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The Poetical Works of Thomas Traherne, 1636?-1674, from the original manuscripts cover

The Poetical Works of Thomas Traherne, 1636?-1674, from the original manuscripts

Chapter 252: [THE TRIUMPH]
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About This Book

A collected edition assembles lyric meditations and prose reflections that celebrate perception and spiritual feeling. The pieces emphasize wonder, childhood-like receptivity, gratitude for creation, and the presence of the divine in ordinary experience. Poems combine devotional praise, moral observation, and contemplative practice, often using natural imagery, musical cadence, and vivid sensory detail. Extended prose meditations and notes deepen the inward focus, exploring joy, humility, the renewal of the self, and the longing for intimate communion with God.

[THE TRIUMPH]

I

A life of Sabbaths here beneath!
Continual Jubilees and Joys!
The days of Heaven, while we breathe
On Earth! where sin all bliss destroys:
This is a triumph of delights
That doth exceed all appetites!
No joy can be compared to this,
It is a life of perfect bliss.

II

Or perfect bliss! How can it be?
To conquer Satan and to reign
In such a vale of misery,
Where vipers, stings and tears remain,
Is to be crowned with victory.
To be content, divine, and free
Even here beneath is great delight,
And next the beatific sight.

III

But inward lusts do oft assail,
Temptations work us much annoy;
We'll therefore weep, and to prevail
Shall be a more celestial joy.
To have no other enemy
But one; and to that one to die:
To fight with that and conquer it,
Is better than in peace to sit.

IV

'Tis better for a little time:
For he that all his lusts doth quell,
Shall find this life to be his prime,
And vanquish sin and conquer hell.
The next shall be his double joy,
And that which here seemed to destroy
Shall in the other life appear
A root of Bliss; a pearl each tear.