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Prayer

LO here a little volume, but great Book    A nest of new-born sweets;    Whose native fires disdaining    To ly thus folded, and complaining    Of these ignoble sheets,            Affect more comly bands    (Fair one) from the kind hands    And confidently look    To find the rest  Of a rich binding in your Brest.         It is, in one choise handfull, heavenn; and all  Heavn’s Royall host; incamp’t thus small  To prove that true schooles use to tell,  Ten thousand Angels in one point can dwell.  It is love’s great artillery         Which here contracts itself, and comes to ly  Close couch’t in their white bosom: and from thence  As from a snowy fortresse of defence,  Against their ghostly foes to take their part,  And fortify the hold of their chast heart.         It is an armory of light  Let constant use but keep it bright,    You’l find it yeilds  To holy hands and humble hearts    More swords and sheilds         Then sin hath snares, or Hell hath darts.    Only be sure    The hands be pure  That hold these weapons; and the eyes  Those of turtles, chast and true;          Wakefull and wise;  Here is a freind shall fight for you,  Hold but this book before their heart;  Let prayer alone to play his part,    But ô the heart          That studyes this high Art    Must be a sure house-keeper    And yet no sleeper.    Dear soul, be strong.    Mercy will come e’re long         And bring his bosom fraught with blessings,  Flowers of never fading graces  To make immortall dressings  For worthy soules, whose wise embraces  Store up themselves for Him, who is alone         The Spouse of Virgins and the Virgin’s son.  But if the noble Bridegroom, when he come  Shall find the loytering Heart from home;    Leaving her chast aboad    To gadde abroad         Among the gay mates of the god of flyes;  To take her pleasure and to play  And keep the devill’s holyday;  To dance th’sunshine of some smiling    But beguiling         Spheares of sweet and sugred Lyes,    Some slippery Pair  Of false, perhaps as fair,  Flattering but forswearing eyes;  Doubtlesse some other heart          Will gett the start  Mean while, and stepping in before  Will take possession of that sacred store  Of hidden sweets and holy ioyes.  Words which are not heard with Eares         (Those tumultuous shops of noise)  Effectuall wispers, whose still voice  The soul it selfe more feeles then heares;  Amorous languishments; luminous trances;  Sights which are not seen with eyes;         Spirituall and soul-peircing glances  Whose pure and subtil lightning flyes  Home to the heart, and setts the house on fire  And melts it down in sweet desire    Yet does not stay         To ask the windows leave to passe that way;  Delicious Deaths; soft exalations  Of soul; dear and divine annihilations;    A thousand unknown rites  Of ioyes and rarefy’d delights;         A hundred thousand goods, glories, and graces,    And many a mystick thing    Which the divine embraces  Of the deare spouse of spirits with them will bring    For which it is no shame         That dull mortality must not know a name.    Of all this store  Of blessings and ten thousand more    (If when he come    He find the Heart from home)          Doubtlesse he will unload    Himself some other where,    And poure abroad    His pretious sweets  On the fair soul whom first he meets.         O fair, ô fortunate!

O riche, ô dear!  O happy and thrice happy she    Selected dove    Who ere she be,    Whose early love          With winged vowes  Makes hast to meet her morning spouse  And close with his immortall kisses.  Happy indeed, who never misses  To improve that pretious hour,          And every day    Seize her sweet prey  All fresh and fragrant as he rises  Dropping with a baulmy Showr  A delicious dew of spices;        O let the blissfull heart hold fast  Her heavnly arm-full, she shall tast  At once ten thousand paradises;    She shall have power    To rifle and deflour        The rich and roseall spring of those rare sweets  Which with a swelling bosome there she meets    Boundles and infinite    Bottomles treasures  Of pure inebriating pleasures        Happy proof! she shal discover    What ioy, what blisse,  How many Heav’ns at once it is  To have her God become her Lover.

An Ode which was præfixed to a little Prayer-book given to a young Gentle-woman

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Richard Crashaw

Richard Crashaw (c. 1613 – 21 August 1649) was an English poet, teacher, High Church Anglican cleric and Roman Catholic convert, who was among t…

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