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النشر الإلكتروني

Oh, thou compacted

Body of blessings! spirit of souls extracted!
Oh dissipate thy spicy powers,

Cloud of condensed sweets! and break upon us
In balmy showers!

Oh, fill our senses, and take from us

All force of so profane a fallacy,

To think aught sweet but that which smells of thee.
Fair, flow'ry name! in none but thee,
And thy nectareal fragrancy,
Hourly there meets

An universal synod of all sweets;
By whom it is defined thus--
That no perfume

For ever shall presume

To pass for odoriferous,

But such alone whose sacred pedigree

Can prove itself some kin, sweet name! to thee.

Sweet name, in thy each syllable

A thousand blest Arabias dwell;
A thousand hills of frankincense;
Mountains of myrrh, and beds of spices,
And ten thousand paradises,

The soul, that tastes thee, takes from thence.
How many unknown worlds there are

Of comforts, which thou hast in keeping!
How many thousand mercies there

In pity's soft lap lie a sleeping!
Happy he who has the art

To awake them,

And to take them

Home, and lodge them in his heart.

Oh, that it were as it was wont to be,
When thy old friends, on fire, all full of thee,

Fought against frowns with smiles; gave glorious

chase

To persecutions; and against the face.

Of death and fiercest dangers, durst with brave
And sober pace march on to meet a grave.

On their bold breasts about the world they bore thee,

And to the teeth of hell stood up to teach thee;
In centre of their inmost souls they wore thee,
Where racks and torments striv'd in vain to reach
thee.

Little, alas! thought they

Who tore the fair breasts of thy friends,

Their fury but made way

For thee, and serv'd them in thy glorious ends.
What did their weapons, but with wider pores
Enlarge thy flaming-breasted lovers,

More freely to transpire

That impatient fire

The heart that hides thee hardly covers?
What did their weapons, but set wide the doors
For thee? fair purple doors, of love's devising;
The ruby windows which enrich'd the east
Of thy so oft-repeated rising.

Each wound of theirs was thy new morning,

And re-enthron'd thee in thy rosy nest,

With blush of thine own blood thy day adorn

ing:

It was the wit of love o'erflow'd the bounds

Of wrath, and made the way through all these

wounds.

Welcome, dear, all-adored name!

For sure there is no knee
That knows not thee;

Or if there be such sons of shame,
Alas! what will they do,

When stubborn rocks shall bow,

And hills hang down their heav'n-saluting heads
To seek for humble beds

Of dust, where, in the bashful shades of night,
Next to their own low nothing they may lie,

And couch before the dazzling light of thy dread
Majesty.

They that by love's mild dictate now
Will not adore thee,

Shall then, with just confusion, bow
And break before thee.

PSALM XXIII.

HAPPY me! O happy sheep!
Whom my God vouchsafes to keep,
Even my God, even he it is

That points me to these ways of bliss;
On whose pastures cheerful spring,
All the year doth sit and sing,
And, rejoicing, smiles to see
Their green backs wear his livery:
Pleasure sings my soul to rest,
Plenty wears me at her breast;
Whose sweet temper teaches me
Nor wanton, nor in want to be.
At my feet the blubbering mountain
Weeping, melts into a fountain,
Whose soft silver-sweating streams
Make high noon forget his beams.

When my wayward breath is flying,
He calls home my soul from dying,
Strokes and tames my rabid grief,
And does woo me into life.
When my simple weakness strays,
Tangled in forbidden ways,
He, my Shepherd, is my guide;
He's before me, on my side,
And behind me; he beguiles
Craft in all her knotty wiles:
He expounds the giddy wonder
Of my weary steps, and under
Spreads a path clear as the day,
Where no churlish rub says nay
To my joy-conducted feet;
Whilst they gladly go to meet
Grace and peace, to meet new lays
Tun'd to my great Shepherd's praise.
Come now, all ye terrors, sally,
Muster forth into the valley,

Where triumphant darkness hovers

With a sable wing, that covers

Brooding horror. Come, thou death,
Let the damps of thy dull breath
Overshadow even the shade,
And make darkness' self afraid;
There my feet, even there, shall find
Way for a resolved mind.

Still, my Shepherd-still, my God,
Thou art with me; still thy rod
And thy staff, whose influence
Gives direction, gives defence.
At the whisper of thy word
Crown'd abundance spreads my board:

While I feast, my foes do feed
Their rank malice, not their need;
So that with the selfsame bread
They are starv'd, and I am fed.
How my head in ointment swims!
How my cup o'erlooks her brims!
So, even so, still may I move
By the line of thy dear love:
Still may thy sweet mercy spread
A shady arm above my head,
About my paths; so shall I find
The fair centre of my mind

Thy temple, and those lovely walls
Bright ever with a beam that falls

Fresh from the pure glance of thine eye,

Lightning to eternity.

There I'll dwell for ever; there

Will I find a purer air

To feed my life with; there I'll sup

Balm and nectar in my cup;

And thence my ripe soul will I breathe
Warm into the arms of Death.

DEATH'S LECTURE.

THE FUNERAL OF A YOUNG GENTLEMAN.

DEAR relics of a dislodg'd soul, whose lack
Makes many a mourning paper put on black!
O stay awhile ere thou draw in thy head,
And wind thyself up close in thy cold bed.
Stay but a little while, until I call

A summons worthy of thy funeral.

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