Page:The Complaint, or Night Thoughts on Life, Death, and Immortality, Edward Young, (1755).djvu/22

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
12
The Complaint.
Night I.
To labouring thought is born. How dim our eye!
The present moment terminates our sight;
Clouds, thick as those on doomsday, drown the next;
We penetrate, we prophesy in vain.
Time is dealt out by particles; and each,
Ere mingled with the streaming sands of life,
By fate's inviolable oath is sworn
Deep silence, 'Where eternity begins.'
By Nature's law, what may be, may be now;
There's to prerogative in human hours
In human hearts what bolder thought can rise,
Than man's presumption on to-morrow's dawn?
Where is to-morrow? in another world.
For numbers this is certain; the reverse
Is sure to none; and yet on this perhaps,
This peradventure, infamous for lyes,
As on a rock of adamant we build
Our mountain hopes; spin out eternal schemes,
As we the fatal sisters could out-spin,
And, big with life's futurities, expire.
Not ev'n Philander had bespoke his shroud.
Nor had he cause; a warning was deny'd:
How many fail as sudden, not as safe;
As sudden, tho' for years admonisht home?
Of human ills the last extreme beware,
Beware, Lorenzo! a now sudden death.
How dreadful that deliberate surprize;
Be wise to-day; 'tis madness to defer;
Next day the fatal precedent will plead;
Thus on, till wisdom is push'd out of life.
Procrastination is the thief of time;
Year after year it steals, till all are fled,
And to the mercies of a moment leaves
The vast concerns of an eternal scene.

If