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But now at even,

Too grosse for heaven,

Thou fall'st in teares, and weep'st for thy mistake.

II.

Ah! it is so with me; oft have I prest

Heaven with a lazie breath; but fruitles this
Peirc'd not; love only can with quick accesse
Unlock the way,

When all else stray,

The smoke and exhalations of the brest.

III.

Yet if, as thou doest melt, and with thy traine
Of drops make soft the earth, my eyes could weep
O're my hard heart, that's bound up and asleep;
Perhaps at last,

Some such showres past,

My God would give a sunshine after raine.

DISTRACTION.

O KNIT me, that am crumbled dust! the heape
Is all dispers'd and cheape;

Give for a handfull but a thought,
And it is bought.

Hadst thou

Made me a starre, a pearle, or a rainbow,

The beames I then had shot

My light had lessend not;

But now

I find myselfe the lesse, the more I grow.
The world

Is full of voices; man is call'd, and hurl'd
By each; he answers all,

Knows ev'ry note and call;
Hence still

Fresh dotage tempts, or old usurps his will.
Yet hadst thou clipt my wings, when coffin'd in
This quicken'd masse of sinne,

And saved that light which freely thou
Didst then bestow,

I feare

I should have spurn'd, and said thou didst forbeare, Or that thy store was lesse.

But now since thou didst blesse

So much,

I grieve, my God! that thou hast made me such. I grieve?

O, yes! thou know'st I doe; come, and releive,
And tame, and keepe downe with thy light,
Dust that would rise and dimme my sight!
Lest, left alone too long

Amidst the noise and throng,
Oppressed I,

Striving to save the whole, by parcells dye.

THE PURSUITE.

LORD! what a busie, restless thing
Hast thou made man!

Each day and houre he is on wing,
Rests not a span.

Then having lost the sunne and light,
By clouds surpriz❜d,

He keepes a commerce in the night
With aire disguis'd.

Hadst thou given to this active dust
A state untir'd,

The lost sonne had not left the huske,
Nor home desir'd.

That was thy secret, and it is

Thy mercy too;

For when all failes to bring to blisse,

Then this must doe.

Ah, Lord! and what a purchase will that be,
To take us sick, that sound would not take thee!

MOUNT OF OLIVES.

I.

SWEETE, sacred hill! on whose fair brow

My Saviour sate, shall I allow

Language to love

And idolize some shade or grove,

Neglecting thee? Such ill-plac'd wit,
Conceit, or call it what you please,
Is the braine's fit,

And meere disease.

II.

Cotswold and Cooper's both have met
With learned swaines, and eccho yet
Their pipes and wit;

But thou sleep'st in a deepe neglect,
Untouch'd by any; and what need
The sheep bleat thee a silly lay,
That heard'st both reed

And sheepward play?

III.

Yet if poets mind thee well,

They shall find thou art their hill,

And fountaine too.

Their Lord with thee had most to doe.

Ile wept once, waked whole nights on thee:

And from thence (his sufferings ended)

Unto glorie

Was attended.

IV.

Being there, this spacious ball
Is but his narrow footstoole all;
And what we thinke

Unsearchable, now with one winke
He doth comprise. But in this aire
When he did stay to beare our ill
And sinne, this hill

Was then his chaire.

THE INCARNATION AND PASSION.

LORD! when thou didst thyselfe undresse,
Laying by thy robes of glory,

To make us more thou wouldst be lesse,
And becam❜st a wofull story.

To put on clouds instead of light,

And cloath the morning-starre with dust,
Was a translation of such height

As, but in thee, was ne'r exprest.

Brave wormes and earth! that thus could have

A God enclos'd within your cell,

Your Maker pent up in a grave,

Life lockt in death, heav'n in a shell!

Ah, my deare Lord! what couldst thou spye

In this impure, rebellious clay,

That made thee thus resolve to dye
For those that kill thee every day?

O what strange wonders could thee move
To slight thy precious bloud and breath?
Sure it was love, my Lord; for love
Is only stronger far than death!

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