| The Lie Sir Walter Raleigh [home]  | 
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| Go, Soul, the body's guest, | Tell age it daily wasteth; | 
| Upon a thankless arrant; | Tell honour how it alters; | 
| Fear not to touch the best; | Tell beauty how she blasteth; | 
| The truth shall be thy warrant: | Tell favour how it falters: 40 | 
| Go, since I needs must die, | And as they shall reply, | 
| And give the world the lie. | Give every one the lie. | 
| Say to the court it glows | Tell wit how much it wrangles | 
| And shines like rotten wood; | In tickle points of niceness; | 
| Say to the church, it shows | Tell wisdom she entangles | 
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		 What's good, and doth no good: 10  | 
		Herself in overwiseness: | 
| If church and court reply, | And when they do reply, | 
| Then give them both the lie. | Straight give them both the lie. | 
| Tell potentates, they live | Tell physic of her boldness; | 
| Acting by others' action, | Tell skill it is prevention; 50 | 
| Not loved unless they give, | Tell charity of coldness; | 
| Not strong but by affection. | Tell law it is contention: | 
| If potentates reply, | And as they do reply, | 
| Give potentates the lie. | So give them still the lie. | 
| Tell men of high condition, | Tell fortune of her blindness; | 
| That manage the estate, 20 | Tell nature of decay; | 
| Their purpose is ambition, | Tell friendship of unkindness; | 
| Their practice only hate: | Tell justice of delay: | 
| And if they once reply, | And if they will reply, | 
| Then give them all the lie. | Then give them all the lie. 60 | 
| Tell them that brave it most, | Tell arts they have no soundness, | 
| They beg for more by spending, | But vary by esteeming; | 
| Who, in their greatest cost, | Tell schools they want profoundness, | 
| Seek nothing but commending: | And stand too much on seeming: | 
| And if they make reply, | If arts and schools reply, | 
| Then give them all the lie 30 | Give arts and schools the lie. | 
| Tell zeal it wants devotion; | Tell faith it's fled the city; | 
| Tell love it is but lust; | Tell how the country erreth; | 
| Tell time it metes but motion; | Tell, manhood shakes off pity | 
| Tell flesh it is but dust: | Tell, virtue least preferreth: 70 | 
| And wish them not reply, | And if they do reply, | 
| For thou must give the lie. | Spare not to give the lie. | 
| So when thou hast, as I | |
| Commanded thee, done blabbing, | |
| Although to give the lie | |
| Deserves no less than stabbing, | |
| Stab at thee he that will, | |
| No stab the soul can kill. | |
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