Henry King

Here you will find the Poem AThe Anniverse. AN ELEGY. of poet Henry King

AThe Anniverse. AN ELEGY.

So soon grown old! hast thou been six years dead? 
Poor earth, once by my Love inhabited! 
And must I live to calculate the time 
To which thy blooming youth could never climbe, 
But fell in the ascent! yet have not I 
Studi'd enough thy losses history. 
How happy were mankind if Death's strict lawes 
Consum'd our lamentations like the cause! 
Or that our grief turning to dust might end 
With the dissolved body of a friend! 
But sacred Heaven! O how just thou art 
In stamping deaths impression on that heart 
Which through thy favours would grow insolent, 
Were it not physick't by sharp discontent. 
If then it stand resolv'd in thy decree 
That still I must doom'd to a Desart be 
Sprung out of my lone thoughts, which know no path 
But what my own misfortune beaten hath: 
If thou wilt bind me living to a coarse, 
And I must slowly waste; I then of force 
Stoop to thy great appointment, and obey 
That will which nought avail me to gainsay. 
For whil'st in sorrowes Maze I wander on, 
I do but follow lifes vocation. 
Sure we were made to grieve: at our first birth 
With cries we took possession of the earth; 
And though the lucky man reputed be 
Fortunes adopted son, yet onely he 
Is Natures true born child, who summes his years 
(Like me) with no Arithmetick but tears.