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The Retreat October 31, 2006

Posted by zartman in Notices.
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Remember to get and read The Varieties of Metaphysical Poetry by T. S. Eliot for discussion on Friday evening.

And remember to write a ten page paper – of sorts.

Eric – Herbert, etc.

And think of what we are going to do for the next bashing season.

The Odour October 21, 2006

Posted by zartman in Poetry.
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                   1
These hands are jewels to the eye,
Like wine, or oil, or honey, to the taste:
These feet which here I wear beneath the sky
Are us’d, yet never waste.
My members all do yield a sweet perfume;
They minister delight, yet not consume.

2
Ye living gems, how true!  how near!
How real, useful, pleasant!  O how good!
How valuable!  Yea, how sweet!  how fair!
Being once well understood!
For use ye permanent remain entire,
Sweet scents diffus’d do gratify desire.

3
Can melting sugar sweeten wine?
Can light communicated keep its name?
Can jewels solid be, tho they do shine?
From fire rise a flame?
Ye solid are, and yet do light dispense;
Abide the same, tho yield an influence.

4
Your uses flow while ye abide:
The services which I from you receive
Like sweet infusions through me daily glide
Even while they sense deceive,
Being unobserved:  for only spirits see
What treasures services and uses be.

5
The services which from you flow
Are such diffusive joys as know no measure;
Which show His boundless love who did bestow
These gifts to be my treasure.
Your substance is the tree on which it grows;
Your uses are the oil that from it flows.

6
Thus honey flows from rocks of stone;
Thus oil from wood; thus cider, milk, and wine,
From trees and flesh; thus corn from earth; to one
That’s heavenly and divine.
But he that cannot like an angel see,
In Heaven itself shall dwell in misery.

7
If first I learn not what’s your price
Which are alive, and are to me so near;
How shall I all the joys of Paradise,
Which are so great and dear,
Esteem?  Gifts even at distance are our joys,
But lack of sense the benefit destroys.

8
Live to thyself; thy limbs esteem:
From Heaven they came; with money can’t be bought,
They are such works as God Himself beseem,
May precious well be thought.
Contemplate then the value of this treasure,
By that alone thou feelest all the pleasure.

9
Like amber fair thy fingers grow;
With fragrant honey-sucks thy head is crown’d;
Like stars, thine eyes; thy cheeks like roses show:
All are delights profound.
Talk with thyself; thyself enjoy and see:
At once the mirror and the object be.

10
What’s cinnamon, compar’d to thee?
Thy body is than cedars better far:
Those fruits and flowers which in fields I see,
With thine cannot compare.
Where’er thou movest, there the scent I find
Of fragrant myrrh and aloes left behind.

11
But what is myrrh?  What cinnamon?
What aloes, cassia, spices, honey, wine?
O sacred uses!  You to think upon
Than these I more incline.
To see, taste, smell, observe, is to no end,
If I the use of each don’t apprehend.

Thomas Traherne

Untitled October 17, 2006

Posted by zartman in Poetry.
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1
Ye hidden Nectars, which my God doth drink,
Ye Heavenly Streams, ye Beams Divine,
On which the Angels think,
How Quick, how Strongly do ye shine!
Ye Images of Joy that in me Dwell,
Ye Sweet Mysterious Shades
That do all Substances Excell,
Whose Glory Never fades;
Ye Skies, ye Seas, ye Stars, or things more fair,
Or ever, ever unto me repair.

2
Ye Pleasant Thoughts! O how that Sun Divine
Appears to Day which I did see
So Sweetly then to Shine.
Even in my very Infancy!
Ye rich Ideas which within me live
Ye Living Pictures here
Ye Spirits that do bring and Give
All joys; when ye appear,
Even Heavn it self, and God, and all in You,
Come down on Earth, and pleas my Blessed View.

 

3
I never Glorious Great and Rich am found,
Am never ravished with Joy,
Till ye my Soul Surround,
Till ye my Blessedness display.
No Soul but Stone, No Man but Clay am I,
No flesh, but Dust; till ye
Delight, invade to move my Ey,
And do replenish me.
My Sweet Informers and my Living Treasures
My Great Companion, and my only Pleasures!

 

4
O what Incredible Delights, What fires,
What Appetites, what Joys do ye
Occasion, what Desires,
What Heavenly Praises! While we see
What evry Seraphim above admires!
Your Jubilee and Trade
Ye are so Strangely, and Divinely made,
Shall never, never fade.
Ye ravish all my Soul, Of you I twice
Will speak. For in the Dark y’are Paradice.

 

Thomas Traherne