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Sir Walter Raleigh
The Lie
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- Go, Soul, the body's guest,
- Upon a thankless arrant:
- Fear not to touch the best;
- The truth shall be thy warrant:
- Go, since I needs must die,
- And give the world the lie.
- Say to the court, it glows
- And shines like rotten wood;
- Say to the church it shows
- What's good, and doth no good:
- If church and court reply,
- Then give them both the lie.
- Tell potentates, they live
- Acting by others' action;
- Not loved unless they give,
- Not strong but by affection:
- If potentates reply,
- Give potentates the lie.
- Tell men of high condition
- That manage the estate,
- Their purpose is ambition,
- Their practice only hate:
- And if they once reply,
- Then give them all the lie.
- Tell them that brave it most
- They beg for more by spending,
- Who, in their greatest cost,
- Seek nothing but commending:
- And if they make reply,
- Then give them all the lie.
- Tell zeal it wants devotion,
- Tell love it is but lust;
- Tell time it metes but motion,
- Tell flesh it is but dust:
- And wish them not reply,
- For thou must give the lie.
- Tell age it daily wasteth;
- Tell honour how it alters;
- Tell beauty how she blasteth;
- Tell favour how it falters;
- And as they shall reply,
- Give every one the lie.
- Tell wit how much it wrangles
- In tickle points of niceness;
- Tell wisdom she entangles
- Herself in over-wiseness:
- And when they do reply,
- Straight give them both the lie.
- Tell physic of her boldness;
- Tell skill it is pretension;
- Tell charity of coldness;
- Tell law it is contention;
- And as they all reply,
- So give them still the lie.
- Tell fortune of her blindness;
- Tell nature of decay;
- Tell friendship of unkindness;
- Tell justice of delay;
- And if they will reply,
- Then give them all the lie.
- Tell arts they have no soundness,
- But vary by esteeming;
- Tell schools they want profoundness,
- And stand too much on seeming:
- If arts and schools reply,
- Give arts and schools the lie.
- Tell faith it's fled the city;
- Tell how the country erreth;
- Tell manhood shakes off pity
- And virtue least preferreth:
- And if they do reply,
- Spare not to give the lie.
- So when thou hast, as I
- Commanded thee, done blabbing
- --Although to give the lie
- Deserves no less than stabbing--
- Stab at thee he that will,
- No stab thy soul can kill.
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