JOHN DONNE

28          THE CALME

  Our storme is past, and that storms tyrannous rage,
  A stupid calme, but nothing it, doth swage.
  The fable is inverted, and farre more
  A blocke afflicts, now, then a storke before.

5            Stormes chafe, and soone weare out themselves, or us;

In calmes, Heaven laughs to see us languish thus.

As steady’as I can wish, that my thoughts were,

Smooth as thy mistresse glasse, or what shines there,

The sea is now. And, as those Iles which wee

10          Seeke, when wee can move, our ships rooted bee.

As water did in stormes, now pitch runs out

As lead, when a fir’d Church becomes one spout.

And all our beauty, and our trimme, decayes,

Like courts removing, or like ended playes.

15          The fighting place now seamens ragges supply;

And all the tackling is a frippery.

No use of lanthornes; and in one place lay

Feathers and dust, to day and yesterday.

Earths hollownesses, which the worlds lungs are,

20          Have no more winde then the upper valt of aire.

We can nor lost friends, nor sought foes recover,

But meteorlike, save that wee move not, hover.

Onely the Calenture together drawes

Deare friends, which meet dead in great fishes jawes:

25          And on the hatches as on Altars lyes

Each one, his owne Priest, and owne Sacrifice.

Who live, that miracle do multiply

Where walkers in hot Ovens, doe not dye.

If in despite of these, wee swimme, that hath

30          No more refreshing, then our brimstone Bath,

But from the sea, into the ship we turne,

Like parboyl’d wretches, on the coales to burne.

Like Bajazet encag’d, the sheepheards scoffe,

Or like slacke sinew’d Sampson, his haire off,

35          Languish our ships. Now, as a Miriade

Of Ants, durst th’Emperours lov’d snake invade,

The crawling Gallies, Sea-goales, finny chips,

Might brave our venices, now bed-ridde ships.

Whether a rotten state, and hope of gaine,

40          Or, to disuse mee from the queasie paine

Of being belov’d, and loving, or the thirst

Of honour, or faire death, out pusht mee first,

I lose my end: for here as well as I

A desperate may live, and a coward die.

45          Stagge, dogge, and all which from, or towards flies,

Is paid with life, or pray, or doing dyes.

Fate grudges us all, and doth subtly lay

A scourge, ’gainst which wee all forget to pray,

He that at sea prayes for more winde, as well

50          Under the poles may begge cold, heat in hell.

What are wee then? How little more alas

Is man now, then before he was? he was

Nothing; for us, wee are for nothing fit;

Chance, or our selves still disproportion it.

55          Wee have no power, no will, no sense; I lye,

I should not then thus feele this miserie.