The Poetry Corner

Lament XVI

By Jan Kochanowski

Misfortune hath constrained me To leave the lute and poetry, Nor can I from their easing borrow Sleep for my sorrow. Do I see true, or hath a dream Flown forth from ivory gates to gleam In phantom gold, before forsaking Its poor cheat, waking? Oh, mad, mistaken humankind, 'Tis easy triumph for the mind While yet no ill adventure strikes us And naught mislikes us. In plenty we praise poverty, 'Mid pleasures we hold grief to be (And even death, ere it shall stifle Our breath) a trifle. But when the grudging spinner scants Her thread and fate no surcease grants From grief most deep and need most wearing, Less calm our bearing. Ah, Tully, thou didst flee from Rome With weeping, who didst say his home The wise man found in any station, In any nation. And why dost mourn thy daughter so When thou hast said the only woe That man need dread is base dishonor? - Why sorrow on her? Death, thou hast said, can terrify The godless man alone. Then why So loth, the pay for boldness giving, To leave off living? Thy words, that have persuaded men, Persuade not thee, angelic pen; Disaster findeth thy defenses, Like mine, pretenses. Soft stone is man: he takes the lines That Fortune's cutting tool designs. To press the wounds wherewith she graves us, Racks us or saves us? Time, father of forgetfulness So longed for now in my distress, Since wisdom nor the saints can steel me, Oh, do thou heal me!