Public Domain Poetry And Stories - An Elegy Upon The Death Of The Dean Of St. Paul's, Dr. John by Thomas Carew
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An Elegy Upon The Death Of The Dean Of St. Paul's, Dr. John

    By Thomas Carew



    Can we not force from widow'd poetry,
    Now thou art dead (great Donne) one elegy
    To crown thy hearse? Why yet dare we not trust,
    Though with unkneaded dough-bak'd prose, thy dust,
    Such as th' unscissor'd churchman from the flower
    Of fading rhetoric, short-liv'd as his hour,
    Dry as the sand that measures it, should lay
    Upon thy ashes, on the funeral day?
    Have we no voice, no tune? Didst thou dispense
    Through all our language, both the words and sense?
    'Tis a sad truth. The pulpit may her plain
    And sober Christian precepts still retain,
    Doctrines it may, and wholesome uses, frame,
    Grave homilies and lectures, but the flame
    Of thy brave soul (that shot such heat and light
    As burnt our earth and made our darkness bright,
    Committed holy rapes upon our will,
    Did through the eye the melting heart distil,
    And the deep knowledge of dark truths so teach
    As sense might judge what fancy could not reach)
    Must be desir'd forever. So the fire
    That fills with spirit and heat the Delphic quire,
    Which, kindled first by thy Promethean breath,
    Glow'd here a while, lies quench'd now in thy death.
    The Muses' garden, with pedantic weeds
    O'erspread, was purg'd by thee; the lazy seeds
    Of servile imitation thrown away,
    And fresh invention planted; thou didst pay
    The debts of our penurious bankrupt age;
    Licentious thefts, that make poetic rage
    A mimic fury, when our souls must be
    Possess'd, or with Anacreon's ecstasy,
    Or Pindar's, not their own; the subtle cheat
    Of sly exchanges, and the juggling feat
    Of two-edg'd words, or whatsoever wrong
    By ours was done the Greek or Latin tongue,
    Thou hast redeem'd, and open'd us a mine
    Of rich and pregnant fancy; drawn a line
    Of masculine expression, which had good
    Old Orpheus seen, or all the ancient brood
    Our superstitious fools admire, and hold
    Their lead more precious than thy burnish'd gold,
    Thou hadst been their exchequer, and no more
    They each in other's dust had rak'd for ore.
    Thou shalt yield no precedence, but of time,
    And the blind fate of language, whose tun'd chime
    More charms the outward sense; yet thou mayst claim
    From so great disadvantage greater fame,
    Since to the awe of thy imperious wit
    Our stubborn language bends, made only fit
    With her tough thick-ribb'd hoops to gird about
    Thy giant fancy, which had prov'd too stout
    For their soft melting phrases. As in time
    They had the start, so did they cull the prime
    Buds of invention many a hundred year,
    And left the rifled fields, besides the fear
    To touch their harvest; yet from those bare lands
    Of what is purely thine, thy only hands,
    (And that thy smallest work) have gleaned more
    Than all those times and tongues could reap before.

    But thou art gone, and thy strict laws will be
    Too hard for libertines in poetry;
    They will repeal the goodly exil'd train
    Of gods and goddesses, which in thy just reign
    Were banish'd nobler poems; now with these,
    The silenc'd tales o' th' Metamorphoses
    Shall stuff their lines, and swell the windy page,
    Till verse, refin'd by thee, in this last age
    Turn ballad rhyme, or those old idols be
    Ador'd again, with new apostasy.

    Oh, pardon me, that break with untun'd verse
    The reverend silence that attends thy hearse,
    Whose awful solemn murmurs were to thee,
    More than these faint lines, a loud elegy,
    That did proclaim in a dumb eloquence
    The death of all the arts; whose influence,
    Grown feeble, in these panting numbers lies,
    Gasping short-winded accents, and so dies.
    So doth the swiftly turning wheel not stand
    In th' instant we withdraw the moving hand,
    But some small time maintain a faint weak course,
    By virtue of the first impulsive force;
    And so, whilst I cast on thy funeral pile
    Thy crown of bays, oh, let it crack awhile,
    And spit disdain, till the devouring flashes
    Suck all the moisture up, then turn to ashes.

    I will not draw the envy to engross
    All thy perfections, or weep all our loss;
    Those are too numerous for an elegy,
    And this too great to be express'd by me.
    Though every pen should share a distinct part,
    Yet art thou theme enough to tire all art;
    Let others carve the rest, it shall suffice
    I on thy tomb this epitaph incise:

    Here lies a king, that rul'd as he thought fit
    The universal monarchy of wit;
    Here lie two flamens, and both those, the best,
    Apollo's first, at last, the true God's priest.



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