Epitaph On Her Son H. P. At St. Syth's Church Wher Her Body Also Lies Interred
Katherine Philips
What on Earth deserves our trust? Youth and Beauty both are dust. Long we gathering are with pain, What one moment calls again. Seven years childless, marriage past, A Son, a son is born at last: So exactly lim’d and fair. Full of good Spirits, Meen, and Air, As a long life promised, Yet, in less than six weeks dead. Too promising, too great a mind In so small room to be confin’d : Therefore, as fit in Heav’n to dwell, He quickly broke the Prison shell. So the subtle Alchimist, Can’t with Hermes Seal resist The powerful spirit’s subtler flight, But t’will bid him long good night. And so the Sun if it arise Half so glorious as his Eyes, Like this Infant, takes a shrowd, Buried in a morning Cloud.
Next 10 Poems
- Katherine Philips : Friendships Mystery, To My Dearest Lucasia
- Katherine Philips : In Memory Of F.p.
- Katherine Philips : In Memory Of That Excellent Person Mrs. Mary Lloyd Of Bodidrist In Denbigh-shire,
- Katherine Philips : La Solitude De St. Amant
- Katherine Philips : L'amitie: To Mrs. M. Awbrey.
- Katherine Philips : Orinda To Lucasia Parting October 1661 At London
- Katherine Philips : Orinda Upon Little Hector Philips
- Katherine Philips : The World
- Katherine Philips : To Mr. Vaughan, Silurist On His Poems
- Katherine Philips : To Mrs. M. A. At Parting
Previous 10 Poems
- Katherine Philips : Epitaph On Her Son H. P.
- Katherine Philips : Content, To My Dearest Lucasia
- Katherine Philips : Arion To A Dolphin, On His Majesty's Passage Into England.
- Katherine Philips : Against Love
- Katherine Philips : A Retir'd Friendship
- Katherine Philips : 6th April 1651 L'amitie: To Mrs. M. Awbrey
- Dorothy Parker : Words Of Comfort To Be Scratched On A Mirror
- Dorothy Parker : Wisdom
- Dorothy Parker : Walter Savage Landor
- Dorothy Parker : Wail