OFT has my prostrate Soule to Thee Great @3Lord of Love,@1 commended this @3DESIGNE@1 Whose restless importunitie Burns in this Heart of mine And at thy gracious Feet full low It & my Self, again I throw. 2 Thou se'st how many pretious Houres Of my short Time it spends: Thou seest how It reigns in all my Thoughts, & pours Storms of Disquiet through My deerest Meditations, which Fain at thy Heavn & Thee would reach. 3 Most bitter-sweet @3DESIGNE@1 which hants My Bosome with such Tyrannous Delight, That though my Hearts Indeavour pants To flie this tedious Night Of gloomy & uncertain Hope, Still in these doubtfull Mists I grope. 4 Oft have I thought, that I had drawn Neer unto Quiets blessed Shore; but strait By flattering Fancy I was thrown Into some new Deceit: Still-joying to Sail in this Sea Which shipwrackd all my Joies, & Me. 5 And thus deliciously perplext, Close in my Breast I huggd my sweet Distress; Which, though it always knawd & vext With pleasing Restlesness, I durst not turn my Foe away Whoe me so daintily did slay. 6 My Wounds to any tender Ey I durst not shew, nor gain a Freinds releif: I durst not mine own Help supply To cure ev'n mine own Greif: I unwishd mine own Wishes, and With one beat down my other Hand. 7 A thousand times my Thoughts I chode, And then as oft those Chideings did recant: Against my Self I boldly stood, And when I firmly ment This Side should Victor be, the other Soon trampled down his dareing Brother. 8 Did any Riddle e'r present So valiant a Coward, as poor I; Who by the Wings of strange Consent Pursue ev'n what I fly: Whoe hate these anxious Thoughts, yet am So mad to Think none else but them. 9 O mighty LORD of GOODNES, my Most aenigmatik Greif appeals to Thee: Use, Use thine own Authority Both upon it, & Me. No more will I own this DESIGNE Unless it may comply with Thine. 10 Pure Sweets dwell in thy Will alone, But mine, when sweetest, with rank Gall doth flow: O then, may Thine, may Thine be done, Though mine it overthrow! The onely way I have to quiet My troubled Will, is, to Deny it. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MARY DONNELLY by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM WINTER WITH THE GULF STREAM by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS INVOCATION TO SLEEP by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH VENETIAN BLIND by HELEN DARBY BERNING SONG OF SOLOMON: AWAKE by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE A GOTHAMITE IN CAMELOT by BERTON BRALEY BRITANNIA'S PASTORALS: BOOK 2. THE THIRD SONG by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) |