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- III LIFE AND DEATH
III LIFE AND DEATH
The pleasant years that seem, so swift that run:
The merry days to end, so fast that fleet:
The joyful nights, of which day dawns so soon:
The happy hours, which mo [13] do miss, than meet,
Do all consume, as snow against the sun:
And death makes end of all, that life begun.
Since death shall dure, till all the world be waste:
What meaneth man to dread death then so sore?
As man might make [14] , that life should alway last,
Without regard [15] , the LORD hath led before
The dance of death, which all must run on row:
Though how, or when, the LORD alone doth know.
If man would mind, what burdens life doth bring:
What grievous crimes to GOD he doth commit:
What plagues, what pangs, what perils thereby spring:
With no sure hour in all his days to sit:
He would sure think, as with great cause I do:
The day of death were better of the two.
Death is a port, whereby we pass to joy:
Life is a lake, that drowneth all in pain:
Death is so dear, it ceaseth all annoy:
Life is so lewd [16] , that all it yields is vain.
And as, by life, to bondage man is brought:
E'en so likewise by death was freedom wrought.