'Horace. Book II. Ode X' (poem) written by William Cowper

 Receive, dear friend, the truths I teach,

So shalt thou live beyond the reach

Of adverse fortune’s power;

Not always tempt the distant deep,

Nor always timorously creep

Along the treacherous shore.

 

He that holds fast the golden mean,

And lives contentedly between

The little and the great,

Feels not the wants that pinch the poor,

Nor plagues that haunt the rich man’s door,

Imbittering all his state.

 

The tallest pines feels most of the power

Of wintry blast, the loftiest tower

Comes heaviest to the ground;

The bolts that spare the mountain’s side

His cloud-clapt eminence divide

And spread the ruin round.

 

The well-informed philosopher

Rejoices with a wholesome fear,

And hopes in spite of pain;

If winter bellow from the north,

Soon the sweet spring comes dancing forth,

And nature laughs again.

 

What if thine heaven be overcast,

The dark experience will not last,

Expect a brighter sky;

The God that strings the silver bow

Awakes sometimes the muses too,

And lays his arrows by.

 

If hindrances obstruct thy way,

Thy magnanimity display,

And let thy strength e seen;

But oh! if Fortune fill thy sail

With more than a propitious gale,

Take half thy canvas in!

 

A REFLECTION ON THE FOREGOING ODE

And is this all? Can reason do no more

Than bid me shun the deep and dread the shore?

Sweet moralist! Afloat on life’s rough sea

The Christian has an art unknown to thee;

He holds no parley with unmanly fears,

Where duty bids he confidently steers,

Faces a thousand dangers at her call,

And trusting in his God, surmounts them all.

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