The Shorter Poems

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by Edmund Spenser


  That we the like should to the wretches shew,

  And loue our brethren; thereby to approue,

  How much himselfe that loued vs, we loue.

  Then rouze thy selfe, O earth, out of thy soyle,

  In which thou wallowest like to filthy swyne

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  And doest thy mynd in durty pleasures moyle,

  Vnmindfull of that dearest Lord of thyne;

  Lift vp to him thy heauie clouded eyne,

  That thou his soueraine bountie mayst behold,

  And read through loue his mercies manifold.

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  Beginne from first, where he encradled was

  In simple cratch, wrapt in a wad of hay,

  Betweene the toylefull Oxe and humble Asse,

  And in what rags, and in how base aray,

  The glory of our heauenly riches lay,

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  When him the silly Shepheards came to see,

  Whom greatest Princes sought on lowest knee.

  From thence reade on the storie of his life,

  His humble carriage, his vnfaulty wayes,

  His cancred foes, his fights, his toyle, his strife,

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  His paines, his pouertie, his sharpe assayes,

  Through which he past his miserable dayes,

  Offending none, and doing good to all,

  Yet being malist both of great and small.

  And looke at last how of most wretched wights,

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  He taken was, betrayd, and false accused,

  How with most scornefull taunts, and fell despights

  He was reuyld, disgrast, and foule abused,

  How scourgd, how crownd, how buffeted, how brused;

  And lastly how twixt robbers crucifyde,

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  With bitter wounds through hands, through feet and syde.

  Then let thy flinty hart that feeles no paine,

  Empierced be with pittifull remorse,

  And let thy bowels bleede in euery vaine,

  At sight of his most sacred heauenly corse,

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  So tome and mangled with malicious forse,

  And let thy soule, whose sins his sorrows wrought,

  Melt into teares, and grone in grieued thought.

  With sence whereof whilest so thy softened spirit

  Is inly toucht, and humbled with meeke zeale,

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  Through meditation of his endlesse merit,

  Lift vp thy mind to th’author of thy weale,

  And to his soueraine mercie doe appeale;

  Learne him to loue, that loued thee so deare,

  And in thy brest his blessed image beare.

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  With all thy hart, with all thy soule and mind,

  Thou must him loue, and his beheasts embrace:

  All other loues, with which the world doth blind

  Weake fancies, and stirre vp affections base,

  Thou must renounce, and vtterly displace,

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  And giue thy selfe vnto him full and free,

  That full and freely gaue himselfe to thee.

  Then shalt thou feele thy spirit so possest,

  And rauisht with deuouring great desire

  Of his deare selfe, that shall thy feeble brest

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  Inflame with loue, and set thee all on fire

  With burning zeale, through euery part entire,

  That in no earthly thing thou shalt delight,

  But in his sweet and amiable sight.

  Thenceforth all worlds desire will in thee dye,

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  And all earthes glorie on which men do gaze,

  Seeme durt and drosse in thy pure sighted eye,

  Compar’d to that celestiall beauties blaze,

  Whose glorious beames all fleshly sense doth daze

  With admiration of their passing light,

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  Blinding the eyes and lumining the spright.

  Then shall thy rauisht soule inspired bee

  With heauenly thoughts, farre aboue humane skil,

  And thy bright radiant eyes shall plainely see

  Th’Idee of his pure glorie present still,

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  Before thy face, that all thy spirits shall fill

  With sweete enragement of celestiall loue,

  Kindled through sight of those faire things aboue.

  FINIS.

  AN HYMNE OF HEAVENLY BEAVTIE.

  Rapt with the rage of mine own rauisht thought,

  Through contemplation of those goodly sights,

  And glorious images in heauen wrought,

  Whose wondrous beauty breathing sweet delights,

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  Do kindle loue in high conceipted sprights:

  I faine to tell the things that I behold,

  But feele my wits to faile, and tongue to fold.

  Vouchsafe then, O thou most almightie Spright,

  From whom all guifts of wit and knowledge flow,

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  To shed into my breast some sparkling light

  Of thine eternall Truth, that I may show

  Some litle beames to mortall eyes below,

  Of that immortall beautie, there with thee,

  Which in my weake distraughted mynd I see.

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  That with the glorie of so goodly sight,

  The hearts of men, which fondly here admyre

  Faire seeming shewes, and feed on vaine delight,

  Transported with celestiall desyre

  Of those faire formes, may lift themselues vp hyer,

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  And learne to loue with zealous humble dewty

  Th’eternall fountaine of that heauenly beauty.

  Beginning then below, with th’easie vew

  Of this base world, subiect to fleshly eye,

  From thence to mount aloft by order dew,

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  To contemplation of th’immortall sky,

  Of the soare faulcon so I learne to fly,

  That flags awhile her fluttering wings beneath,

  Till she her selfe for stronger flight can breath.

  Then looke who list, thy gazefull eyes to feed

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  With sight of that is faire, looke on the frame

  Of this wyde vniuerse, and therein reed

  The endlesse kinds of creatures, which by name

  Thou canst not count, much lesse their natures aime:

  All which are made with wondrous wise respect,

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  And all with admirable beautie deckt.

  First th’Earth, on adamantine pillers founded,

  Amid the Sea engirt with brasen bands;

  Then th’Aire still flitting, but yet firmely bounded

  On euerie side, with pyles of flaming brands,

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  Neuer consum’d nor quencht with mortall hands;

  And last, that mightie shining christall wall,

  Wherewith he hath encompassed this All.

  By view whereof, it plainly may appeare,

  That still as euery thing doth vpward tend,

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  And further is from earth, so still more cleare

  And faire it growes, till to his perfect end

  Of purest beautie, it at last ascend:

  Ayre more then water, fire much more then ayre,

  And heauen then fire appeares more pure and fayre.

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  Looke thou no further, but affixe thine eye

  On that bright shynie round still mouing Masse,

  The house of blessed Gods, which men call Skye,

  All sowd with glistring stars more thicke then grasse,

  Whereof each other doth in brightnesse passe;

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  But those two most, which ruling night and day,

  As King and Queene, the heauens Empire sway.

  And tell me then, what hast thou euer seene,

  That to their beaut
ie may compared bee,

  Or can the sight that is most sharpe and keene,

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  Endure their Captains flaming head to see?

  How much lesse those, much higher in degree,

  And so much fairer, and much more then these,

  As these are fairer then the land and seas?

  For farre aboue these heauens which here we see,

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  Be others farre exceeding these in light,

  Not bounded, not corrupt, as these same bee,

  But infinite in largenesse and in hight,

  Vnmouing, vncorrupt, and spotlesse bright,

  That need no Sunne t’illuminate their spheres,

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  But their owne natiue light farre passing theirs.

  And as these heauens still by degrees arize,

  Vntill they come to their first Mouers bound,

  That in his mightie compasse doth comprize,

  And carrie all the rest with him around,

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  So those likewise doe by degrees redound,

  And rise more faire, till they at last ariue

  To the most faire, whereto they all do striue.

  Faire is the heauen, where happy soules haue place,

  In full enioyment of felicitie,

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  Whence they doe still behold the glorious face

  Of the diuine eternall Maiestie;

  More faire is that, where those Idees on hie

  Enraunged be, which Plato so admyred,

  And pure Intelligences from God inspyred.

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  Yet fairer is that heauen, in which doe raine

  The soueraine Powres and mightie Potentates,

  Which in their high protections doe containe

  All mortall Princes, and imperiall States;

  And fayrer yet, whereas the royall Seates

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  And heauenly Dominations are set,

  From whom all earthly gouernance is fet.

  Yet farre more faire be those bright Cherubins,

  Which all with golden wings are ouerdight,

  And those eternall burning Seraphins,

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  Which from their faces dart out fierie light;

  Yet fairer then they both, and much more bright

  Be th’Angels and Archangels, which attend

  On Gods owne person, without rest or end.

  These thus in faire each other farre excelling,

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  As to the Highest they approch more neare,

  Yet is that Highest farre beyond all telling,

  Fairer then all the rest which there appeare,

  Though all their beauties ioynd together were:

  How then can mortall tongue hope to expresse,

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  The image of such endlesse perfectnesse?

  Cease then my tongue, and lend vnto my mynd

  Leaue to bethinke how great that beautie is,

  Whose vtmost parts so beautifull I fynd,

  How much more those essentiall parts of his,

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  His truth, his loue, his wisedome, and his blis,

  His grace, his doome, his mercy and his might,

  By which he lends vs of himselfe a sight.

  Those vnto all he daily doth display,

  And shew himselfe in th’image of his grace,

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  As in a looking glasse, through which he may

  Be seene, of all his creatures vile and base,

  That are vnable else to see his face,

  His glorious face which glistereth else so bright,

  That th’Angels selues can not endure his sight.

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  But we fraile wights, whose sight cannot sustaine

  The Suns bright beames, when he on vs doth shyne,

  But that their points rebutted backe againe

  Are duld, how can we see with feeble eyne,

  The glory of that Maiestie diuine,

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  In sight of whom both Sun and Moone are darke,

  Compared to his least resplendent sparke?

  The meanes therefore which vnto vs is lent,

  Him to behold, is on his workes to looke,

  Which he hath made in beauty excellent,

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  And in the same, as in a brasen booke,

  To reade enregistred in euery nooke

  His goodnesse, which his beautie doth declare,

  For all thats good, is beautifull and faire.

  Thence gathering plumes of perfect speculation,

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  To impe the wings of thy high flying mynd,

  Mount vp aloft through heauenly contemplation,

  From this darke world, whose damps the soule do blynd,

  And like the natiue brood of Eagles kynd,

  On that bright Sunne of glorie fixe thine eyes,

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  Clear’d from grosse mists of fraile infirmities.

  Humbled with feare and awfull reuerence,

  Before the footestoole of his Maiestie,

  Throw thy selfe downe with trembling innocence,

  Ne dare looke vp with corruptible eye,

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  On the dred face of that great Deity,

  For feare, lest if he chaunce to looke on thee,

  Thou turne to nought, and quite confounded be.

  But lowly fall before his mercie seate,

  Close couered with the Lambes integrity,

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  From the iust wrath of his auengefull threate,

  That sits vpon the righteous throne on hy:

  His throne is built vpon Eternity,

  More firme and durable then steele or brasse,

  Or the hard diamond, which them both doth passe.

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  His scepter is the rod of Righteousnesse,

  With which he bruseth all his foes to dust,

  And the great Dragon strongly doth represse,

  Vnder the rigour of his iudgement iust;

  His seate is Truth, to which the faithfull trust;

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  From whence proceed her beames so pure and bright,

  That all about him sheddeth glorious light.

  Light farre exceeding that bright blazing sparke,

  Which darted is from Titans flaming head,

  That with his beames enlumineth the darke

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  And dampish aire, wherby al things are red:

  Whose nature yet so much is maruelled

  Of mortall wits, that it doth much amaze

  The greatest wisards, which thereon do gaze.

  But that immortall light which there doth shine,

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  Is many thousand times more bright, more cleare,

  More excellent, more glorious, more diuine,

  Through which to God all mortall actions here,

  And euen the thoughts of men, do plaine appeare:

  For from th’eternall Truth it doth proceed,

 

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