Iii. O Thou, Whose Stern Command And Precepts Pure...
William Lisle Bowles
O THOU, whose stern command and precepts pure (Tho' agony in every vein should start, And slowly drain the blood-drops from the heart) Have bade the patient spirit still endure; Thou, who to sorrow hast a beauty lent, On the dark brow, with resolution clad, Illumining the dreary traces sad, Like the cold taper on a monument; O firm Philosophy! display the tide Of human misery, and oft relate How silent sinking in the storms of fate, The brave and good have bow'd their head and died. So taught by Thee, some solace I may find, Remembering the sorrows of mankind.
Next 10 Poems
- William Lisle Bowles : In Age
- William Lisle Bowles : In Youth
- William Lisle Bowles : Iv. To The River Wenbeck
- William Lisle Bowles : Ix. O Poverty! Though From Thy Haggard Eye...
- William Lisle Bowles : Languid, And Sad, And Slow, From Day To Day
- William Lisle Bowles : Netley Abbey
- William Lisle Bowles : O Poverty! Though From Thy Haggard Eye
- William Lisle Bowles : O Thou, Whose Stern Command And Precepts Pure
- William Lisle Bowles : On A Beautiful Landscape
- William Lisle Bowles : On A Distant View Of England
Previous 10 Poems
- William Lisle Bowles : Ii. Written At Bamborough Castle.
- William Lisle Bowles : I. Written At Tinemouth, Northumberland, After A Tempestuous Voyage.
- William Lisle Bowles : Evening
- William Lisle Bowles : Bereavement
- William Lisle Bowles : At Dover Cliffs, July 20th 1787
- William Lisle Bowles : At A Village In Scotland
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