The Hymns of Prudentius eBook

Prudentius
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 144 pages of information about The Hymns of Prudentius.

The Hymns of Prudentius eBook

Prudentius
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 144 pages of information about The Hymns of Prudentius.

PREFACE

Full fifty years my span of life hath run,
Unless I err, and seven revolving years
Have further sped while I the sun enjoy. 
Yet now the end draws nigh, and by God’s will
Old age’s bound is reached:  how have I spent
And with what fruit so wide a tract of days? 
I wept in boyhood ’neath the sounding rod: 
Youth’s toga donned, the rhetorician’s arts
I plied and with deceitful pleadings sinned: 
Anon a wanton life and dalliance gross
(Alas! the recollection stings to shame!)
Fouled and polluted manhood’s opening bloom: 
And then the forum’s strife my restless wits
Enthralled, and the keen lust of victory
Drove me to many a bitterness and fall. 
Twice held I in fair cities of renown
The reins of office, and administered
To good men justice and to guilty doom. 
At length the Emperor’s will beneficent
Exalted me to military power
And to the rank that borders on the throne. 
The years are speeding onward, and gray hairs
Of old have mantled o’er my brows
And Salia’s consulship from memory dies. 
What frost-bound winters since that natal year
Have fled, what vernal suns reclothed
The meads with roses,—­this white crown declares. 
Yet what avail the prizes or the blows
Of fortune, when the body’s spark is quenched
And death annuls whatever state I held? 
This sentence I must hear:  “Whate’er thou art,
Thy mind hath lost the world it loved:  not God’s
The things thou soughtest, Whose thou now shalt be.” 
Yet now, ere hence I pass, my sinning soul
Shall doff its folly and shall praise my Lord
If not by deeds, at least with humble lips. 
Let each day link itself with grateful hymns
And every night re-echo songs of God: 
Yea, be it mine to fight all heresies,
Unfold the meanings of the Catholic faith,
Trample on Gentile rites, thy gods, O Rome,
Dethrone, the Martyrs laud, th’ Apostles sing. 
O while such themes my pen and tongue employ,
May death strike off these fetters of the flesh
And bear me whither my last breath shall rise!

I. HYMNUS ad galli CANTUM

  Ales diei nuntius

lucem propinquam praecinit;
nos excitator mentium
iam Christus ad vitam vocat.

  Auferte, clamat, lectulos 5

aegros, soporos, desides: 
castique recti ac sobrii
vigilate, iam sum proximus.

    Post solis ortum fulgidi
  serum est cubile spernere, 10
  ni parte noctis addita
  tempus labori adieceris.

    Vox ista, qua strepunt aves
  stantes sub ipso culmine
  paulo ante quam lux emicet, 15
  nostri figura est iudicis.

    Tectos tenebris horridis
  stratisque opertos segnibus
  suadet quietem linquere
  iam iamque venturo die. 20

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Hymns of Prudentius from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.