Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
False and True KnowledgeVII. Sir John Davies
W
That I with knowledge might enrich my mind,
Since the desire to know first made men fooles,
And did corrupt the roote of all mankind?
Of the first parents all the rules of good,
So that their skill enfusd did passe all arts
That euer were, before or since the flood;
And, as an eagle can behold the sunne,
Could haue approch’t th’ eternall light as neere
As the intellectual angels could haue done;
That they were blind, because they saw not ill,
And breathes into their incorrupted breasts
A curious wish, which did corrupt their will.
Which ill, being nought but a defect of good,
In all God’s works the diuell could not shew,
While man, their lord, in his perfection stood:
Ere they thereof the knowledge could attaine;
Like him that knew not poison’s power to kill,
Vntill, by tasting it, himselfe was slaine.
Where they sought knowledge, they did error find;
Ill they desir’d to know, and ill they did;
And, to giue Passion eyes, made Reason blind:
Those wretched shapes of miserie and woe,
Of nakednesse, of shame, of pouertie,
Which then their owne experience made them know.
Could the faire formes of Good and Truth discerne:
Battes they became, who eagles were before;
And this they got by their desire to learne.
Doe not wee still tast of the fruite forbid,
Whiles, with fond fruitlesse curiositie,
In bookes prophane we seeke for knowledge hid?
For which the thiefe still chain’d in ice doth sit,
And which the poore rude satyre did admire,
And needs would kisse, but burnt his lips with it?
Which when Ioue’s guest imbrac’t, he monsters got?
Or the false pailes, which, oft being fild with paine,
Receiu’d the water, but retain’d it not?
Which the youth sought, and sought his death withall?
Or the boye’s wings, which, when he did approch
The sunne’s hote beames, did melt and let him fall?
Our bodies wasted, and our spirits spent;
When we haue all the learned volumes turnd,
Which yeeld men’s wits both helpe and ornament;
When error chokes the windowes of the minde?
The diuers formes of things how can we learne,
That haue bene euer from our birth-day blind?
Throughout man’s litle world her beames did spread,
Is now become a sparkle, which doth lie
Vnder the ashes, halfe extinct and dead;
This dying sparkle, in this cloudie place,
Can recollect these beames of knowledge cleare,
Which were enfus’d in the first minds by grace?
Wasted a thousand pound of auncient rent,
By painefull earning of one grote a day,
Hope to restore the patrimonie spent.
Seeking man’s pow’rs, haue found his weaknes such:
Skill comes so slow, and life so fast doth flie;
We learne so litle, and forget so much:
Said, he knew nought, but that he nought did know;
And the great mocking maister mockt not then,
When he said, Truth was buried deepe below.
When none of vs his own soule vnderstands?
For which the diuell mockes our curious braine,
When, Know thyselfe, his oracle commands.
When boldly she concludes of that and this,
When of herselfe she can no iudgment geue,
Nor how, nor whence, nor where, nor what she is?
We seeke to know, and how therewith to do:
But that whereby we reason, liue, and be,
Within ourselves, we strangers are thereto.
And the straunge cause of th’ ebbs and flouds of Nile;
But of that clocke within our breasts we beare,
The subtill motions we forget the while.
And pass both tropikes, and behold both poles,
When we come home, are to ourselues vnknowne,
And vnacquainted still with our own soules.
We leech-craft learne, but others cure with it;
We interpret lawes which other men haue made,
But reade not those which in our harts are writ.
Through which it gathers knowledge by degrees;
Whose rayes reflect not, but spread outwardly;
Not seeing itselfe, when other things it sees.
Vpon herself her vnderstanding light;
But she is so corrupt, and so defac’t,
And her owne image doth herselfe affright:
Which for her lust was turn’d into a cow;
When thirstie to a streame she did repaire,
And saw herselfe transform’d, she wist not how,
At last with terror she from thence doth flie,
And loathes the watrie glasse wherein she gaz’d,
And shunnes it still, though she for thirst do die.
And was at first faire, good, and spotlesse pure,
Since with her sinnes her beauties blotted were,
Doth of all sights her owne sight least endure:
Such strange chymeras, and such monsters there,
Such toyes, such antikes, and such vanities,
As she retires and shrinkes for shame and feare.
That hath a sluttish house, haunted with sprites;
So she, impatient her owne faults to see,
Turnes from herselfe, and in strange things delites.
View their estate with discontent and paine;
And seas are troubled, when they doe reuoke
Their flowing waues into themselues againe.
Pleasing and faire, agreeable and sweete,
These things transport, and carrie out the mind,
That with herselfe herselfe can neuer meete.
And threat the feeble Sense with sword and fire,
The minde contracts herselfe, and shrinketh in,
And to herselfe she gladly doth retire;
As bees in stormes vnto their hiues returne;
As bloud in danger gathers to the hart;
As men seek towns, when foes the country burne.
Making vs looke vnto ourselues so neare,
Teach vs to know ourselues beyond all bookes,
Or all the learned schooles that euer were.
And many a golden lesson hath me taught;
Hath made my senses quicke, and reason cleare,
Reformd my will, and rectifide my thought.
So working leas settle and purge the wine;
So lopt and pruned trees doe florish faire;
So doth the fire the drossie gold refine.
Nor rules of art, nor precepts of the wise,
Could in my braine those beames of skill enfuse,
As but the glaunce of this dame’s angrie eyes.
That now beyond myselfe I will not go:
Myselfe am center of my circling thought,
Onely myselfe I studie, learne, and know.
As force without, feauers within can kill:
I know the heauenly nature of my minde,
But ’tis corrupted both in wit and will.
Yet is she blinde and ignorant in all:
I know I am one of Nature’s litle kings,
Yet to the least and vilest things am thrall.
I know my sense is mockt with euery thing;
And, to conclude, I know myselfe a man,
Which is a proud, and yet a wretched thing.