ULYSSES AND THE SIREN
By Samuel Daniel
- Siren:
- Come, worth Greek, Ulysses, come,
- Possess these shores with me;
- The winds and seas are troublesome,
- And here we may be free.
- Here may we sit and view their toil
- That travail in the deep,
- And joy the day in mirth the while,
- And spend the night in sleep.
- Ulysses:
- Fair nymph, if fame or honor were
- To be attained with ease
- Then would I come and rest me there,
- And leave such toils as these.
- But here it dwells, and here must I
- With danger seek it forth;
- To spend the time luxuriously
- Becomes not men or worth.
- Siren:
- Ulysses, Oh be not deceived
- With that unreal name;
- This honor is a thing conceived,
- And rests on others' fame.
- Begotten only to molest
- Our peace, and to beguile
- The best thing of our life, our rest,
- And give us up to toil.
- Ulysses:
- Delicious nymph, suppose there were
- No honor nor report,
- Yet manliness would scorn to wear
- The time in idle sport.
- For toil doth give a better touch,
- To make us feel our joy;
- And ease finds tediousness, as much
- as labor yields annoy.
- Siren:
- Then pleasure likewise seems the shore
- Whereto tends all your toil,
- Which you forgo to make it more,
- And perish oft the while.
- Who may disport them diversly,
- Find never tedious day,
- And ease may have variety
- As well as action may.
- Ulysses:
- But natures of the noblest frame
- These toils and dangers please,
- And they take comfort in the same
- As much as you in ease,
- And with the thoughts of actions past
- Are recreated still;
- When pleasure leaves a touch at last
- To show that it was ill.
- Siren:
- That doth opinion only cause
- That's out of custom bred,
- Which makes us many other laws
- Than ever nature did.
- No widows wail for our delights,
- Our sports are without blood;
- The world, we see, by warlike wights
- Receives more hurt than good.
- Ulysses:
- But yet the state of things require
- These motions of unrest,
- And these great spirits of high desire
- Seem born to turn them best,
- To purge the mischiefs that increase
- And all good order mar;
- For oft we see a wicked peace
- To be well changed for war.
- Siren:
- Well, well, Ulysses, then I see
- I shall not have thee here,
- And thereforer I will come to thee,
- And take my fortunes there.
- I must be won that cannot win,
- Yet lost were I not won;
- For beauty hath created been
- T' undo, or be undone.
1605
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