Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, THE INVITATION, by GEORGE HERBERT



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Classic and Contemporary Poetry

THE INVITATION, by                 Poet Analysis     Poet's Biography
First Line: Come ye hither all, whose taste
Last Line: Where is all, there all should be.
Subject(s): Bible; Consolation; Religion; Theology


COME ye hither all, whose taste
Is your waste;
Save your cost, and mend your fare.
God is here prepar'd and drest,
And the feast,
God, in whom all dainties are.

Come ye hither all, whom wine
Doth define,
Naming you not to your good:
Weep what ye have drunk amisse,
And drink this,
Which, before ye drink, is bloud.

Come ye hither all, whom pain
Doth arraigne,
Bringing all your sinnes to sight:
Taste, and fear not; God is here
In this cheer,
And on sinne doth cast the fright.

Come ye hither all, whom joy
Doth destroy,
While ye graze without your bounds:
Here is joy that drowneth quite
Your delight,
As a floud the lower grounds.

Come ye hither all, whose love
Is your dove,
And exalts you to the skie:
Here is love, which, having breath
Ev'n in death,
After death can never die.

Lord, I have invited all,
And I shall
Still invite, still call to thee;
For it seems but just and right
In my sight,
Where is all, there all should be.





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