C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
The Pilgrimage
By George Herbert (15931633)
I
My expectation.
A long it was and weary way,
The gloomy cave of Desperation
I left on the one, and on the other side
The rock of Pride.
With many a flower;
Fain would I here have made abode,
But I was quickened by my hour.
So to Care’s copse I came, and there got through
With much ado.
Some call the wold;
A wasted place, but sometimes rich.
Here I was robbed of all my gold,—
Save one good angel, which a friend had tied
Close to my side.
Where lay my hope,
Where lay my heart; and climbing still,
When I had gained the brow and top
A lake of brackish waters on the ground
Was all I found.
Of swarming fears,
I fell, and cried, “Alas, my King!
Can both the way and end be tears?”
Yet taking heart, I rose, and then perceived
I was deceived.
Yet heard a cry
Just as I went,—“None goes that way
And lives.” “If that be all,” said I,
“After so foul a journey, death is fair,
And but a chair.”