[Page 14]
On the Vanities of this Life: A Pindarick Ode.
1.
1 WHat makes fond Man the trifle Life desire,
2 And with such Ardor court his Pain?
3 'Tis Madness, worse than Madness, to admire
4 What brings Ten thousand Miseries in its Train:
5 To each soft moment, Hours of Care succeed,
6 And for the Pleasures of a Day,
7 With Years of Grief we pay;
8 So much our lasting Sorrows, our fleeting Joys exceed.
9 In vain, in vain, we Happiness pursue,
10 That mighty Blessing is not here;
11 That, like the false misguiding Fire,
12 Is farthest off, when we believe it near:
13 Yet still we follow till we tire,
14 And in the fatal Chase Expire:
15 Each gaudy nothing which we view,
16 We fancy is the wish'd for Prize,
17 Its painted Glories captivate our Eyes;
18 Blinded by Pride, we hug our own Mistake,
19 And foolishly adore that Idol which we make.
2.
20 Some hope to find it on the Coasts of Fame,
21 And hazard all to gain a glorious Name;
22 Proud of Deformity and Scars,
[Page 15]23 They seek for Honour in the bloodiest Wars;
24 On Dangers, unconcern'd, they run,
25 And Death it self disdain to shun:
26 This, the Rich with Wonder see,
27 And fancy they are happier far
28 Than those deluded Heroes are:
29 But this, alas! is their Mistake;
30 They only dream that they are blest,
31 For when they from their pleasing Slumbers wake,
32 They'll find their Minds with Swarms of Cares opprest,
33 So crouded, that no part is free
34 To entertain Felicity:
35 The Pain to get, and Fear to lose,
36 Like Harpies, all their Joys devour:
37 Who such a wretched Life wou'd chuse?
38 Or think those happy who must Fortune trust?
39 That fickle Goddess is but seldom just.
40 Exterior things can ne'er be truly good,
41 Because within her Pow'r;
42 This the wise Ancients understood,
43 And only wish'd for what wou'd Life sustain;
44 Esteeming all beyond superfluous and vain.
3.
45 Some think the Great are only blest,
46 Those God-like Men who shine above the rest:
47 In whom united Glories meet,
48 And all the lower World pay Homage at their Feet:
49 On their exalted Heights they sit in State,
50 And their Commands bind like the Laws of Fate:
51 Their Regal Scepters, and their glitt'ring Crowns,
52 Imprint an awful Fear in ev'ry Breast:
53 Death shoots his killing Arrows thro' their Frowns;
[Page 16]54 Their Smiles are welcom, as the Beams of Light
55 Were to the infant World, when first it rose from Night.
56 Thus, in the Firmament of Pow'r above,
57 Each in his radiant Sphere does move,
58 Remote from common View;
59 Th' admiring Croud with Wonder gaze,
60 The distant Glories their weak Eyes amaze:
61 But cou'd they search into the Truth of Things,
62 Cou'd they but look into the Thoughts of Kings;
63 If all their hidden Cares they knew,
64 Their Jealousies, their Fears, their Pain,
65 And all the Troubles of their Reign,
66 They then wou'd pity those they now admire;
67 And with their humble State content, wou'd nothing more desire.
4.
[Page 17]68 If any thing like Happiness is here,
69 If any thing deserves our Care,
70 'Tis only by the Good possest;
71 By those who Virtue's Laws obey,
72 And cheerfully proceed in her unerring Way;
73 Whose Souls are cleans'd from all the Dregs of Sin,
74 From all the base Alloys of their inferior Part,
75 And fit to harbour that Celestial Guest,
76 Who ne'r will be confin'd
77 But to a holy Breast.
78 The pure and spotless Mind,
79 Has all within
80 That the most boundless Wish can crave;
81 The most aspiring Temper hope to have:
82 Nor needs the Helps of Art,
83 Nor vain Supplies of Sense,
84 Assur'd of all in only Innocence.
5.
85 Malice and Envy, Discontent, and Pride,
86 Those fatal Inmates of the Vicious Mind,
87 Which into dang'rous Paths th' unthinking Guide,
88 Ne'er to the pious Breast admittance find.
89 As th' upper Region is Serene and clear,
90 No Winds, no Clouds are there,
91 So with perpetual Calms the virtuous Soul is blest,
92 Those Antepasts of everlasting Rest:
93 Like some firm Rock amidst the raging Waves
94 She stands, and their united Force outbraves;
95 Contends, till from her Earthly Shackles free,
96 She takes her flight
97 Into immense Eternity,
98 And in those Realms of unexhausted Light,
99 Forgets the Pressures of her former State.
100 O'er-joy'd to find her self beyond the reach of Fate.
6.
101 O happy Place! where ev'ry thing will please,
102 Where neither Sickness, Fear, nor Strife,
103 Nor any of the painful Cares of Life,
104 Will interrupt her Ease:
105 Where ev'ry Object charms the Sight,
106 And yields fresh Wonder and Delight,
107 Where nothing's heard but Songs of Joy,
108 Full of Extasie Divine,
109 Seraphick Hymns! which Love inspire,
110 And fill the Breast with sacred Fire:
111 Love refin'd from drossy Heat,
[Page 18]112 Rais'd to a Flame sublime and great,
113 In ev'ry Heav'nly Face do's shine,
114 And each Celestial Tongue employ:
115 What e'er we can of Friendship know,
116 What e'er we Passion call below,
117 Does but a weak Resemblance bear,
118 To that blest Union which is ever there,
119 Where Love, like Life, do's animate the whole,
120 As if it were but one blest individual Soul.
7.
121 Such as a lasting Happiness would have,
122 Must seek it in the peaceful Grave,
123 Where free from Wrongs the Dead remain.
124 Life is a long continu'd Pain,
125 A lingring slow Disease.
126 Which Remedies a while may ease,
127 But cannot work a perfect Cure:
128 Musick with its inchanting Lays,
129 May for a while our Spirits raise,
130 Honour and Wealth may charm the Sense,
131 And by their pow'rful Influence
132 May gently lull our Cares asleep;
133 But when we think our selves secure,
134 And fondly hope we shall no future Ills endure,
135 Our Griefs awake again,
136 And with redoubl'd Rage augment our Pain:
137 In vain we stand on our Defence,
138 In vain a constant Watch we keep,
139 In vain each Path we guard;
140 Unseen into our Souls they creep,
141 And when they once are there, 'tis very hard
142 With all our Strength to force them thence;
[Page 19]143 Like bold Intruders on the whole they seize,
144 A Part will not th' insatiate Victors please.
8.
[Page 20]145 In vain, alas! in vain,
146 We Reason's Aid implore,
147 That will but add a quicker Sense of Pain,
148 But not our former Joys restore:
149 Those few who by strict Rules their Lives have led,
150 Who Reason's Laws attentively have read;
151 Who to its Dictates glad Submission pay,
152 And by their Passions never led astray,
153 Go resolutely on in its severest Way,
154 Could never solid Satisfaction find:
155 The most that Reason can, is to persuade the Mind,
156 Its Troubles decently to bear,
157 And not permit a Murmur, or a Tear,
158 To tell th' inquiring World that any such are there:
159 But while we strive our Suff'rings to disown,
160 And blush to have our Frailties known;
161 While from the publick View our Griefs we hide,
162 And keep them Pris'ners in our Breast,
163 We seem to be, but are not truly blest;
164 What like Contentment looks, is but th' Effect of Pride:
165 From it we no advantage win,
166 But are the same we were before,
167 The smarting Pains corrode us still within;
168 Confinement do's but make them rage the more:
169 Upon the vital Stock they prey,
170 And by insensible degrees they wast our Life away.
9.
171 In vain from Books we hope to gain Relief,
172 Knowledge does but increase our Grief:
173 The more we read, the more we find
174 Of th' unexhausted Store still left behind:
175 To dig the wealthy Mine we try,
176 No Pain, no Labour spare;
177 But the lov'd Treasure too profound does lie,
178 And mocks our utmost Industry:
179 Like some inchanted Isle it does appear;
180 The pleas'd Spectator thinks it near;
181 But when with wide spread Sails he makes to shore,
182 His Hopes are lost, the Phantom's seen no more:
183 Asham'd, and tir'd, we of Success despair,
184 Our fruitless Studies we repent,
185 And blush to see, that after all our Care,
186 After whole Years on tedious Volumes spent,
187 We only darkly understand
188 That which we thought we fully knew;
189 Thro' Labyrinths we go without a Clue,
190 Till in the dang'rous Maze our selves we lose,
191 And neither know which Path t'avoid, or which to chuse.
192 From Thought to Thought, our restless Minds are tost,
193 Like Ship-wreck'd Mariners we seek the Land,
194 And in a Sea of Doubts are almost lost.
195 The Phœnix Truth wrapt up in Mists does lie,
196 Not to be clearly seen before we die;
197 Not till our Souls free from confining Clay,
198 Open their Eyes in everlasting Day.
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Source edition
Chudleigh, Mary Lee, 1656-1710. Poems on several occasions. Together with the Song of the three children paraphras'd. By the Lady Chudleigh. London: Printed by W.B. for Bernard Lintott at the Middle Temple Gate in Fleetstreet, 1703, pp. 14-20. [16],125,[17],73,[1]p.; 8⁰. (ESTC T97275) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [(OC) 280 j.452].)
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Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.
Other works by Lady Mary Chudleigh
- The Choice. A Dialogue between Emilia and Marissa. ()
- A Dialogue between Alexis and Astrea. ()
- A Dialogue between Virgil and Mævius. ()
- The Elevation. ()
- The Fifteenth Psalm Paraphras'd. ()
- FRIENDSHIP. ()
- The Happy Man. ()
- ICARUS. ()
- The Inquiry. A Dialogue between Cleanthe and Marissa. ()
- The Observation. ()
- The Offering. ()
- On the Death of his Highness the Duke of Glocester. ()
- On the Death of my dear Daughter Eliza Maria Chudleigh: A Dialogue between Lucinda and Marissa. ()
- On the Death of my Honoured Mother Mrs. Lee: A Dialogue between Lucinda and Marissa. ()
- One of Lucian's Dialogues of the Dead Paraphras'd. ()
- A Pindarick Ode. ()
- The Resolution. ()
- The Resolve. ()
- Solitude. ()
- THE SONG OF THE Three Children PARAPHRAS'D. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. To Lerinda. ()
- To Almystrea. ()
- To Clorissa. ()
- To Eugenia. ()
- To Mr. Dryden, on his excellent Translation of Virgil. ()
- To the Ladies. ()
- To the Learn'd and Ingenious Dr. Musgrave of Exeter. ()
- To the QUEEN's most Excellent MAJESTY. ()
- To the QUEEN's most Excellent MAJESTY. ()
- The Wish. ()