Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Harriet Beecher Stowe > Text of Charmer
A poem by Harriet Beecher Stowe |
||
The Charmer |
||
________________________________________________
Title: The Charmer Author: Harriet Beecher Stowe [More Titles by Stowe] "Socrates.--'However, you and Simmias appear to me as if you wished to sift this subject more thoroughly, and to be afraid, like children, lest, on the soul's departure from the body, winds should blow it away.' * * * * * "Upon this Cebes said, 'Endeavor to teach us better, Socrates. * * * Perhaps there is a childish spirit in our breast, that has such a dread. Let us endeavor to persuade him not to be afraid of death, as of hobgoblins.' "'But you must charm him every day,' said Socrates, 'until you have quieted his fears.' "'But whence, O Socrates,' he said, 'can we procure a skilful charmer for such a case, now you are about to leave us.' "'Greece is wide, Cebes,' he replied: 'and in it surely there are skilful men, and there are also many barbarous nations, all of which you should search, seeking such a charmer, sparing neither money nor toil, as there is nothing on which you can more reasonably spend your money.'"--(Last conversation of Socrates with his disciples, as narrated by Plato in the Phaedo.) "We need that Charmer, for our hearts are sore "What is this life? and what to us is death? "And are they all dust? and dust must we become? "O man divine! on thee our souls have hung; "Where is that Charmer whom thou bidst us seek? So spake the youth of Athens, weeping round, They found Him not, those youths of soul divine, But years passed on; and lo! the Charmer came-- Like the Athenian sage rejected, scorned, "Let not your heart be troubled," then he said; And since that hour the awful foe is charmed, [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |