Thomas Urquhart (Томас Эркарт)
Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 26. The vertuous speech of a diseased man, most patient in his sicknesse
MY flesh still having beene an enemy Unto my spirit, it should glad my heart, That paines, which seize now on my body, may Be profitable to my better part; For though Diseases seeme at first unpleasant, They point us out the way, we ought to goe: Admonish us exactly of our present Estate: and t'us at last this favour shew, That they enlarge us from that ruinous, Close, and darke prison, which confined us.
Thomas Urquhart’s other poems:
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 36. Of Death, and Sin
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 37. The advantages of Povertie
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 40. Of wisedome, in speech, in action in reality, and reputation
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 23. Of foure things, in an epalleled way vanquished each by other
- Epigrams. The First Booke. № 36. How difficult a thing it is, to tread in the pathes of vertue
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