255 Those who have homes, when home they do
repair,
To a last
lodging call their wandering friends:
Their short uneasy sleeps
are broke with care,
To look
how near their own destruction tends.
256 Those who have none, sit round where once
it was,
And with
full eyes each wonted room require;
Haunting the yet warm
ashes of the place,
As murder’d
men walk where they did expire.
257 Some stir up coals, and watch the vestal
fire,
Others in
vain from sight of ruin run;
And, while through burning
labyrinths they retire,
With loathing
eyes repeat what they would shun.
258 The most in fields like herded beasts lie
down,
To dews
obnoxious on the grassy floor;
And while their babes
in sleep their sorrows drown,
Sad parents
watch the remnants of their store.
259 While by the motion of the flames they guess
What streets
are burning now, and what are near;
An infant waking to
the paps would press,
And meets,
instead of milk, a falling tear.
260 No thought can ease them but their sovereign’s
care,
Whose praise
the afflicted as their comfort sing:
Even those whom want
might drive to just despair,
Think life
a blessing under such a king.
261 Meantime he sadly suffers in their grief,
Out-weeps
an hermit, and out-prays a saint:
All the long night he
studies their relief,
How they
may be supplied, and he may want.
262 O God, said he, thou patron of my days,
Guide of
my youth in exile and distress!
Who me, unfriended,
brought’st by wondrous ways,
The kingdom
of my fathers to possess:
263 Be thou my judge, with what unwearied care
I since
have labour’d for my people’s good;
To bind the bruises
of a civil war,
And stop
the issues of their wasting blood.
264 Thou who hast taught me to forgive the ill,
And recompense,
as friends, the good misled;
If mercy be a precept
of thy will,
Return that
mercy on thy servant’s head.
265 Or if my heedless youth has stepp’d
astray,
Too soon
forgetful of thy gracious hand;
On me alone thy just
displeasure lay,
But take
thy judgments from this mourning land.
266 We all have sinn’d, and thou hast
laid us low,
As humble
earth from whence at first we came:
Like flying shades before
the clouds we show,
And shrink
like parchment in consuming flame.
267 O let it be enough what thou hast done;
When spotted
Deaths ran arm’d through every street,
With poison’d
darts which not the good could shun,
The speedy
could out-fly, or valiant meet.
268 The living few, and frequent funerals then,
Proclaim’d
thy wrath on this forsaken place;
And now those few who
are return’d again,
Thy searching
judgments to their dwellings trace.