"Death, judgment, heaven, and hell! Think, Christians, think! You stand on vast eternity's dread brink. Faith and repentance, piety and prayer! Despise this world, the next be all your care. Thus while my tomb the solemn silence breaks, And to the eye this cold dumb marble speaks, Though dead I preach, if ever with ill success, Living I strove the important truths to press, Your precious, your immortal souls to save; Hear me, at least, oh, hear me from my grave."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Epigraph written by Dr. Trapp for his own tombstone, as reported in John Hackett's Select and Remarkable Epitaphs (1757), p. 91
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Joseph_Trapp
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Joseph Trapp
1679 – 1747
Joseph Trapp (1679 – 1747) was an English clergyman, academic, poet and pamphleteer.
26 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Joseph Trapp →
Related Quotes
"The art and triumph of poetry are in nothing more seen and felt than in moving the passions."
"However poetry may have been dishonoured by the follies of some and the vices of others, the abuse or corruption of t…"
"Poetry itself being the music of thoughts and words, as music is the poetry of sounds."
"He who says he values no translation of this or that poem because he understands the original, has indeed no true rel…"
"If some gentlemen are resolved that blank verse shall be prose, they have my free leave to enjoy their saying, provid…"
"His versification here, as everywhere else, is generally flowing and harmonious, and a multitude of beauties of all k…"
"Of mine the world will and ought to be judge, whatever I say or think, and its judgment in these matters is never err…"
"Arms and the man I sing who first from Troy Came to the Italian and Lavinian shores, Exiled by fate; much tossed on l…"
"Her Amazonian files with lunar shields Penthesilea leads, and in the midst Of thousand storms, beneath her naked pap …"
"Adjectis istiusmodi notis nitori paginae detractum fore existimavimus."