
Again  to  turn  him  towards  his  thoughts,
His  mind's  fancy;  then  will  he  not  fail
In  his  own  bosom,  buried  deeply,
To  find  in  his  spirit  righteousness  sealed,
Amid  the  turmoil  which  ever  troubles
His  mind  daily  most  and  sorest,
And  the  heavy  laziness  that  hampers  his  body,
And  the  heavy  cares  that  quell  a  man
In  mind  and  in  spirit  at  every  season.'

XXIII

Oh!  truly  blessed  a  man  would  be
Here  in  all  things,  had  he  the  power  to  see
The  bright  and  spotless  heavenly  stream,
That  grand  fountain  of  every  good;
And  if  from  himself  he  might  hurl  away
The  dark  mist,  his  spirit's  darkness.
Yet  now  it  behoves,  God  us  helping,
With  tales  of  fancy,  fables  ancient,
To  amend  your  mind,  that  you  more  surely
May  by  straight  course  come  to  heaven,
To  that  spot  eternal  where  our  souls  have  rest.

XXIV

I  have  feather-wings  fleeter  than  a  bird's,
With  which  I  may  fly  far  from  the  earth
Over  the  high  roof  of  the  heaven  above  us;
But  oh!  that  I  might  your  mind  furnish,
Your  inmost  wit,  with  these  my  wings,
Until  you  might  on  this  world  of  mortals,
On  all  that  there  lives,  look  down  easily!
Then  you  might  mount  on  pinions
Straight  over  heaven,  soaring  upwards
Wind  through  the  clouds,  and  then  witness
All  from  above.  You  could  also  fly
Over  the  fire  that  long  has  fared,
Many  a  year,  mid  air  and  heaven,
Even  as  the  Father  at  first  appointed.
Then  could  you  after  the  course  follow
That  the  sun  takes  between  the  lights  of  heaven,
And  onward  speeding  reach  the  sphere
Far  up  aloft;  then  in  order
That  star  all  cold,  alone  in  station,
Which  is  the  highest  of  heavenly  bodies,
By  sea-dwellers  beneath  the  sky
Saturn  called;  cold  is  that  star,
Wholly  ice-bound,  and  highest  wanders
Over  all  others  up  in  heaven.
Yes,  even  then,  when  you  have  passed
High  over  Saturn,  you  may  still  journey,
And  then  will  soon  be  above  the  sphere
That  swiftly  turns;  and  if  straight  you  go,
Leaving  behind  you  the  highest  heaven,
Then  may  you  at  last  in  the  true  Light
Have  your  portion,  whence  the  sole  Prince
Above  the  firmament  far  sway  holds,
And  also  beneath,  over  every  creature,
Guiding  the  world.  A  wise  King  He;
'Tis  He  that  controls  through  all  countries
All  other  kings  over  the  world.
He  with  His  bridle  has  firmly  bound
The  whole  compass  of  heaven  and  earth;
With  His  guiding  reins  well  He  governs
And  ever  steers  with  mighty  strength
The  hastening  car  of  earth  and  heaven.
He  is  the  only  Judge,  in  justice  steadfast,
God  unchanging,  fair  and  glorious.
If  you  should  reach  by  the  right  way
Up  to  that  region,  that  right  noble  place,
Though  for  a  time  you  have  it  forgotten,
Yet  if  again  ever  you  thither  arrive,
Then  will  you  call  out  and  quickly  say:
'This,  this  only  is  mine  own  true  home,
My  land  and  country;  from  here  am  I  come,
Here  was  created,  by  the  Craftsman's  might.
From  here  will  I  never  take  me  away,
But  pleasantly  here  it  is  my  purpose,
The  Father  willing,  firmly  to  stand.'
If  to  you  after  it  shall  ever  befall
That  you  will,  or  may  to  this  murky  world
Come  once  more,  you  will  quickly  see
That  all  the  unrighteous  rulers  of  earth,
And  all  the  mighty,  those  men  so  haughty
That  most  oppress  this  weary  people,
Are  ever  themselves  utterly  wretched,
In  all  things  feeble,  failing  in  might,
Even  these  proud  ones  that  this  poor  folk
Now  for  a  season  so  sorely  dreads.

XXV

Hear  now  a  tale  told  of  the  proud  ones,
The  kings  unrighteous  that  rule  over  the  earth,
That  shine  among  us  with  wondrous  sheen
In  many  various  beautiful  vestures,
On  high  seats  raised  even  to  the  roof,
Decked  with  gold,  adorned  with  jewels,
On  all  sides  hemmed  with  a  countless  host
Of  thanes  and  fighters.  These  too  are  furnished
With  battle  harness  of  wondrous  brightness,
With  gleaming  brands  stoutly  belted,
And  with  high  state  they  serve  the  other,
Obedient  all;  and  then,  forth  bursting
To  every  quarter,  crush  with  force
All  other  nations  that  neighbouring  dwell;
And  their  lord  heeds,  who  the  host  rules,
Friend  nor  foeman,  life  nor  fortune,
But  ruthless  ever  rushes  on  all  men
Unto  a  mad  hound  most  has  he  likeness,
Too  high  uplifted  within  his  heart,
For  the  dominion  that  each  of  his  darlings,
His  friends  so  trusty,  aids  to  found.
If  a  man,  however,  might  pluck  from  the  tyrant
Each  several  garments  of  the  royal  garb,
And  from  him  sever  the  various  servants,
And  likewise  the  power  that  once  he  possessed,
Then  might  you  see  that  he  is  most  like
To  one  of  the  men  that  now  most  busily
Press  about  him  in  painful  service;
He  might  well  be  worse,  but  I  think  no  better.
If  such  an  one  ever,  all  unwitting,
Happened  to  lose  by  lack  of  fortune
State  and  raiment  and  ready  service,
And  the  power  also  which  we  have  pictured:
If  any  of  such  things  he  sees  no  longer,
I  know  he  will  fancy  that  he  has  fallen
Deep  in  a  dungeon,  or  himself  he  deems
In  shackles  fastened.  This  I  may  show,
That  from  over-measure  in  any  matter,
In  food  or  in  dress,  or  in  wine-drinking,
Or  in  sweetmeats,  sorest  waxes
The  mighty  frenzy  of  fierce  desire
That  clouds  sore  the  inmost  spirit
Of  every  mortal.  Thence  come  most  often
Evil  pride  of  heart  and  profitless  strife.
When  rage  is  burning,  within  their  bosoms
Their  hearts  are  whelmed  with  waves  enormous
Of  seething  passion,  and  soon  thereafter
Are  gripped  in  turn  with  grievous  gloom,
Firmly  caught.  Anon  there  comes
Hope  deceitful  with  hateful  lying
Crying  vengeance,  for  anger  craves
More  and  more;  then  makes  promise
The  heart  so  reckless,  of  all  right  heedless.
I  told  you  before  in  this  same  book
That  somewhat  of  good  by  each  single  member
Of  the  wide  creation  is  ever  craved,
By  the  natural  power  that  it  possesses.
The  unrighteous  Kings  that  rule  the  earth
To  no  good  ever  can  give  an  issue,
By  reason  of  the  sin  whereof  I  have  spoken
Nor  is  that  a  marvel,  for  they  ever  are  minded
Themselves  to  abase,  and  bow  to  the  power
Of  each  of  the  evils  named  already.
Needs  then  straitly  they  must  submit
Unto  the  bondage  of  those  masters,
The  chieftains  by  them  already  chosen.
Yet  is  this  worse,  that  a  man  will  not
Resist  this  mastery  even  for  a  moment.
If  he  were  ready  to  begin  to  wrestle
And  the  war  thereafter  to  wage  for  ever,
Then  were  he  never  worthy  of  blame
Even  if  beaten,  bested  at  last.

XXVI

I  can  from  fables  feigned  of  yore
Tell  you  a  story  touching  nearly
This  same  matter  whereof  we  speak.
In  times  long  past  once  it  betided
That  prince  Aulixes  had  possession
Under  the  Caesar  of  kingdoms  twain.
He  was  the  ruler  of  the  realm  of  Thracia,
And  Retia  also  ruled  as  chieftain;
And  his  liege  lord's  name,  known  to  the  nations
Was  Agamemnon,  ruler  of  all
The  Greekish  kingdom.  It  was  common  rumour
That  in  those  times  the  Trojan  war
Was  fought  under  heaven.  That  hard  fighter,
The  Greekish  monarch,  marched  to  the  field;
Aulixes  likewise  led  five-score  ships
Across  the  sea-stream,  and  there  sat  down
Full  ten  winters.  Then  the  time  came
When  they  had  won  the  realm  by  war,
And  the  Greekish  prince  had  dearly  purchased
The  town  of  Troy  with  his  true  comrades.
Then  when  to  Aulixes  leave  was  given,
The  Thracian  chieftain,  thence  to  journey,
He  left  behind  him  of  his  horned  barks
Nine  and  ninety;  none  of  them  thence,
Of  these  sea-horses,  save  only  one,
He  ferried  over  ocean,  a  foam-washed  galley
With  threefold  oar-bank.  Then  came  cold  weather,
Raging  storm-wind;  the  dun  waves  roaring
Dashed  together,  far  out  driving
Into  the  Wendelsea  the  warrior  crew,
Upon  the  island  where  Apollo's  daughter
Had  been  dwelling  for  many  a  day.
This  same  Apollo  was  of  princely  race,
Son  of  Jove.  This  Jove  was  a  king
Who  to  great  and  little  lying  feigned,
To  every  goodman,  that  he  was  a  god
Most  high  and  holy.  Thus  this  hero
The  silly  people  pleased  with  error,
Till  countless  folk  his  feigning  trusted
For  he  was  rightly  the  realm's  protector,
Of  royal  birth.  'Tis  known  abroad
That  in  those  days  each  folk  deemed
Its  sovereign  head  the  Highest  God,
And  gave  him  honour  as  King  of  Glory,
If  to  be  ruler  he  was  rightly  born.
Jove's  father  also  was  further  a  god,
And  the  sea-dwellers  Saturn  named  him,
The  sons  of  men.  Soon  folk  named
Each  in  turn  God  eternal.
Men  say  there  was  also  Apollo's  daughter,
Well  descended,  to  witless  mortals
A  goddess  seeming,  skilled  in  magic,
In  witchcraft  dealing  and  in  the  delusions,
More  than  all  men,  of  many  a  nation.
She  was  a  king's  daughter,  Circe  was  called
Among  the  multitude,  and  she  ruled  men
Upon  the  island  to  which  Aulixes
Chief  of  Thracia  had  chanced  to  come,
In  his  ship  sailing.  Soon  was  it  known
To  all  the  troop  that  tarried  there  with  her,
The  prince's  coming.  Then  Circe  herself
Loved  beyond  measure  that  lord  of  seamen,
And  in  the  same  way  with  all  his  soul
Such  love  for  her  he  felt  in  his  heart
That  to  his  country  no  care  to  return
Had  power  in  his  mind  like  that  of  the  maiden;
But  he  went  on  dwelling  with  the  woman  thereafter.
So  long  remained  that  none  of  his  men,
His  servants  sturdy,  would  stay  with  him  longer.
But  after  their  hardships  for  home  were  longing,
And  purposed  to  leave  their  dear  lord  behind.
Now  folk  began  to  make  a  fable,
How  that  this  woman  with  her  witchcraft
Changed  men's  bodies,  and  with  baleful  arts
Caused  them  to  take,  the  king's  true  servants,
The  bodies  of  beasts,  and  bound  them  afterwards,
And  fastened  many  in  fetters  also.
Some  became  wolves  and  no  word  could  utter.
But  from  time  to  time  took  to  howling;
Some  were  wild  boars,  and  broke  into  grunting
When  they  their  sorrow  sought  to  lament;
Those  that  were  lions  let  forth  in  anger
A  dreadful  roar  when  they  desired
To  hail  each  other.  These  hapless  mortals,
Both  old  and  young,  yes  all,  were  turned
To  some  wild  beast,  such  as  before
During  his  life-days  each  most  was  like
All  save  the  king,  the  queen's  beloved.
Nought  would  they  taste,  any  one  of  them,
Of  meat  of  men,  but  more  they  longed  for
What  beasts  supports,  as  was  not  seemly.
No  more  was  left  them  of  men's  likeness,
Of  the  earth-dwellers,  save  only  reason.
Each  of  them  kept  his  own  mind,
But  this  with  sorrow  was  sorely  beset
For  the  sad  troubles  that  had  assailed  it.
Now  the  foolish  ones  that  in  this  witchcraft
So  long  believed,  in  lying  stories,
Notwithstanding  knew  that  no  one
The  wit  of  man  nor  his  mind  can  change
With  magic  art,  though  this  be  able
Mortal  bodies  for  many  a  day
In  form  to  worsen.  Wonderful  is  it
And  mighty,  the  power  that  every  mind
Has  over  the  slight  and  sluggish  body!
You  may  by  such  examples  see  most  clearly
That  every  cunning  and  craft  of  the  body
Come  from  the  mind  in  every  man,
Each  single  power.  It  is  easy  to  see
That  to  every  man  more  harm  brings
Wickedness  of  mind  than  weakness  of  body,
Of  the  frail  flesh.  Let  none  of  the  folk
Deem  it  possible  that  this  poor  flesh
May  ever  the  mind  of  any  mortal
Utterly  change  to  its  own  estate.
Nay,  'tis  the  faults,  each  mind's  failings,
And  the  inward  purpose  prompting  each  man,
That  bend  the  body  to  their  bidding.

XXVII

Why  should  you  harass  with  wicked  hatred
Your  spirits  weary,  as  the  waves  of  ocean
Set  a-tossing  the  ice-cold  sea,
Urged  by  the  blast?  Why  do  you  blame,
Your  fate  reproach  that  she  has  no  power?
Why  can  you  not  bide  the  bitter  coming
Of  common  death  by  God  created
When  he  is  drawing  each  day  towards  you?
Can  you  not  perceive  that  he  is  ever  pursuing
Each  thing  begotten,  of  earthly  bearing,
Beasts  and  birds?  Death  also  is  busy
After  mankind,  all  over  this  earth,
The  dreadful  huntsman,  holding  the  chase;
Nor  will  he  truly  the  trail  abandon
Before  that  he  catch  at  last  the  quarry
That  he  was  pursuing.  Oh!  it  is  pitiful
That  borough-dwellers  cannot  bide  him,
But  luckless  mortals  like  the  race  of  birds
Are  flying  onward  fain  to  meet  him,
Or  as  beasts  of  the  forest  that  are  ever  fighting,
Each  one  seeking  to  slay  the  other.
But  it  is  wicked  for  any  creature
That  towards  another  in  his  inmost  temper
He  should  hatred  bear,  like  bird  or  beast
But  most  right  it  were  that  every  mortal
To  others  should  render  their  due  reward,
To  all  earth-dwellers,  whatever  they  earn
By  their  life-works.  He  should  love,  that  is,
All  true  men  most  tenderly,
And  spare  the  wicked,  as  we  have  said.
The  man  himself  he  must  love  in  mind,
And  all  his  vices  view  with  hatred,
And  cut  them  away  as  best  he  can.

XXVIII

What  man  that  learning  on  earth  lacks
Does  marvel  not  at  the  moving  clouds,
The  swift  heavens,  the  stars'  wheeling,
How  never  ceasing  they  spin  around
The  mass  of  earth?  Which  of  mankind
No  wonder  shows  at  these  shining  bodies,
How  that  some  of  them  a  lesser  space
Of  course  revolve,  and  others  run
In  longer  circle?  One  of  these  lights
Is  by  world-men  the  Waggon  Shafts  called.
This  a  shorter  course  and  journey  keeps,
A  smaller  circle  than  other  stars,
For  it  turns  about  the  heavenly  axle
At  the  northern  end,  nigh  revolving.
On  this  same  axle  all  is  circling,
The  spacious  heavens  are  swiftly  speeding,
Southward  rushing,  swift,  untiring.
What  earthly  mortal  does  not  marvel,
Save  the  wise  ones  who  knew  before,
That  many  stars  a  motion  wider
Have  in  the  heavens,  some,  however,
Run  more  straitly  round  the  axle's  end,
And  move  more  widely  when  round  its  middle
They  urge  their  race?  One  of  these  orbs
Is  Saturn  called;  in  some  thirty  winters
He  girdles  round  this  globe  of  earth.
Boötes  also  brightly  shines,
Another  star  that  to  his  station
In  years  as  many  moves  round,
Even  to  the  place  from  which  he  parted.
What  mortal  is  there  that  marvels  not
How  that  some  stars  sink  in  ocean,
Under  the  sea-waves,  as  men  do  suppose?
Some  also  deem  that  the  sun  does  so;
But  none  the  less  false  is  this  their  fancy,
For  neither  at  even  nor  in  early  morning
Is  he  nearer  the  ocean  than  at  high  noon.
Yet  do  men  deem  that  he  dives  to  ocean,
Into  the  sea,  when  he  sinks  to  setting.
Who  in  the  world  wonders  not
At  the  full  moon,  when  in  a  moment
She  is  robbed  of  her  beauty  beneath  the  clouds,
With  darkness  covered?  What  mortal  cannot
See  with  wonder  the  ways  of  all  stars,
Why  in  bright  weather  they  beam  not  forth
Before  the  sun,  when  such  is  their  custom
In  the  middle  of  night  before  the  moon,
When  clear  is  heaven?  How  many  a  man,
At  all  such  things  sorely  wonders,
But  marvels  not  that  men  and  beasts,
Every  creature,  keep  up  anger
Great  and  useless,  each  against  other,
Never  ceasing?  It  is  a  strange  thing
That  men  do  not  marvel  how  often  amid  the  clouds
The  thunder  sounds,  then  for  a  space
Lies  silent;  and  likewise  how
Waves  and  sea-shore  are  warring  ever,
The  wind  and  billows.  Who  wonders  at  this,
Or  at  another  thing  also,  why  ice  is  able
To  come  from  water?  When  the  sun  shines
Hot  in  splendour,  soon  it  hastens,
The  wondrous  ice-pool,  once  more  to  its  kind,
Even  to  water.  No  wonder  seems
To  any  of  mortals  what  he  may  see
Day  by  day;  but  the  crazy  people
What  they  see  but  seldom  sooner  marvel,
Though  to  the  minds  of  men  of  wisdom
It  seem  much  less  matter  of  wonder.
To  unsteadfast  men  it  ever  seems
No  part  of  the  ancient  early  creation,
What  they  see  seldom;  but  still  they  think,
World-men  hold  that  by  chance  it  happens,
Newly  befalls,  if  to  any  before
It  has  not  appeared  a  pity  'tis  so!
But  if  any  of  them  ever  becomes
So  lusting  for  knowledge  that  he  begins  to  learn
Wise  ways  many,  and  the  Warden  of  Life
From  his  mind  clears  the  mountain  of  folly
That  has  buried  it

(Translated into modern English by Walter John Sedgefield Litt.D.)

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