WERT Thou not what Thou art, O Lord of most unbounded LOVE; This my rebellious Heart Durst never prove So bold as to implore Thy Pardon any more, Bycause my Boldnes hath so rampant been Against thy mighty Mercy to my Sinn. 2 For have not I again Resum'd that odious Vomit, which Of late I did disdain? Has not the Itch Of fond Imaginations, And fruitless Contemplations Spred its unquiet Taint's unhappy powers Over my calm & consecrated houres? 3 Has not my foolish Minde Foulie misplac'd its Sorrow, and Been troubled more to finde Thine angry Hand Pouring out Vengeance; then To see my Flood of Sinn, Whose roaring Waves awak'd thy Wrath, which now In woefull Streams of Blood about doth flow. 4 Has not my lavish Breast Embrac'd my pretious Friend too close: The thoughts of whome possest Me so, that those Which I design'd to be Attending upon Thee Were often justled out, whilst thus my faint Devotions, from my God fell to my Saint. 5 O mighty Soverain Of Pittie, Loe my prostrate Heart Lies trembling once again Under thy Dart: Strike, strike, & pierce it by LOVES healing cruelty; That by that blessed Wound my Soule may be Sett ope, & bleed out every thing but Thee. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE JOYS OF THE ROAD by BLISS CARMAN AD LESBIAM by GAIUS VALERIUS CATULLUS W'EN I GITS HOME by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR WORLD'S WORTH by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI ANTIMENIDAS by ALCAEUS OF MYTILENE A CHARACTER OF HIS FRIEND, W.B. ESQ by PHILIP AYRES WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM AT CLIFTON by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES HINC LACHRIMAE; OR THE AUTHOR TO AURORA: 30 by WILLIAM BOSWORTH |