[Poems on Several Occasions with A Pastoral to which is added A Discourse of Life] [by John Tutchin] |
[Could we our Passions guide by Reason's Law] |
[Poems on Several Occasions with A Pastoral | ||
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[Could we our Passions guide by Reason's Law]
Could we our Passions guide by Reason's Law,And keep th' Affections in severest Awe:
Could we a Limit set to boundless Love,
And make our Wrath in peaceful Order move:
Could we unruly Hate in Fetters bind,
And tame the wild Desires of the Mind;
Not Lovers would enjoy more Blissful Ease,
Or Halcions brooding on the silent Seas:
More Damage would the sturdy Oaks sustain
From Fighting Winds, and the Tempestuous Rain,
Than We; though Passion should its Storms raise,
Wild as the Wind, and raging as the Seas.
Grant me, good God! a Melancholy Seat,
Free from the Noise and Tumults of the Great:
Like some Blest Man, who his Retinue sees
A tall and sprightly Grove of servile Trees,
Of complemental Trees, that fright the Hindes,
Making low Congees to the roaring Winds:
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And some good Friends make short the tedious Day.
Fraught full of Mirth, the Hours more Joy would bring,
Than the black Days attend a Regent King.
[Poems on Several Occasions with A Pastoral | ||