W[illiam] S[hakespeare], "A Funeral Elegy for Master William Peter," (London: G.Eld for T.Thorpe, 1612). Normalized text, ed. Donald Foster.
The love I bore to your brother, and will do to his memory, hath craved from me this last duty of a friend; I am herein but a second to the privilege of truth, who can warrant more in his behalf than I undertook to deliver. Exercise in this kind I will little affect, and am less addicted to, but there must be miracle in that labor which, to witness my remembrance to this departed gentleman, I would not willingly undergo. Yet whatsoever is here done, is done to him and to him only. For whom and whose sake I will not forget to remember any friendly respects to you, or to any of those that have loved him for himself, and himself for his deserts.
|
Since time, and his predestinated end, |
|
Abridged the circuit of his hopeful days, |
|
Whiles both his youth and virtue did intend |
|
The good endeavors of deserving praise, |
5 |
What memorable monument can last |
Whereon to build his never-blemished name |
But his own worth, wherein his life was graced. . . |
Sith as that ever he maintained the same? |
Oblivion in the darkest day to come, |
10 |
When sin shall tread on merit in the dust, |
Cannot rase out the lamentable tomb |
Of his short-lived deserts; but still they must, |
Even in the hearts and memories of men, |
Claim fit respect, that they, in every limb |
15 |
Remembering what he was, with comfort then |
May pattern out one truly good, by him. |
For he was truly good, if honest care |
Of harmless conversation may commend |
A life free from such stains as follies are, |
20 |
Ill recompensed only in his end. |
Nor can the tongue of him who loved him least |
(If there can be minority of love |
To one superlative above the rest |
Of many men in steady faith) reprove |
25 |
His constant temper, in the equal weight |
Of thankfulness and kindness: Truth doth leave |
Sufficient proof, he was in every right |
As kind to give, as thankful to receive. |
The curious eye of a quick-brained survey |
30 |
Could scantly find a mote amidst the sun |
Of his too-shortened days, or make a prey |
Of any faulty errors he had done. |
Not that he was above the spleenful sense |
And spite of malice, but for that he had |
35 |
Warrant enough in his own innocence |
Against the sting of some in nature bad. |
Yet who is he so absolutely blest |
That lives encompassed in a mortal frame, |
Sometime in reputation not oppressed |
40 |
By some in nothing famous but defame? |
Such in the bypath and the ridgeway lurk |
That leads to ruin, in a smooth pretense |
Of what they do to be a special work |
Of singleness, not tending to offense; |
45 |
Whose very virtues are, not to detract |
Whiles hope remains of gain (base fee of slaves), |
Despising chiefly men in fortunes wracked. |
But death to such gives unremembered graves. |
Now therein lived he happy, if to be |
50 |
Free from detraction happiness it be. |
His younger years gave comfortable hope |
To hope for comfort in his riper youth, |
Which, harvest-like, did yield again the crop |
Of education, bettered in his truth. |
55 |
Those noble twins of heaven-infused races, |
Learning and wit, refined in their kind |
Did jointly both, in their peculiar graces, |
Enrich the curious temple of his mind; |
Indeed a temple, in whose precious white |
60 |
Sat reason by religion overswayed, |
Teaching his other senses, with delight, |
How piety and zeal should be obeyed. |
Not fruitlessly in prodigal expense |
Wasting his best of time, but so content |
65 |
With reason's golden mean to make defense |
Against the assault of youth's encouragement; |
As not the tide of this surrounding age |
(When now his father's death had freed his will) |
Could make him subject to the drunken rage |
70 |
Of such whose only glory is their ill. |
He from the happy knowledge of the wise |
Draws virtue to reprove secured fools |
And shuns the glad sleights of ensnaring vice |
To spend his spring of days in sacred schools. |
75 |
Here gave he diet to the sick desires |
That day by day assault the weaker man, |
And with fit moderation still retires |
From what doth batter virtue now and then. |
But that I not intend in full discourse |
80 |
To progress out his life, I could display |
A good man in each part exact and force |
The common voice to warrant what I say. |
For if his fate and heaven had decreed |
That full of days he might have lived to see |
85 |
The grave in peace, the times that should succeed |
Had been best-speaking witnesses with me; |
Whose conversation so untouched did move |
Respect most in itself, as who would scan |
His honesty and worth, by them might prove |
90 |
He was a kind, true, perfect gentleman. |
Not in the outside of disgraceful folly, |
Courting opinion with unfit disguise, |
Affecting fashions, nor addicted wholly |
To unbeseeming blushless vanities, |
95 |
But suiting so his habit and desire |
As that his virtue was his best attire. |
Not in the waste of many idle words |
Cared he to be heard talk, nor in the float |
Of fond conceit, such as this age affords, |
100 |
By vain discourse upon himself to dote; |
For his becoming silence gave such grace |
To his judicious parts, as what he spake |
Seemed rather answers which the wise embrace |
Than busy questions such as talkers make. |
105 |
And though his qualities might well deserve |
Just commendation, yet his furnished mind |
Such harmony of goodness did preserve |
As nature never built in better kind; |
Knowing the best, and therefore not presuming |
110 |
In knowing, but for that it was the best, |
Ever within himself free choice resuming |
Of true perfection, in a perfect breast; |
So that his mind and body made an inn, |
The one to lodge the other, both like framed |
115 |
For fair conditions, guests that soonest win |
Applause; in generality, well famed, |
If trim behavior, gestures mild, discreet |
Endeavors, modest speech, beseeming mirth, |
True friendship, active grace, persuasion sweet, |
120 |
Delightful love innated from his birth, |
Acquaintance unfamiliar, carriage just, |
Offenseless resolution, wished sobriety, |
Clean-tempered moderation, steady trust, |
Unburthened conscience, unfeigned piety; |
125 |
If these, or all of these, knit fast in one |
Can merit praise, then justly may we say, |
Not any from this frailer stage is gone |
Whose name is like to live a longer day. . . |
Though not in eminent courts or places great |
130 |
For popular concourse, yet in that soil |
Where he enjoyed his birth, life, death, and seat |
Which now sits mourning his untimely spoil. |
And as much glory is it to be good |
For private persons, in their private home, |
135 |
As those descended from illustrious blood |
In public view of greatness, whence they come. |
Though I, rewarded with some sadder taste |
Of knowing shame, by feeling it have proved |
My country's thankless misconstruction cast |
140 |
Upon my name and credit, both unloved |
By some whose fortunes, sunk into the wane |
Of plenty and desert, have strove to win |
Justice by wrong, and sifted to embane |
My reputation with a witless sin; |
145 |
Yet time, the father of unblushing truth, |
May one day lay ope malice which hath crossed it, |
And right the hopes of my endangered youth, |
Purchasing credit in the place I lost it. |
Even in which place the subject of the verse |
150 |
(Unhappy matter of a mourning style |
Which now that subject's merits doth rehearse) |
Had education and new being; while |
By fair demeanor he had won repute |
Amongst the all of all that lived there, |
155 |
For that his actions did so wholly suit |
With worthiness, still memorable here. |
The many hours till the day of doom |
Will not consume his life and hapless end, |
For should he lie obscured without a tomb, |
160 |
Time would to time his honesty commend; |
Whiles parents to their children will make known, |
And they to their posterity impart, |
How such a man was sadly overthrown |
By a hand guided by a cruel heart, |
165 |
Whereof as many as shall hear that sadness |
Will blame the one's hard fate, the other's madness; |
Whiles such as do recount that tale of woe, |
Told by remembrance of the wisest heads, |
Will in the end conclude the matter so, |
170 |
As they will all go weeping to their beds. |
For when the world lies wintered in the storms |
Of fearful consummation, and lays down |
Th' unsteady change of his fantastic forms, |
Expecting ever to be overthrown; |
175 |
When the proud height of much affected sin |
Shall ripen to a head, and in that pride |
End in the miseries it did begin |
And fall amidst the glory of his tide; |
Then in a book where every work is writ |
180 |
Shall this man's actions be revealed, to show |
The gainful fruit of well-employed wit, |
Which paid to heaven the debt that it did owe. |
Here shall be reckoned up the constant faith, |
Never untrue, where once he love professed; |
185 |
Which is a miracle in men, one saith, |
Long sought though rarely found, and he is best |
Who can make friendship, in those times of change, |
Admired more for being firm than strange. |
When those weak houses of our brittle flesh |
190 |
Shall ruined be by death, our grace and strength, |
Youth, memory and shape that made us fresh |
Cast down, and utterly decayed at length; |
When all shall turn to dust from whence we came |
And we low-leveled in a narrow grave, |
195 |
What can we leave behind us but a name, |
Which, by a life well led, may honor have? |
Such honor, O thou youth untimely lost, |
Thou didst deserve and hast; for though thy soul |
Hath took her flight to a diviner coast, |
200 |
Yet here on earth thy fame lives ever whole, |
In every heart sealed up, in every tongue |
Fit matter to discourse, no day prevented |
That pities not thy sad and sudden wrong, |
Of all alike beloved and lamented. |
205 |
And I here to thy memorable worth, |
In this last act of friendship, sacrifice |
My love to thee, which I could not set forth |
In any other habit of disguise. |
Although I could not learn, whiles yet thou wert, |
210 |
To speak the language of a servile breath, |
My truth stole from my tongue into my heart, |
Which shall not thence be sundered, but in death. |
And I confess my love was too remiss |
That had not made thee know how much I prized thee, |
215 |
But that mine error was, as yet it is, |
To think love best in silence: for I sized thee |
By what I would have been, not only ready |
In telling I was thine, but being so, |
By some effect to show it. He is steady |
220 |
Who seems less than he is in open show. |
Since then I still reserved to try the worst |
Which hardest fate and time thus can lay on me. |
T' enlarge my thoughts was hindered at first, |
While thou hadst life; I took this task upon me, |
225 |
To register with mine unhappy pen |
Such duties as it owes to thy desert, |
And set thee as a president to men, |
And limn thee to the world but as thou wert. . . |
Not hired, as heaven can witness in my soul, |
230 |
By vain conceit, to please such ones as know it, |
Nor servile to be liked, free from control, |
Which, pain to many men, I do not owe it. |
But here I trust I have discharged now |
(Fair lovely branch too soon cut off) to thee, |
235 |
My constant and irrefragable vow, |
As, had it chanced, thou mightst have done to me. . . |
But that no merit strong enough of mine |
Had yielded store to thy well-abled quill |
Whereby t' enroll my name, as this of thine, |
240 |
How s'ere enriched by thy plenteous skill. |
Here, then, I offer up to memory |
The value of my talent, precious man, |
Whereby if thou live to posterity, |
Though 't be not as I would, 'tis as I can: |
245 |
In minds from whence endeavor doth proceed, |
A ready will is taken for the deed. |
Yet ere I take my longest last farewell |
From thee, fair mark of sorrow, let me frame |
Some ampler work of thank, wherein to tell |
250 |
What more thou didst deserve than in thy name, |
And free thee from the scandal of such senses |
As in the rancor of unhappy spleen |
Measure thy course of life, with false pretenses |
Comparing by thy death what thou hast been. |
255 |
So in his mischiefs is the world accursed: |
It picks out matter to inform the worst. |
The willful blindness that hoodwinks the eyes |
Of men enwrapped in an earthy veil |
Makes them most ignorantly exercise |
260 |
And yield to humor when it doth assail, |
Whereby the candle and the body's light |
Darkens the inward eyesight of the mind, |
Presuming still it sees, even in the night |
Of that same ignorance which makes them blind. |
265 |
Hence conster they with corrupt commentaries, |
Proceeding from a nature as corrupt, |
The text of malice, which so often varies |
As 'tis by seeming reason underpropped. |
O, whither tends the lamentable spite |
270 |
Of this world's teenful apprehension, |
Which understands all things amiss, whose light |
Shines not amidst the dark of their dissension? |
True 'tis, this man, whiles yet he was a man, |
Soothed not the current of besotted fashion, |
275 |
Nor could disgest, as some loose mimics can, |
An empty sound of overweening passion, |
So much to be made servant to the base |
And sensual aptness of disunioned vices, |
To purchase commendation by disgrace, |
280 |
Whereto the world and heat of sin entices. |
But in a safer contemplation, |
Secure in what he knew, he ever chose |
The ready way to commendation, |
By shunning all invitements strange, of those |
285 |
Whose illness is, the necessary praise |
Must wait upon their actions; only rare |
In being rare in shame (which strives to raise |
Their name by doing what they do not care), |
As if the free commission of their ill |
290 |
Were even as boundless as their prompt desires; |
Only like lords, like subjects to their will, |
Which their fond dotage ever more admires. |
He was not so: but in a serious awe, |
Ruling the little ordered commonwealth |
295 |
Of his own self, with honor to the law |
That gave peace to his bread, bread to his health; |
Which ever he maintained in sweet content |
And pleasurable rest, wherein he joyed |
A monarchy of comfort's government, |
300 |
Never until his last to be destroyed. |
For in the vineyard of heaven-favored learning |
Where he was double-honored in degree, |
His observation and discreet discerning |
Had taught him in both fortunes to be free; |
305 |
Whence now retired home, to a home indeed |
The home of his condition and estate, |
He well provided 'gainst the hand of need, |
Whence young men sometime grow unfortunate; |
His disposition, by the bonds of unity, |
310 |
So fastened to his reason that it strove |
With understanding's grave immunity |
To purchase from all hearts a steady love; |
Wherein not any one thing comprehends |
Proportionable note of what he was, |
315 |
Than that he was so constant to his friends |
As he would no occasion overpass |
Which might make known his unaffected care, |
In all respects of trial, to unlock |
His bosom and his store, which did declare |
320 |
That Christ was his, and he was friendship's rock: |
A rock of friendship figured in his name, |
Foreshowing what he was, and what should be, |
Most true presage; and he discharged the same |
In every act of perfect amity. |
325 |
Though in the complemental phrase of words |
He never was addicted to the vain |
Of boast, such as the common breath affords; |
He was in use most fast, in tongue most plain, |
Nor amongst all those virtues that forever |
330 |
Adorned his reputation will be found |
One greater than his faith, which did persever, |
Where once it was protested, alway sound. |
Hence sprung the deadly fuel that revived |
The rage which wrought his end, for had he been |
335 |
Slacker in love, he had been longer lived |
And not oppressed by wrath's unhappy sin. . . |
By wrath's unhappy sin, which unadvised |
Gave death for free good will, and wounds for love. |
Pity it was that blood had not been prized |
340 |
At higher rate, and reason set above |
Most unjust choler, which untimely drew |
Destruction on itself; and most unjust, |
Robbed virtue of a follower so true |
As time can boast of, both for love and trust: |
345 |
So henceforth all (great glory to his blood) |
Shall be but seconds to him, being good. |
The wicked end their honor with their sin |
In death, which only then the good begin. |
Lo, here a lesson by experience taught |
350 |
For men whose pure simplicity hath drawn |
Their trust to be betrayed by being caught |
Within the snares of making truth a pawn; |
Whiles it, not doubting whereinto it enters, |
Without true proof and knowledge of a friend, |
355 |
Sincere in singleness of heart, adventers |
To give fit cause, ere love begin to end: |
His unfeigned friendship where it least was sought, |
Him to a fatal timeless ruin brought; |
Whereby the life that purity adorned |
360 |
With real merit, by this sudden end |
Is in the mouth of some in manner scorned, |
Made questionable, for they do intend, |
According to the tenor of the saw |
Mistook, if not observed (writ long ago |
365 |
When men were only led by reason's law), |
That "Such as is the end, the life proves so." |
Thus he, who to the universal lapse |
Gave sweet redemption, offering up his blood |
To conquer death by death, and loose the traps |
370 |
Of hell, even in the triumph that it stood: |
He thus, for that his guiltless life was spilt |
By death, which was made subject to the curse, |
Might in like manner be reproved of guilt |
In his pure life, for that his end was worse. |
375 |
But O far be it, our unholy lips |
Should so profane the deity above |
As thereby to ordain revenging whips |
Against the day of judgment and of love. |
The hand that lends us honor in our days |
380 |
May shorten when it please, and justly take |
Our honor from us many sundry ways, |
As best becomes that wisdom did us make. |
The second brother, who was next begot |
Of all that ever were begotten yet, |
385 |
Was by a hand in vengeance rude and hot |
Sent innocent to be in heaven set. |
Whose fame the angels in melodious choirs |
Still witness to the world. Then why should he, |
Well-profited in excellent desires, |
390 |
Be more rebuked, who had like destiny? |
Those saints before the everlasting throne |
Who sit with crowns of glory on their heads, |
Washed white in blood, from earth hence have not gone |
All to their joys in quiet on their beds, |
395 |
But tasted of the sour-bitter scourge |
Of torture and affliction ere they gained |
Those blessings which their sufferance did urge, |
Whereby the grace fore-promised they attained. |
Let then the false suggestions of the froward, |
400 |
Building large castles in the empty air, |
By suppositions fond and thoughts untoward |
(Issues of discontent and sick despair) |
Rebound gross arguments upon their heart |
That may disprove their malice, and confound |
405 |
Uncivil loose opinions which insert |
Their souls into the roll that doth unsound |
Betraying policies, and show their brains, |
Unto their shame, ridiculous; whose scope |
Is envy, whose endeavors fruitless pains, |
410 |
In nothing surely prosperous, but hope. . . |
And that same hope, so lame, so unprevailing, |
It buries self-conceit in weak opinion; |
Which being crossed, gives matter of bewailing |
Their vain designs, on whom want hath dominion. |
415 |
Such, and of such condition, may devise |
Which way to wound with defamation's spirit |
(Close-lurking whisper's hidden forgeries) |
His taintless goodness, his desertful merit. |
But whiles the minds of men can judge sincerely, |
420 |
Upon assured knowledge, his repute |
And estimation shall be rumored clearly |
In equal worth--time shall to time renew 't. |
The grave, that in his ever-empty womb |
Forever closes up the unrespected, |
425 |
Who when they die, die all, shall not entomb |
His pleading best perfections as neglected. |
They to his notice in succeeding years |
Shall speak for him when he shall lie below; |
When nothing but his memory appears |
430 |
Of what he was, then shall his virtues grow. |
His being but a private man in rank |
(And yet not ranked beneath a gentleman) |
Shall not abridge the commendable thank |
Which wise posterity shall give him then; |
435 |
For nature, and his therein happy fate. |
Ordained that by his quality of mind |
T' ennoble that best part, although his state |
Were to a lower blessedness confined. |
Blood, pomp, state, honor, glory and command, |
440 |
Without fit ornaments of disposition, |
Are in themselves but heathenish and profaned, |
And much more peaceful is a mean condition |
Which, underneath the roof of safe content, |
Feeds on the bread of rest, and takes delight |
445 |
To look upon the labors it hath spent |
For its own sustenance, both day and night; |
Whiles others, plotting which way to be great, |
How to augment their portion and ambition, |
Do toil their giddy brains, and ever sweat |
450 |
For popular applause and power's commission. |
But one in honors, like a seeled dove |
Whose inward eyes are dimmed with dignity, |
Does think most safety doth remain above, |
And seeks to be secure by mounting high: |
455 |
Whence, when he falls, who did erewhile aspire, |
Falls deeper down, for that he climbed higher. |
Now men who in lower region live |
Exempt from danger of authority |
Have fittest times in reason's rules to thrive, |
460 |
Not vexed with envy of priority, |
And those are much more noble in the mind |
Than many that have nobleness by kind. |
Birth, blood, and ancestors, are none of ours, |
Nor can we make a proper challenge to them |
465 |
But virtues and perfections in our powers |
Proceed most truly from us, if we do them. |
Respective titles or a gracious style, |
With all what men in eminence possess, |
Are, without ornaments to praise them, vile: |
470 |
The beauty of the mind is nobleness. |
And such as have that beauty, well deserve |
Eternal characters, that after death |
Remembrance of their worth we may preserve, |
So that their glory die not with their breath. |
475 |
Else what avails it in a goodly strife |
Upon this face of earth here to contend, |
The good t' exceed the wicked in their life, |
Should both be like obscured in their end? |
Until which end, there is none rightly can |
480 |
Be termed happy, since the happiness |
Depends upon the goodness of the man, |
Which afterwards his praises will express. |
Look hither then, you that enjoy the youth |
Of your best days, and see how unexpected |
485 |
Death can betray your jollity to ruth |
When death you think is least to be respected! |
The person of this model here set out |
Had all that youth and happy days could give him, |
Yet could not all-encompass him about |
490 |
Against th' assault of death, who to relieve him |
Strook home but to the frail and mortal parts |
Of his humanity, but could not touch |
His flourishing and fair long-lived deserts, |
Above fate's reach, his singleness was such. |
495 |
So that he dies but once, but doubly lives, |
Once in his proper self, then in his name; |
Predestinated time, who all deprives, |
Could never yet deprive him of the same. |
And had the genius which attended on him |
500 |
Been possibilited to keep him safe |
Against the rigor that hath overgone him, |
He had been to the public use a staff, |
Leading by his example in the path |
Which guides to doing well, wherein so few |
505 |
The proneness of this age to error hath |
Informed rightly in the courses true. |
As then the loss of one, whose inclination |
Stove to win love in general, is sad, |
So specially his friends, in soft compassion |
510 |
Do feel the greatest loss they could have had. |
Amongst them all, she who those nine of years |
Lived fellow to his counsels and his bed |
Hath the most share in loss; for I in hers |
Feel what distemperature this chance hath bred. |
515 |
The chaste embracements of conjugal love, |
Who in a mutual harmony consent, |
Are so impatient of a strange remove |
As meager death itself seems to lament, |
And weep upon those cheeks which nature framed |
520 |
To be delightful orbs in whom the force |
Of lively sweetness plays, so that ashamed |
Death often pities his unkind divorce. |
Such was the separation here constrained |
(Well-worthy to be termed a rudeness rather), |
525 |
For in his life his love was so unfeigned |
As he was both an husband and a father. . . |
The one in firm affection and the other |
In careful providence, which ever strove |
With joint assistance to grace one another |
530 |
With every helpful furtherance of love. |
But since the sum of all that can be said |
Can be but said that "He was good" (which wholly |
Includes all excellence can be displayed |
In praise of virtue and reproach of folly). |
535 |
His due deserts, this sentence on him gives, |
"He died in life, yet in his death he lives." |
Now runs the method of this doleful song |
In accents brief to thee, O thou deceased! |
To whom those pains do only all belong |
540 |
As witnesses I did not love thee least. |
For could my worthless brain find out but how |
To raise thee from the sepulcher of dust, |
Undoubtedly thou shouldst have partage now |
Of life with me, and heaven be counted just |
545 |
If to a supplicating soul it would |
Give life anew, by giving life again |
Where life is missed; whereby discomfort should |
Right his old griefs, and former joys retain |
Which now with thee are leaped into thy tomb |
550 |
And buried in that hollow vault of woe, |
Expecting yet a more severer doom |
Than time's strict flinty hand will let 'em know. |
And now if I have leveled mine account |
And reckoned up in a true measured score |
555 |
Those perfect graces which were ever wont |
To wait on thee alive, I ask no more |
(But shall hereafter in a poor content |
Immure those imputations I sustain, |
Learning my days of youth so to prevent |
560 |
As not to be cast down by them again); |
Only those hopes which fate denies to grant |
In full possession to a captive heart |
Who, if it were in plenty, still would want |
Before it may enjoy his better part: |
565 |
From which detained, and banished in th' exile |
Of dim misfortune, has none other prop |
Whereon to lean and rest itself the while |
But the weak comfort of the hapless, "hope." |
And hope must in despite of fearful change |
570 |
Play in the strongest closet of my breast, |
Although perhaps I ignorantly range |
And court opinion in my deep'st unrest. |
But whether doth the stream of my mischance |
Drive me beyond myself, fast friend, soon lost, |
575 |
Long may thy worthiness thy name advance |
Amongst the virtuous and deserving most, |
Who herein hast forever happy proved: |
In life thou lived'st, in death thou died'st beloved. |