Mount Of Olives I
1.
ET, sacred hill ! on whose fair brow My Saviour sate, shall I allow Language to love,
And idolize some shade, or grove,
Neglecting thee ? such ill-plac'd wit,
Conceit, or call it what you please, Is the brain's fit, And mere disease. 2.
Cotswold and Cooper's both have met With learn褠swains, and echo yet Their pipes and wit ;
But thou sleep'st in a deep neglect,
Untouch'd by any ; and what need The sheep bleat thee a silly lay, That heard'st both reed And sheepward play ? 3.
Yet if poets mind thee well,
They shall find thou art their hill, And fountain too.
Their Lord with thee had most to do ;
He wept once, walk'd whole nights on thee :
And from thence?
His suff'rings ended? Unto glory Was attended. 4.
Being there, this spacious ball Is but His narrow footstool all ; And what we think Unsearchable, now with one wink He doth comprise ; but in this air When He did stay to bear our ill And sin, this hill Was then His Chair.
Henry Vaughan
Other author posts
The Revival
Unfold unfold Take in His light, Who makes thy cares more short than night The joys which with His day-star rise, He deals to all but drowsy eyes; And (what the men of this world miss) Some drops and dews of future bliss...
Retirement
Fresh fields and woods the Earth's fair face, God's foot-stool, and man's dwelling-place I ask not why the first
Son-Days
1 Bright shadows of true Rest some shoots of bliss, Heaven once a week; The next world's gladness prepossest in this; A day to seek; Eternity in time; the steps by which We Climb above all ages;
Rules And Lessons
When first thine eyes unveil, give thy soul leave To do the like: our bodies but The spirit's duty True hearts spread and Unto their God, as flowers do to the sun