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SOLITARY THOUGHTS ON THE UNCERTAINTY OF ALL HUMAN THINGS.
 
 
 


235

SOLITARY THOUGHTS ON THE UNCERTAINTY OF ALL HUMAN THINGS.

“Transibunt cito, quæ vos mansura putatis.”

What ground, alas! has any man
To set his heart on things below,
Which, when they seem most like to stand,
Fly like an arrow from a bow?
Things subject to exterior sense
Are to mutation most prepense.
If stately houses we erect,
And therein think to take delight,
On what a sudden are we checked,
And all our hopes made groundless quite!
One little spark in ashes lays
What we were building half our days.
If on estates an eye we cast,
And pleasure there expect to find,
A secret providential blast
Brings disappointment to our mind.
Who's now on top ere long may feel
The circling motion of the wheel.
If we our tender babes embrace,
And comfort hope in them to have,
Alas! in what a little space
Is hope laid with them in the grave!
Whatever promiseth content
Is in a moment from us rent.
But is there nothing, then, that's sure
For man to six his heart upon?
Nothing that always will endure
When all these transient things are gone?

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Sad state where man, with grief oppress'd,
Finds nought wherein his mind may rest.
Oh yes! there is a God above,
Who unto men is also nigh,
On whose unalterable love
We may with confidence rely.
No disappointment can befall
While trusting Him that's All in All.
In Him o'er all if we delight,
And in His precepts pleasure take,
We shall be sure to do aright.
Tis not His nature to forsake.
A proper object He alone
For man to set his heart upon.
T. E. Kent, 4th, 7th mo. 1670.