T Campion read by Classic Poetry Aloud: Giving voice to the poetry of the past.
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What if a Day
by Thomas Campion (1567 – 1620)
What if a day, or a month, or a year
Crown thy delights with a thousand sweet contentings?
Cannot a chance of a night or an hour
Cross thy desires with as many sad tormentings?
Fortune, honor, beauty, youth
Are but blossoms dying;
Wanton pleasure, doting love
Are but shadows flying.
All our joys are but toys,
Idle thoughts deceiving;
None have power of an hour
In their lives’ bereaving.
Earth’s but a point to the world, and a man
Is but a point to the world’s compare´d centure;
Shall then the point of a point be so vain
As to triumph in a sely point’s adventure?
As is hazard that we have,
There is nothing biding;
Days of pleasure are like streams
Through fair meadows gliding.
Weal and woe, time doth go,
Time is never turning;
Secret fates guide our states,
Both in mirth and mourning.
First aired: 25 February 2009
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Reading © Classic Poetry Aloud 2009