Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
The SoulVII. Sir John Davies
T
Looke downe into the world, the world to see;
And as they turne or wander in the skies,
Surueigh all things that on this center bee.
Mine eyes, which view all obiects, nigh and farre,
Looke not into this little world of mine,
Nor see my face, wherein they fixed are.
Why want I meanes mine inward selfe to see?
Which sight the knowledge of myselfe might bring,
Which to true wisdome is the first degree.
To view myselfe enfusd an inward light,
Whereby my soule, as by a mirror true,
Of her own forme may take a perfect sight.
Except the sun-beames in the aire doe shine;
So the best sense with her reflecting thought
Seekes not herselfe without some light diuine.
Which setst the eye without, and mind within,
Lighten my spirit with one cleare heauenly ray,
Which now to view itselfe doth first begin.
Which, dimme by nature, art did neuer cleare,
When the great wits, of whom all skill we learne,
Are ignorant both what shee is, and where?
Another, blood defus’d about the hart;
Another saith the elements conspire,
And to her essence each doth giue a part.
Physicians hold that they complexions bee;
Epicures make them swarmes of atomies,
Which do by chaunce into our bodies flee.
As the bright sunne sheds light in euery starre;
And others thinke the name of soule is vaine,
And that we onely well-mixt bodies are.
And thus they varie in iudgment of her seate:
For some her chaire vp to the braine do carrie,
Some thrust it downe into the stomake’s heate.
Some in the liuer, fountaine of the vaines;
Some say she is all in all, and all in part:
Some say she is not containd, but all containes.
While with their doctrines they at hazard play;
Tossing their light opinions to and fro,
To mocke the lewd, as learnd in this as they.
Touching the soule so vaine and fond a thought;
But some among these maisters haue been found,
Which in their schooles the self-same thing haue taught.
Among men’s wits hath this confusion wrought;
As the proud towre, whose points the clouds did hit,
By tongues’ confusion was to ruine brought.
And when to nothing it was fallen agen,
To make it new, the forme of man didst take,
And God with God becam’st a man with men;
So that she is by double title thine,
Thou onely knowest her nature and her powers;
Her subtile forme thou onely canst define.
As greater circles comprehend the lesse:
But she wants power her owne power to extend;
As fettred men cannot their strength expresse.
Which in these later times hast brought to light
Those mysteries, that, since the world begun,
Lay hid in darknesse and eternall night;
Into the pallace and the cottage shine,
And shew’st the soule both to the clarke and lay
By the cleere lampe of thy oracle diuine.
Where my soule sits, doth spread such beames of grace,
As now, methinks, I do distinguish plain
Each subtill line of her immortall face.
Which God himselfe doth in the bodie make,
Which makes the man: for euery man from this
The nature of a man and name doth take.
As an apt meane her powers to exercise,
Which are life, motion, sense, and will, and wit,
Yet she suruiues, although the bodie dies.