University of Virginia Library


118

XXXI. Of Man's Uprightness.

Quam variis terras animalia permeant flguris!
Nempe alia extento sunt corpore, pulveremque verrunt.

Hwæt thu meaht ongitan
Gif his the geman list
Thæt te mislice. &c.

Yet more, thou mayst know,
If it list thee to mind,
That many things go
Over earth in their kind,
Unlike to the view
In shape as in hue.
Known or unknown
Some forms of them all
On earth lying prone
Must creep and must crawl;
By feathers help'd not,
Nor walking with feet,
As it is their lot
Earth they must eat.

119

Twofooted these,
Fourfooted those,
Each one with ease
Its going wellknows,
Some flying high
Under the sky.
Yet to this earth
Is everything bound,
Bowed from its birth
Down to the ground,
Looking on clay
And leaning to dust,
Some as they may
And some as they must.
Man alone goes
Of all things upright,—
Whereby he shows
That his mind and his might
Ever should rise
Up to the skies.
Unless like the beast
His mind is intent
Downwards to feast,—
It cannot be meant

120

That any man
So far should sink
Upwards to scan
Yet—downwards to think!