Early Poems: The Prayer of Nature
1
Father of Light! great God of Heaven! Hear'st thou the accents of despair? Can guilt like man's be e'er forgiven? Can vice atone for crimes by prayer?
2
Father of Light, on thee I call! Thou see'st my soul is dark within; Thou, who canst mark the sparrow's fall, Avert from me the death of sin.
3
No shrine I seek, to sects unknown; Oh, point to me the path of truth! Thy dread Omnipotence I own; Spare, yet amend, the faults of youth.
4
Let bigots rear a gloomy fane, Let Superstition hail the pile, Let priests, to spread their sable reign, With tales of mystic rites beguile.
5
Shall man confine his Maker's sway To Gothic domes of mouldering stone? Thy temple is the face of day; Earth, Ocean, Heaven thy boundless throne.
6
Shall man condemn his race to Hell, Unless they bend in pompous form? Tell us that all, for one who fell, Must perish in the mingling storm?
7
Shall each pretend to reach the skies, Yet doom his brother to expire, Whose soul a different hope supplies, Or doctrines less severe inspire?
8
Shall these, by creeds they can't expound, Prepare a fancied bliss or woe? Shall reptiles, groveling on the ground, Their great Creator's purpose know?
9
Shall those, who live for self alone, i Whose years float on in daily crime - Shall they, by Faith, for guilt atone, And live beyond the bounds of Time?
10
Father! no prophet's laws I seek, - 'Thy' laws in Nature's works appear; - I own myself corrupt and weak, Yet will I 'pray', for thou wilt hear!
11
Thou, who canst guide the wandering star, Through trackless realms of aether's space; Who calm'st the elemental war, Whose hand from pole to pole I trace:
12
Thou, who in wisdom plac'd me here, Who, when thou wilt, canst take me hence, Ah! whilst I tread this earthly sphere, Extend to me thy wide defence.
13
To Thee, my God, to thee I call! Whatever weal or woe betide, By thy command I rise or fall, In thy protection I confide.
14.
If, when this dust to dust's restor'd, My soul shall float on airy wing, How shall thy glorious Name ador'd Inspire her feeble voice to sing!
15
But, if this fleeting spirit share With clay the Grave's eternal bed, While Life yet throbs I raise my prayer, Though doom'd no more to quit the dead.
16
To Thee I breathe my humble strain, Grateful for all thy mercies past, And hope, my God, to thee again ii This erring life may fly at last.
December 29, 1806.
Footnote 1: These stanzas were first published in Moore's 'Letters and Journals of Lord Byron', 1830, i. 106.
Footnote i:
Shalt these who live for self alone, Whose years fleet on in daily crime - Shall these by Faith for guilt atone, Exist beyond the bounds of Time?
'MS. Newstead'.
Footnote ii:
My hope, my God, in thee again This erring life will fly at last.
'MS. Newstead'
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- Table of Contents
- Preface to the Poems
- Bibliographical Note to 'Hours of Idleness and Other Early Poems'
- Bibliographical Note to English Bards and Scotch Reviewers
- Early Poems: On Leaving Newstead Abbey
- Early Poems: To E---
- Early Poems: On the Death of a Young Lady, Cousin To the Author, and Very Dear To Him
- Early Poems: To D---
- Early Poems: To Caroline i
- Early Poems: To Caroline 1
- Early Poems: To Emma
- Early Poems: Fragments of School Exercises: From the "Prometheus Vinctus" of Aeschylus
- Early Poems: Lines Written in "Letters of an Italian Nun and an English Gentleman, By J.J. Rousseau, Founded On Facts"
- Early Poems: Answer to the Foregoing, Addressed to Miss ---
- Early Poems: On a Change of Masters At a Great Public School
- Early Poems: Epitaph on a Beloved Friend
- Early Poems: Adrian's Address to His Soul When Dying
- Early Poems: A Fragment
- Early Poems: To Caroline
- Early Poems: To Caroline
- Early Poems: On a Distant View of the Village and School of Harrow On the Hill, 1806
- Early Poems: Thoughts Suggested By a College Examination
- Early Poems: To Mary On Receiving Her Picture
- Early Poems: On the Death of Mr. Fox
- Early Poems: To a Lady Who Presented to the Author a Lock of Hair Braded With His Own, and Appointed a Night in December to Meet Him in the Garden
- Early Poems: To a Beautiful Quaker
- Early Poems: To Lesbia!
- Early Poems: To Woman
- Early Poems: An Occasional Prologue, Delivered By the Author Previous to the Performance of "The Wheel of Fortune" at a Private Theater
- Early Poems: To Eliza
- Early Poems: The Tear
- Early Poems: Reply to Some Verses of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq., On the Cruelty of His Mistress
- Early Poems: Granta. A Medley
- Early Poems: To the Sighing Strephon
- Early Poems: The Cornelian
- Early Poems: To M---
- Early Poems: Lines Addresssed To a Young Lady
- Early Poems: Translation from Catullus "Ad Lesbiam"
- Early Poems: Translation of the Epitaph on Virgil and Tibullus, By Domitius Marsus
- Early Poems: Imitation of Tibullus "Sulpicia Ad Cerinthum"
- Early Poems: Translation From Catullus "Lugete Veneres Cupidinesque (Carm. III)
- Early Poems: Imitated From Catullus - To Ellen
- Early Poems: To M.S.G
- Early Poems: Stanzas To a Lady, With the Poems of Camoens
- Early Poems: To M.S.G. (second poem)
- Early Poems: Translation From Horace
- Early Poems: The First Kiss of Love
- Early Poems: Childish Recollections
- Early Poems: Answer To a Beautiful Poem, Written By Montgomery, Author of "The Wanderer of Switzerland," etc., Entitled "The Common Lot"
- Early Poems: Love's Last Adieu
- Early Poems: Lines Addressed To the Rev. J.T. Becher, On His Advising the Author To Mix More With Society
- Early Poems: Answer To Some Elegant Verses Sent By a Friend To the Author, Complaining That One of His Descriptions Was Rather Too Warmly Drawn
- Early Poems: Elegy On Newstead Abbey
- Early Poems: To George, Earl Delawarr
- Early Poems: Damaetas
- Early Poems: To Marion
- Early Poems: Oscar of Alva
- Early Poems: Translation From Anacreon Ode 1
- Early Poems: Translation From Anacreon Ode 3
- Early Poems: The Episode of Nisus and Euryalus
- Early Poems: Translation From the "Medea" of Euripides L1 627-660
- Early Poems: Lachin Y Gair
- Early Poems: To Romance
- Early Poems: The Death of Calmar and Orla - An Imitation of MacPherson's "Ossian"
- Early Poems: To Edward Noel Long, Esq.
- Early Poems: To a Lady
- Early Poems: When I Roved a Young Highlander
- Early Poems: To the Duke of Dorset
- Early Poems: To the Earl of Clare
- Early Poems: I Would I Were a Careless Child
- Early Poems: Lines Written Beneath an Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow
- Early Poems: Fragment Written Shortly After the Marriage of Miss Chaworth
- Early Poems: Remembrance
- Early Poems: To a Lady Who Presented the Author With the Velvet Band Which Bound Her Tresses
- Early Poems: To a Knot of Ungenerous Critics
- Early Poems: Soliloquy of a Bard in the Country
- Early Poems: L'amitie, Est L'amour Sans Ailes
- Early Poems: The Prayer of Nature
- Early Poems: Translation From Anacreon Ode 5
- Early Poems: Ossian's Address To the Sun in "Carthon"
- Early Poems: Pignus Amoris
- Early Poems: A Woman's Hair
- Early Poems: Stanzas To Jessy
- Early Poems: The Adieu, Written Under the Impression That the Author Would Soon Die
- Early Poems: To ----
- Early Poems: On the Eyes of Miss A--- H---
- Early Poems: To a Vain Lady
- Early Poems: To Anne
- Early Poems: Egotism, a Letter J.T. Becher
- Early Poems: To Anne
- Early Poems: To the Author of a Sonnet Beginning "'Sad Is My Verse,' You Say, 'and Yet No Tear'"
- Early Poems: On Finding a Fan
- Early Poems: Farewell To the Muse
- Early Poems: To an Oak at Newstead
- Early Poems: On Revisiting Harrow
- Early Poems: To My Son
- Early Poems: Queries To Casuists
- Early Poems: Song
- Early Poems: To Harriet
- Early Poems: There Was a Time I Need Not Name
- Early Poems: And Wilt Thou Weep When I Am Low?
- Early Poems: Remind Me Not, Remind Me Not
- Early Poems: To a Youthful Friend
- Early Poems: Lines Inscribed Upon a Cup Formed From a Skull
- Early Poems: Well! Thou Art Happy
- Early Poems: Inscription On the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog
- Early Poems: To a Lady On Being Asked My Reason For Quitting England in the Spring
- Early Poems: Fill the Goblet Again - A Song
- Early Poems: Stanzas to a Lady, On Leaving England
- English Bards and Scotch Reviewers: A Satire
- Hints From Horace
- The Curse of Minerva
- The Waltz
- Sources
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