¥3
THE ENGLISH WORKS OF
GEORGE HERBERT
IN THREE VOLUMES
VOLUME in
Jt'-
THE ENGLISH WORKS OF
NEWLY ARRANGED AND ANNOTATED AND
CONSIDERED IN RELATION TO HIS LIFE
BY GEORGE HERBERT PALMER
VOLUME III
BEMERTON POEMS
BOSTON AND NEW YORK /b
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
MDCCCCV
COPYRIGHT 1905 BY GEORGE HERBERT PALMER
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Published October fo
TABLE OF CONTENTS
VOLUME III
GROUP PAGE
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 1
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 65
EX. RESTLESSNESS 169
X. SUFFERING 241
XI. DEATH 309
XH. ADDITIONAL AND DOUBTFUL POEMS 345
VARIATIONS OF THE MANUSCRIPTS 433
INDEX TO POEMS 439
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
VOLUME III
WILTON HOUSE FRONTISPIECE
HERBERT'S SUBSCRIPTION AT INSTITUTION PAGE 6
HERBERT'S SUBSCRIPTION AT ORDINATION 64
RECTORY AT BEMERTON 74
GARDEN AND RIVER AT BEMERTON 168
EXTERIOR OF BEMERTON CHURCH 240
INTERIOR OF BEMERTON CHURCH 308
FUGGLESTON CHURCH 844
SALISBURY CATHEDRAL 432
VII
THE HAPPY PRIEST
PREFACE
WITH this Group begins the last and briefest
period of Herbert's life, a period remark
able for its productivity. It extends from his com
ing to Bemerton in 1630 to his death in 1633. In it
THE COUNTBY PARSON was written and most of
the eighty-six poems which here follow. No poem
printed in Groups VII-XI is found in the Williams
Manuscript, which I have elsewhere shown to have
been probably drawn up about 1628. Some of
these poems may proceed from the last years of
the Crisis, but as they contain no reference to the
struggle there described, I have not included them
in that Group. Some, especially among those
printed under the heading Bemerton Study, were
probably written at least in part during the Cam
bridge years, and then, either by accident or de
sign, were not copied into the manuscript lent to
Ferrar in 1627-9. But substantially the poems of
these five Groups are Bemerton poems. Their
omission from the Williams Manuscript is prima
facie evidence of date. Nearly all of them, outside
Group VIII, contain allusions to the priestly
character of the writer. Emotional depth and^
individual experience will be found in them to
a degree unknown in the Cambridge period, and
4 PREFACE TO
they very generally look back to a past different ^
from that in which their author is now living.
The beginning of the Bemerton life brought to
Herbert a joyful sense of attainment. The hopes .
of many years seemed now about to be realized.
The great deed was done. He was no longer cum
bered with political, social, or scholarly ties. He
and God were to be alone, and his one interest
henceforth was to be the priestly office. He set
himself with characteristic energy to search out all
the subtle significance which his present tasks
might contain. His life should be as intellectually
ordered, as coherent, as beautiful, as compact with
rich suggestion, as his verse had been before. He
codified his work ; he studied from day to day
what were the best ways of performing each petty
portion of his stately office.
Walton gives a long account of Herbert's elabo
rate rationalization of the English ritual. This ac
count is on its face open to doubt. How much of
it proceeds from Herbert's mind, and how much
from Walton's, is not clear. Walton had no ac
quaintance with Herbert, and this argumentative
piece of history was written long after Herbert's
death. Walton's Life, like that by Oley, was ob
viously intended to serve the useful purpose of an
Anti-Puritan tract. But after all deductions, the
argumentation seems well in keeping with Her
bert's general temper. It is ever his way to make
the most of what he finds at hand. He asks few
THE HAPPY PRIEST 5
ultimate questions, but turns all that tradition
hands down to him into something rich and mean- '
ingful. Throughout this account he justifies the
services of his Church because of their reasonable
ness, and not because they are authoritatively pre
scribed; and this is his method in his poems and
THE COUNTRY PARSON. There, as here, he grounds
the practices of the collective Church on the needs
of the individual soul. On the whole, then, I be
lieve Walton's pages on ritual may be accepted as
a fair account of Herbert's disposition during the
Bemerton years. He tried to bring into action and
fill with ingenious, independent, and reverent in
telligence all the resources of his little world. By
this poetic development of ritual he sought to do
for his people what he was at the same time doing
for himself in THE COUNTRY PARSON. He " made
it appear to them that the whole Service of the
Church was a reasonable, and therefore an accept
able, Sacrifice to God." Always to his mind the
way to render life glorious was to stuff every por
tion of it with thought, and delightedly to detect
compacted reason where the dull mind contents
itself with seeing only plain fact.
The present Group of poems is the expression of
exuberant joy in at last reaching a long hoped for
good. Few other Groups have so lyric a quality.
After some study of the conditions of the priest
hood, he sees that these are all summed up in the
priest's abandonment of everything that can be
6 PREFACE
called his own, and in his full absorption into the
i ife of his Master. Such union, the realization of
thoughts of love which had possessed him for
nany years, throws him into an intellectual ecstasy,
and song after song is poured out expressing his
delight. The ordinances of the Church, especially
those connected with the Holy Supper, get a new
meaning. The closing day is sacramental, and all
the world resounds with God's praise.
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THE HAPPY PRIEST
THE CALL
DATE:
Not found in W. The first happiness either of tak
ing orders or of settling at Bemerton.
METRE:
Used also in THE ROSE, II, 389.
SUBJECT:
Having Thee, I have all.
Stanza i, What life will then be.
Stanza ii, What He will then be.
Stanza iii, What I shall then be.
NOTES :
1. John xiv, 6.
2. A way or road usually deprives us of breath.
4. Ed. 1633 reads And such a, throwing the line out
of rhythm and out of conformity to the plan of
the poem. I substitute the reading of B. and of
the later editions.
6. Thou art not only the feast, but the way to it:
COUNTRY PARSON, XXII. The same rhyme occurs
again in FAITH, II, 233, 1. 6 and 8.
7. A feast , unlike common feasts, more enjoyable the
longer it continues.
8. A strength which makes him who approaches
strong.
10. As none can demand. Cf. PRAISE, II, 397, 1. 4;
THE METHOD, III, 197, 1. 6.
11. Romans viii, 35.
VH. THE HAPPY PRIEST
THE CALL
COME, my Way, my Truth, my Life:
Such a Way as gives us breath,
Such a Truth as ends all strife,
Such a Life as killeth death.
Come, my Light, my Feast, my Strength: 5
Such a Light as shows a feast,
Such a Feast as mends in length,
Such a Strength as makes his guest.
Come, my Joy, my Love, my Heart:
Such a Joy as none can move, 10
Such a Love as none can part,
Such a Heart as joyes in love.
10 AARON
INTRODUCTORY:
"When at his Induction he was shut into Bemerton
Church, being left there alone to Toll the Bell (as
the Law requires him) he staid so much longer than
an ordinary time that his Friend Mr. Woodnot
looked in at the Church-window and saw him lie
prostrate on the ground before the Alter; at which
time and place (as he after told Mr. Woodnot) he
set some Rules to himself for the future manage of
his life; and then and there made a vow to labour
to keep them:" Walton's Life. — AARON well illus
trates the exquisite art of Herbert in allowing
thought to dictate form. The standard of the priest-*
hood being one, is fixed in five rhyming words : in
his own head and heart the priest must be sound;
from him music must go forth; it is his work to
find rest for the sinful; his dress or exterior must
express an inner purity. In successive stanzas, all
having the same fixed rhyme, this scheme tests the
divergent natures found in man. Swinburne, in his
poem Eight Years Old, similarly employs a fixed
set of rhymes for all the stanzas.
DATE:
Not found in W. Probably written after ordination
at Bemerton.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The true priest.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 11
AARON
HOLINESSE on the head,
Light and perfections on the breast,
Harmonious bells below, raising the dead
To leade them unto life and rest;
Thus are true Aarons drest. 5
Profanenesse in my head,
Defects and darknesse in my breast,
A noise of passions ringing me for dead
Unto a place where is no rest;
Poore priest thus am I drest. 10
AARON
NOTES:
1. Exodus xxviii, 36.
2. Light and perfections =Urim and Thummim, Exo
dus xxviii, 30.
3. In Exodus xxviii, 33-35, the robe of the High Priest
is described. On its lower hem it had rows of bells
and pomegranates. Herbert refers to Aaron's bell
again in DECAY, III, 115, 1. 10.
8. Noise is again contrasted with music in THE FAMI-
LIE, III, 185, 1. 1.
13. Live= alive.
19. Old man. Colossians iii, 9. Vaughan in his Repent
ance rewrites thus:
"Profaneness on my tongue doth rest,
Defects and darkness in my breast:
Pollutions all my body wed,
And even my soul to Thee is dead;
Only in Him on Whom I feast
Both soul and body are well drest."
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 13
Onely another head
I have, another heart and breast,
Another musick, making live not dead,
Without whom I could have no rest;
In him I am well drest. 15
Christ is my onely head,
My alone onely heart and breast,
My onely musick, striking me ev'n dead,
That to the old man I may rest,
And be in him new drest. 20
So holy in my head,
Perfect and light in my deare breast,
My doctrine tun'd by Christ, (who is not dead,
But lives in me while I do rest,)
Come people! Aaron's drest. 25
14 THE WINDOWS
DATE:
Not found in W. Salisbury Cathedral is noted for
the number of its windows, which are said to be as
many as the days of the year.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The preacher's heavenly doctrine must shine
through his own life before it can affect those who
would see God.
NOTES :
2. Brittle. So THE PRIESTHOOD, II, 373, 1. 11.
3. Though Herbert often regards man as God's Tem
ple (MAN, II, 215, 1. 1-6; THE CHURCH-FLOORE,
III, 167; SIGN, III, 265), the word occurs in his
poems only here, in THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 63,
1. 423, SIGN, III, 265, 1. 2, THE CHURCH MILITANT,
III, 375, 1. 225, and in the doubtful poem THE
CONVERT, III, 397, 1. 18. It occurs again in his
letter to his mother (1622), I, 405: God intends the
soul to be as a sacred temple for Himself to dwell
in. And in THE COUNTRY PARSON, XXI, the
parson is to build up this knowledge to a spirituall
Temple.
6. Anneal. Glass which has been painted is after
wards fired or annealed in order to fix the color. So
LOVE-JOY, HI, 163, 1. 3.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 15
THE WINDOWS
LORD, how can man preach thy eteraall word ?
He is a brittle crazie glasse,
Yet in thy temple thou dost him afford
This glorious and transcendent place
To be a window, through thy grace. 5
But when thou dost anneal in glasse thy stone,
Making thy life to shine within
The holy Preachers, then the light and glorie
More rev'rend grows, and more doth
win;
Which else shows watrish, bleak, and
thin. 10
Doctrine and life, colours and light, in one
When they combine and mingle, bring
A strong regard and aw; but speech alone
Doth vanish like a flaring thing,
And in the eare, not conscience ring. 15
16 THE HOLDFAST
INTRODUCTORY:
The true ground of confidence.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Of seventeen sonnets, six — like this — are in the
Shakespearian form.
SUBJECT:
"It is God which worketh in you both to will and
to do of his good pleasure:" Philippians ii, 13.
NOTES :
1. Strict decree, Matthew v, 48.
6. Was, instead of is, indicating quotation.
13. 1 Corinthians xv, 22.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 17
THE HOLDFAST
I THBEATNED to observe the strict decree
Of my deare God with all my power and
might.
But I was told by one it could not be,
Yet I might trust in God to be my light.
Then will I trust, said I, in him alone. 5
Nay, ev'n to trust in him was also his;
We must conf esse that nothing is our own.
Then I confesse that he my succour is.
But to have nought is ours, not to confesse
That we have nought. I stood amaz'd at
this, 10
Much troubled, till I heard a friend expresse
That all things were more ours by being his.
What Adam had, and forfeited for all,
Christ keepeth now, who cannot fail or fall.
18 THE 23 PSALME
INTRODUCTORY :
For five other Psalms which are supposed to have
been translated by Herbert, see III, 407-419.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used again in SUBMISSION, III, 205.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 19
THE 23 PSALME
* C* OMJL
THE God of love my shepherd is,
And he that doth me feed.
While he is mine and I am his,
What can I want or need ?
He leads me to the tender grasse, 5
Where I both feed and rest,
Then to the streams that gently passe;
In both I have the best.
Or if I stray, he doth convert
And bring my minde in frame. 10
And all this not for my desert,
But for his holy name.
20 THE 23 PSALME
15. Thy rod is with me.
21-24. In this stanza one sees how sweetly and simply
Herbert could write when he designed to do so.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST
Yea, in death's shadie black abode
Well may I walk, not fear;
For thou art with me, and thy rod 15
To guide, thy staffe to bear.
Nay, thou dost make me sit and dine
Ev'n in my enemies' sight.
My head with oyl, my cup with wine
Runnes over day and night. 20
Surely thy sweet and wondrous love
Shall measure all my dayes;
And as it never shall remove,
So neither shall my praise.
22 THE ODOUR
INTRODUCTORY :
"The same night that he had his Induction he said
to Mr. Woodnot : I have this day taken JesiLS to be
my Master and Governour ; and I am so proud of his
service that I will always observe and obey and do
his Witty and alwaies catt him Jesus my Master: "
Walton's Life. — "To testifie his independencie
upon all others, and to quicken his diligence in this
kinde, he used in his ordinarie speech, when he
made mention of the blessed name of our Lord and
Saviour, Jesus Christ, to adde, My Master: " Fer-
rar, Preface to THE TEMPLE. Cf. also John xiii, 13.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used only here. The first and last line of each
stanza rhyme on the same word, thus assisting the
suggestion of a pervasive perfume.
SUBJECT :
Love should yield a reciprocal fragrance, both to
lover and to loved.
NOTES :
3. Gray amber, a secretion of the spermaceti whale, is
found floating in lumps upon the sea, and is much
prized in perfumery. Milton refers to it in his "Am
ber scent of odorous perfume : " Samson Agonistes,
1. 720. See, too, Sir T. Browne, Vulgar Errors, Bk.
Ill, ch. xxvi.
6. So THE BANQUET, III, 55, 1. 24.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 23
THE ODOUR
(2 CORINTHIANS II, 15)
How sweetly doth My Master sound! My Mas
ter !
As Amber-greese leaves a rich sent
Unto the taster,
So do these words a sweet content,
An orientall fragrancie, My Master. 5
With these all day I do perfume my minde,
My minde ev'n thrust into them both,
That I might finde
What cordials make this curious broth,
This broth of smells, that feeds and fats my minde.
My Master, shall I speak? O that to thee 11
My servant were a little so,
As flesh may be,
That these two words might creep and
grow
To some degree of spicinesse to thee! 15
THE ODOUR
16. Pomander (more fully described in THE BANQUET,
III, 55, 1. 25= a scent-ball, which when warmed in
the hand or crushed (1. 20) yields odor. Shake
speare mentions it among a lady's trinkets; Win
ter's Tale, iv, 3: "A ribbon, glass, pomander,
brooch." And Bacon, Nat. Hist. Cent. 9, among
medical appliances: "They have in physick use
of pomanders and knots of powders for drying of
rheums, comforting of the heat, provoking of sleep,
&c." In short, it served the double purpose of the
modern smelling-bottle.
17. That fragrance which formerly attended my ad
dresses to thee would now be reflected back from
thee, and thus gain a double potency.
22. An uneven line is rare in Herbert.
25. Breathing— emission.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 25
Then should the Pomander, which was before
A speaking sweet, mend by reflection
And tell me more;
For pardon of my imperfection 19
Would warm and work it sweeter then before.
For when My Master, which alone is sweet
And ev'n in my unworthinesse pleasing,
Shall call and meet
My servant, as thee not displeasing,
That call is but the breathing of the sweet. 25
This breathing would with gains by sweetning me
(As sweet things traffick when they meet)
Return to thee;
And so this new commerce and sweet
Should all my life employ and busie me. 30
26 A TRUE HYMNE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
UNIQUE.
SUBJECT:
A poem is the utterance of feeling; perfect, accord
ing to the completeness with which that feeling is
expressed.
NOTES:
2. Catches, proverbs, brief phrases saturated with
meaning, frequently run in Herbert's mind. So,
My Master, in THE ODOUR, III, 23; Less then
the least of all thy mercies, in THE POSIE, III, 29;
Thou shalt answer, Lord, for me, in THE QUIP,
III, 33; My God and King, in ANTIPHON, III, 63;
Thou art still my God, in THE FORERUNNERS, III,
317.
10. Campion in the Preface to his Divine and Moral
Songs (1613) prettily writes : " In these English airs
I have chiefly aimed to couple my words and notes
lovingly together; which will be much for him to
do that hath not power over both."
14. Behinde=\addng. So L'ENVOY, III, 381, 1. 16.
15. In kinde= according to the true nature of a hymn.
Cf. LOVE, II, 85, 1. 25, and NATURE, II, 303, 1. 10.
20. Similar cases where feeling may be conceived as
interfering with rhyme are the last lines of JORDAN,
II, 89; THE SACRIFICE, II, 143, 1. 215; DENIALL,
II, 299; GRIEF, III, 323.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 27
A TRUE HYMNE
MY joy, my life, my crown!
My heart was meaning all the day
Somewhat it fain would say;
And still it runneth mutt'ring up and down
With onely this, My joy, my life, my crown. 5
Yet slight not these few words.
If truly said, they may take part
Among the best in art.
The finenesse which a hymne or psalme affords
Is when the soul unto the lines accords. 10
He who craves all the minde,
And all the soul, and strength, and time,
If the words onely ryme,
Justly complains that somewhat is behinde
To make his verse, or write a hymne in kinde.
Whereas if th* heart be moved, 16
Although the verse be somewhat scant,
God doth supplie the want.
As when th' heart sayes (sighing to be approved)
O, could I love ! and stops: God writeth, Loved.
28 THE POSIE
INTRODUCTORY:
Posie here means not a bunch of flowers, as in LIFE,
III, 321, 1. 1, but a motto, as in MISERIE, II, 257,
1. 69. In this sense posie is a shortened form of
poesie, and is sometimes spelled so by old writers. It
is regularly used of inscriptions on glass, and love-
verses engraved in rings. I append a few of the
latter which I have met in old authors: I seek to
be not thine but thee; There is a time; Caught
and content; Let us be one till we are none; I
would be glad if you I had; Not too fast, but to
last; To live in love I love to live; Once mine,
always thine; There is no other, and lam he,
That loves no other, and thou art she; My joy I do
enjoy; Thy death is mine, my life is thine. —
Shakespeare uses posie in the same sense as Her
bert. In The Merchant of Venice, v. 1, Gratiano
says he had a ring from his mistress,
"Whose posy was
For all the world like cutler's poetry
Upon a knife, Love me and leave me not."
A notable revival of posie in its ancient sense is that
of Browning in his Introduction to The Ring and
the Book. After stating the facts which give form
to the Ring, he writes: "A ring without a posy, and
that ring mine ? " and so appends the love-verses of
the Invocation.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 29
THE POSIE
LET wits contest,
And with their words and posies windows fill.
Lesse then the least
Of all thy mercies, is my posie still.
30 THE POSIE
Just before his death, when Herbert sent his poems
to Ferrar, he said : / and this book (THE TEMPLE)
are less than the least of God's mercies : Walton's
Life. — " We conclude all with his own Motto,
with which he used to conclude all things that
might seem to tend any way to his honour: Lesse
then the least of God's mercies: " Ferrar's Preface
to THE TEMPLE.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The lover's delight in his own unworthiness.
NOTES :
3. Cf. Genesis xxxii, 10, with Ephesians iii, 8.
9, 10. Cf. the two JORDANS, II, 87 and 91.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 31
This on my ring, 5
This by my picture, in my book I write.
Whether I sing,
Or say, or dictate, this is my delight.
Invention rest,
Comparisons go play, wit use thy will. 10
Lesse then the least
0} all God's mercies, is my posie still.
32 THE QUIP
INTRODUCTORY:
Quip— quid pro quo, a repartee, retort, or home-
thrust (1. 24), as in Shakespeare's "Quip modest,"
As You Like It, v, 4. So, too, Lyly, Campaspe,
III, 2.
"Ps. Why, what's a quip?
"Ma. Wee great girders call it a short saying of a sharpe
wit, with a bitter sense in a sweet word."
Vaughan imitates this poem in The Ornament.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used also in THE QUIDDITIE, II, 97.
SUBJECT:
The same that Herbert has often treated in earlier
periods of his career, — in THE QUIDDITIE, II, 97;
THE WORLD, II, 225; THE PEARL, II, 381. He
recounts the appeals that Beauty, Pleasure, Ambi
tion, Wit, have made, calling him from that service
of God which he still feels to be a sufficient offset
to them. "In this time of his decay he would often
speak to this purpose: I now look back upon the
pleasures of my life past, and see the content I have
taken in beauty, in wit, in musick, and pleasant
Conversation, are now all past by me like a dream,
or as a shadow that returns not, and are now all
become dead to me, or I to them : " Walton's Life.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 33
THE QUIP
THE merrie world did on a day
With his train-bands and mates agree
To meet together where I lay,
And all in sport to geere at me.
First, Beautie crept into a rose; 5
Which when I pluckt not, Sir, said she,
Tell me, I pray, whose hands are those ?
But thou shalt answer, Lord, for me.
34 THE QUIP
NOTES :
2. Train-bands= militia, soldiery ; here, organized
society.
7. Why do you not clutch at beauty ? So, too, in THE
COLLAR, III, 213, 1. 18.
8. The Prayer-Book version of Psalm xxxviii, 15,
reads: "In thee, O Lord, have I put my trust;
thou shalt answer for me, O Lord, my God."
9. To Herbert money is not a serious temptation. His
most important poem on it is AVARICE, III, 113.
He has also a few general precepts about it in THE
CHURCH-PORCH, II, 33, 35, 1. 151-180, and occa
sional mention elsewhere.
15. I do not understand this to mean: He granted me
only a glimpse; but, He declared that a person of
my dull life could only half perceive what glory is.
23. Some late editions print Thine, with a capital, as
if referring to God, and I to man. As printed in
ed. 1633, the overwhelming reply to every tempta
tion promising gain is God's voice, saying: "I am
thine. What gain is comparable?"
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 35
Then Money came, and chinking still,
What tune is this, poore man ? said he, 10
I heard in Musick you had skill.
But thou shalt answer, Lord, for me.
Then came brave Glorie puffing by
In silks that whistled, who but he ?
He scarce allow'd me half an eie. 15
But thou shalt answer, Lord, for me.
Then came quick Wit and Conversation,
And he would needs a comfort be,
And, to be short, make an oration.
But thou shalt answer, Lord, for me. 20
Yet when the houre of thy designe
To answer these fine things shall come,
Speak not at large, say, I am thine;
And then they have their answer home.
36 CLASPING OF HANDS
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique. Throughout the poem only two rhymes
are used, — mine, thine, and more, restore.
SUBJECT:
"Either was the other's mine." Shakespeare's The
Phoenix and the Turtle, 1. 36. The subject requires
that this poem shall have but two stanzas, — re
porting Me and Thee, — that these two shall be
fully identical in sense and sound, and only distin
guishable through being approached from opposite
points of view. This thought of "making two one"
(THE SEARCH, III, 223, 1. 60) is also found in
JUDGEMENT, II, 271, 1. 15; ARTILLERIE, II, 363,
1. 30; THE HOLDFAST, III, 17, 1. 12.
NOTES :
1. Song of Solomon ii, 16.
6. Advantage^ addition, like with gains, of THE
ODOUR, III, 25, 1. 26. Cf. Shakespeare, King
John, iii, 3:
"There is a soul counts thee her creditor,
And with advantage means to pay thy love."
This line forms the turn in each stanza; cf. 1. 16.
7. Being mine—o, verbal noun, with this as its adjec
tive.
13. 7Vim=than.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 37
CLASPING OF HANDS
LORD, thou art mine, and I am thine,
If mine I am; and thine much more
Then I or ought or can be mine.
Yet to be thine doth me restore;
So that again I now am mine, 5
And with advantage mine the more.
Since this being mine brings with it thine,
And thou with me dost thee restore.
If I without thee would be mine,
I neither should be mine nor thine. 10
Lord, I am thine, and thou art mine;
So mine thou art that something more
I may presume thee mine then thine.
For thou didst suffer to restore
Not thee, but me, and to be mine, 15
And with advantage mine the more.
Since thou in death wast none of thine,
Yet then as mine didst me restore.
O be mine still ! Still make me thine !
Or rather make no Thine and Mine!
38 PARADISE
INTRODUCTORY:
Herbert generally uses Paradise in this sense, re
ferring to a garden, and primarily to the Garden of
Eden. The only passages, I believe, in which the
word is used in the sense of Heaven, are : SUNDAY,
II, 179, 1. 56, THE FLOWER, III, 307, 1. 23 and 49,
and PERSEVERANCE, III, 395, 1. 10.— THE COUN
TRY PARSON (XXXII) is to dresse and prune them,
and take as much joy in a straight-growing childe
or servant as a Gardiner doth in a choice tree.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used also in TRINITIE-SUNDAY, II, 161.
SUBJECT:
The careful pruning of the divine husbandman
symbolized by the elimination of letters from a
rhyme, — possibly suggested to Herbert by the trim
ming of trees in the artificial gardens of his time.
NOTES:
2. Thy trees. He writes as if he were already a priest.
He alludes to the ordering of gardens again in SUN
DAY, II, 177, 1. 27, and THE FAMILIE, III, 185, 1. 12.
10. Spare probably means refrain from, as in GIDDI-
NESSE, III, 129, 1. 12, and elsewhere. The rhyme
with are occurs in THE BRITISH CHURCH, III, 101,
1. 10.
15. Touch= attain. So Donne, Forbidding Mourning,
1. 36: "And makes me end where I begun."
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 39
PARADISE
I BLESSE thee, Lord, because I GROW
Among thy trees, which in a R o w
To thee both fruit and order ow.
What open force or hidden CHARM
Can blast my fruit, or bring me HARM, 5
While the inclosure is thine ARM?
Inclose me still for fear I START.
Be to me rather sharp and TART
Then let me want thy hand and ART. 9
When thou dost greater judgements SPARE,
And with thy knife but prune and PARE,
Ev'n fruitfull trees more fruitfull ARE.
Such sharpnes shows the sweetest FREND,
Such cuttings rather heal then REND,
And such beginnings touch their END. 15
40 GRATEFULNESSE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Grant — Thou who hast already granted so much
— grant rest in thyself and thankfulness.
" Would I could wish my wishes all to rest,
And know to wish the wish that were the best ! "
A. H. dough's Love is Fellow-Service.
NOTES :
2. Notes and Queries for November 2, 1850, quotes
Shakespeare, 2 Henry VI, i, 1 :
"O Lord, that lends me life,
Lend me a heart replete with thankfulness!"
13-16. A reckoning of what it would come to.
16. And though it is already much, keeps coming for
more.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 41
GRATEFULNESSE
THOU that hast giv'n so much to me,
Give one thing more, a gratefull heart.
See how thy beggar works on thee
By art.
He makes thy gifts occasion more, 5
And sayes, If he in this be crost,
All thou hast giv'n him heretofore
Is lost.
But thou didst reckon, when at first
Thy word our hearts and hands did crave,
What it would come to at the worst 11
To save:
Perpetuall knockings at thy doore,
Tears sullying thy transparent rooms,
Gift upon gift, much would have more, 15
And comes.
42 GRATEFULNESSE
17. Thou wentst on, so EVEN-SONG, III, 61, 1. 17.
19. SIGN, HI, 265, 1. 18.
22. Cf . Donne, A Litanie, xxiii, 1 :
To Thee
A sinner is more music when he prays
Than spheres' or angels' praises be."
27. In UNGRATEFULNESSE, II, 245, 1. 26, we learn that
the only thing God demands of us is a grateful
heart. This poem shows how even this must be
accepted from Him.
30. Days of omission, containing no blessing.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 43
This notwithstanding, thou wentst on
And didst allow us all our noise.
Nay, thou hast made a sigh and grone
Thy joyes. 20
Not that thou hast not still above
Much better tunes then grones can make,
But that these countrey-aires thy love
Did take.
Wherefore I crie and crie again, 25
And in no quiet canst thou be
Till I a thankfull heart obtain
Of thee.
Not thankfull when it pleaseth me,
As if thy blessings had spare dayes, 30
But such a heart whose pulse may be
Thy praise.
44 PRAISE
INTRODUCTORY :
Two other poems with this title are given, II, 95,
and 397.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
Praise of God for his watchful efficiency.
NOTES :
1. Mean= intend, aim at,— so JUSTICE, III, 253, 1. 9.
5. Wring. So in LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 179, 1. 17.
6. Cf. the refrain of PRAISE, II, 95.
9. Cf. THE ELIXER, II, 99, 1. 8.
13. On= against, adversely to.
15. Is Herbert here remembering the Chain of Zeus ?
Homer, Iliad, VIII, 19-27.
17. Exodus xiv, 25.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 45
PRAISE
LORD, I will mean and speak thy praise,
Thy praise alone.
My busie heart shall spin it all my dayes;
And when it stops for want of store,
Then will I wring it with a sigh or grone, 5
That thou mayst yet have more.
When thou dost favour any action,
It runnes, it flies;
All things concurre to give it a perfection.
That which had but two legs before, 10
When thou dost blesse, hath twelve. One wheel
doth rise
To twentie then, or more.
But when thou dost on businesse blow,
It hangs, it clogs;
Not all the teams of Albion in a row 15
Can hale or draw it out of doore.
Legs are but stumps, and Pharaoh's wheels but
logs,
And struggling hinders more.
46 PRAISE
22. The sea his shore. So PROVIDENCE, HI, 83, 1. 48.
23. Stint = bounds, restraint.
24. In a letter thanking King James for his book, he
says of him: O prudentiam incomparabttem, quae
eodem vidtu et moderalur mundum et nos respidt.
27. Psahn Ivi, 8. Cf. HOPE, III, 203, 1. 5.
30. In heaven provision is made for more repentance
than I have shown.
33. Old battle-flags hung up within a church. — Which
refers to drop, not to eye.
36. Referring back to the bottle of 1. 27. A little of
God's grief over my sin is weightier than all my
own.
38. The pressure promised in 1. 5.
40. At use=usuTy, interest. Cf. for the thought, OBE
DIENCE, II, 387, 1. 42, and AN OFFERING, II, 393,
1. 7-9.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 47
Thousands of things do thee employ
In ruling all 20
This spacious globe : Angels must have their joy,
Devils their rod, the sea his shore,
The windes their stint. And yet when I did call,
Thou heardst my call, and more.
I have not lost one single tear. 25
But when mine eyes
Did weep to heav'n, they found a bottle there
(As we have boxes for the poore)
Readie to take them in; yet of a size
That would contain much more. 30
But after thou hadst slipt a drop
From thy right eye,
(Which there did hang like streamers neare the
top
Of some fair church, to show the sore
And bloudie battell which thou once didst trie) 35
The glasse was full and more.
Wherefore I sing. Yet since my heart,
Though press'd, runnes thin,
Othat I might some other hearts convert,
And so take up at use good store; 40
That to thy chests there might be coming in
Both all my praise and more!
48 THE INVITATION
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used also in the next poem, THE BANQUET.
SUBJECT:
Ho, every one that thirsteth, — whether for food,
wine, ease, joy, or love, — come to the banquet and
find what will elsewhere be vainly sought. Cf.
Isaiah Iv, 1.
NOTES :
1. Taste= appetite.
4. THE PRIESTHOOD, II, 875, 1. 27.
8. Whose character wine determines, — as winebib-
bers, drunkards, — with possibly a play upon the
word, i. e. it empties of fineness. Cf. Donne, Anat
omic of the World, 37: "Her name defined thee,
gave thee form and frame." And THE COUNTRY
PARSON, XXVI: One ad in these things is bad, but
it is the custome and habit that names a glvtton.
15. The same thought in MISERIE, II, 253, 1. 22.
18. 'Fright. The terror one would naturally feel at his
sin becoming visible is here felt for sin itself.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 49
THE INVITATION
COME ye hither all whose taste
Is your waste.
Save your cost and mend your fare.
God is here prepared and drest,
And the feast, 5
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, 10
And drink this,
Which before ye drink is bloud.
Come ye hither all whom pain
Doth arraigne,
Bringing all your sinnes to sight. 15
Taste and fear not. God is here
In this cheer,
And on sinne doth cast the fright.
50 THE INVITATION
23. Such delight as you have known hitherto.
26. Doves draw the celestial car of Venus.
28. This contrast between divine and human love is
expounded at length in Two SONNETS, II, 79, and
in LOVE, II, 83.
31. Luke xiv, 13.
36. Where God is, there all people should be.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 51
Come ye hither all whom joy
Doth destroy, 20
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 25
Is your dove,
And exalts you to the skie.
Here is love which, having breath
Ev'n in death,
After death can never die. 30
Lord I have invited all,
And I shall
Still invite, still call to thee.
For it seems but just and right
In my sight, 35
Where is all, there all should be.
52 THE BANQUET
DATE:
Not found in W.
METHE :
Used also in the preceding poem, THE INVITATION.
SUBJECT:
The marvellous delicacy of God's table.
NOTES :
4. Neatnesse (cf. MAN, II, 221, 1. 42, and THE
FAMILIE, III, 185, 1. 8) is Herbert's frequent word
for refined beauty. Dr. Willinott well quotes Mil
ton's line in his Sonnet to Mr. Lawrence: "What
neat repast shall feast us, light and choice ? "
13. Sweetnesse here, as usually with Herbert, refers to
the smell, not the taste. In five stanzas of the poem
it is mentioned.
14. Made a head. We say made headway. Cf. THE
SACRIFICE, II, 123, 1. 5.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 53
THE BANQUET
WELCOME sweet and sacred cheer,
Welcome deare!
With me, in me, live and dwell;
For thy neatnesse passeth sight,
Thy delight 5
Passeth tongue to taste or tell.
O what sweetnesse from the bowl
Fills my soul,
Such as is and makes divine!
Is some starre (fled from the sphere) 10
Melted there,
As we sugar melt in wine ?
Or hath sweetnesse in the bread
Made a head
To subdue the smell of sinne; 15
Flowers, and gummes, and powders giving
All their living,
Lest the enemie should winne ?
54 THE BANQUET
19. The starre of the second stanza, the flower of the
third.
24. So THE ODOUR, III, 23, 1. 6.
25. Pomander = scent-ball. Cf. THE ODOUR, III, 25,
1. 16.
26. Still = at all times.
31. Cf. VANITIE, II, 357, 1. 13.
34. Took bloud= became man.
35. 2 Samuel xiv, 14.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 55
Doubtlesse neither starre nor flower
Hath the power 20
Such a sweetnesse to impart.
Onely God, who gives perfumes,
Flesh assumes,
And with it perfumes my heart.
But as Pomanders and wood 25
Still are good,
Yet being bruis'd are better sented,
God to show how farre his love
Could improve,
Here, as broken, is presented. 30
When I had forgot my birth,
And on earth
In delights of earth was drown'd,
God took bloud and needs would be
Spilt with me, 35
And so found me on the ground.
56 THE BANQUET
41. Farre /row both the heavenly and the earthly
courts.
43. Cf. PRAISE, II, 95, 1. 5.
49. The jritie God has shown in the Incarnation.
50. My theme, as in THE FORERUNNERS, III, 317,
1. 11.
51. Lines and life=veise and action, repeated in hands
and breath of 1. 53. So, too, THE COLLAR, III, 21 1 ,
1. 4. Deed and storie of COMPLAINING, III, 267,
1. 7, is similar.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 57
Having rais'd me to look up,
In a cup
Sweetly he doth meet my taste.
But I still being low and short, 40
Farre from court,
Wine becomes a wing at last.
For with it alone I flie
To the skie;
Where I wipe mine eyes, and see 45
What I seek, for what I sue,
Him I view
Who hath done so much for me.
Let the wonder of this pitie
Be my dittie, 50
And take up my lines and life.
Hearken, under pain of death,
Hands and breath,
Strive in this and love the strife.
58 EVEN-SONG
DATE:
This poem is not in W., but in place of it appears
the poem given, III, 391.
METRE :
Unique. The stanzas are arranged in pairs, by
making the second and eighth lines long.
SUBJECT:
Eyes, light, and power, and the cessation of all three,
equally express the love of God. The poem is
divided into two parts, by the employment in the
fourth and eighth stanzas of a special rhyming
system. The first part shows how little I bring
to God; the second, how much He brings to me.
Is it fanciful to suggest that the first two stanzas
of each part discuss eyes and light ; the third
power ?
NOTES :
7. Psalm cxxx, 3. But I am now protected against
his gaze.
8. His sonne. The double meaning is expanded and
discussed in THE SONNE, III, 161.
14. Cf. NATURE, II, 303, 1. 9.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 59
EVEN-SONG
BLEST be the God of love,
Who gave me eyes, and light, and power this day
Both to be busfo and to play.
But much more blest be God above
Who gave me sight alone, 5
Which to himself he did denie;
For when he sees my waies, I dy,
But I have got his sonne, and he hath none.
What have I brought thee home
For this thy love ? Have I discharg'd the debt 10
Which this dayes favour did beget ?
I ranne, but all I brought was fome.
Thy diet, care, and cost
Do end in bubbles, balls of winde;
Of winde to thee whom I have crost, 15
But balls of wilde-fire to my troubled minde.
60 EVEN-SONG
17. So GRATEFULNESSE, III, 43, 1. 17. Possibly still
here may have its modern meaning of notwithstand
ing, instead of its usual meaning in Herbert of
always.
18. Cf. MAN, II, 221, 1. 32.
26. The contrasts of day and night are those of activity
and repose.
30. Eludes thy heart's care.
32. 77im=than. Romans viii, 35.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 61
Yet still thou goest on,
And now with darknesse closest wearie eyes,
Saying to man, It doth suffice.
Henceforth repose. Your work is done. 20
Thus in thy Ebony box
Thou dost inclose us, till the day
Put our amendment in our way,
And give new wheels to our disorder'd clocks.
I muse which shows more love, 25
The day or night : that is the gale, this th' harbour;
That is the walk, and this the arbour;
Or that the garden, this the grove.
My God, thou art all love.
Not one poore minute 'scapes thy breast
But brings a favour from above. 31
And in this love, more then in bed, I rest.
62 ANTIPHON
INTRODUCTORY :
Antiphon is the chant or singing of a choir in
church, in which strain answers strain. It is de
scribed in CHRISTMAS, II, 169, 1. 32. Another
poem with this title is given, II, 107.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
A call for universal praise, from all above and all
below. Psalm cxlviii.
NOTES:
2. Cf. JORDAN, II, 89, 1. 15, and THE ELIXER, II,
99,1. 1.
VII. THE HAPPY PRIEST 63
ANTIPHON
Cho. LET all the world in ev'ry corner sing,
My God and King.
Vers. The heav'ns are not too high,
His praise may thither flie.
The earth is not too low, 5
His praises there may grow.
Cho. Let all the world in ev'ry corner sing,
My God and King.
Vers. The church with psalms must shout.
No doore can keep them out. 10
But above all, the heart
Must bear the longest part.
Cho. Let all the world in ev'ry corner sing,
My God and King.
VIII
BEMERTON STUDY
PREFACE
MANY persons find the reflective poetry of
Herbert the most agreeable portion of THE
TEMPLE. The more personal poems call for larger
historical and artistic imagination than most of
us care to supply. To reconstruct their reality
we must project ourselves into conditions of mind
which belong to a bygone age; and few are willing,
or even able, to detach themselves from their own
time and feel the humanity in types of emotion
which look fictitious because unfamiliar. Or if
we take the very probable view that in these poems,
as in Shakespeare's or Sidney's Sonnets, art is as
much concerned as emotion, the chance that Her
bert's eager songs will be understood becomes
more slender still. For art is little known or hon
ored among us. It interests but few to see a feeling
taking its rise in some experience of a poet, then
purged of whatever checks its coherence, and
gradually furnished with all that can lend it ful
ness and precision, until it finally comes forth pal
pitating with fresh and irresponsible life, and ex
hibits with a completeness not otherwise possible
an isolated section of the complex soul of man.
Indeed, busy and matter-of-fact folk are disposed
to suspect falsehood in anything which bears the
68 PREFACE TO
marks of art, and to count only those emotions
genuine which are poured out with the sponta
neous disorderliness of nature. Where such instinc
tive presuppositions exist, the subtle adjustments
and intricate accords by means of which Herbert
idealizes passions which to-day are but slightly
felt will to a considerable extent remove his per
sonal poems from sympathy. Work which charms
the lover of exquisite art, and beautiful records of
earlier habits of mind which fascinate the imagi
native student of spiritual history, will be easily
discarded as artificial and full of conceits.
But even then the reflective poetry of Herbert
remains. Art is not usually felt to be a disturber
of meditation, but rather to be required in utter
ances of profound thought. Herbert's intellectual
verse has accordingly been prized by many who
have regarded his emotional with something like
contempt. I do not myself think the two kinds can
be fully parted. Herbert puts passion into every-
thing, and everything he rationalizes. Yet I have
thought I might render him more accessible to all
tastes if here among the Bemerton poems, as pre
viously among those of the Cambridge years, I place
in a special Group those which are least marked
by the personal note. Here stand the compact
pieces of wisdom which were shaped in the Wilt
shire study. Some of them may have been brought
over half-finished from Cambridge, Dauntsey, or
Baynton. But in Bemerton they received their
BEMERTON STUDY 69
final form, and they appear only in the manuscript
of Herbert's later years.
In this more abstract and contemplative species %
of verse Herbert is able to exhibit with fullest ad
vantage one of his chief literary merits, I meanjbis
power to charge a few common words with more •
meaning than they easily carry. The phrase
strains; the thought obtrudes beyond the words.
By audacity of diction Herbert forces his reader —
his energetic reader — to approach at some strange
angle new aspects of old truths. We all know the
aphoristic force of the Elizabethan and Jacobean *
poets. They were no mere epigrammatists, like
the Queen Anne's men. They cared nothing for
propriety, and kept their thoughts on things rather
than on words. But nobody has ever been able toll
fashion a phrase with greater certainty that it will]|
stick in the mind which it once enters. In this
penetrative power Herbert stands among the fore
most of his age. Few poets are more quotable. He
abounds in those " jewels five words long which
on the stretched forefinger of all time sparkle
forever." Yet his sententious power is not satis
fied with creating scattered phrases ; these are but
the material out of which a pathetic, gay, or saga
cious whole is firmly fashioned. The general in
tellectual tone appropriate to each poem is to
Herbert's mind a matter of much consequence,
and the phrasing which would enter fitly into one
is not allowed to disturb the poise of another.
70 PREFACE TO
Let any reader compare PEACE and DOTAGE,
CONSTANCIE and THE BAG, or either of these
with VANITIE or VERTUE, and he will see how
harmoniously selective is Herbert's craftsmanship,
how free he is from anything like a single fixed
style. All this is less felt because without special
training on the reader's part Herbert is difficult
to follow. He moves at great speed through strange
and tangled regions. He loves "by indirection to
find direction out." He does not concern himself
with his reader, but with getting his own mind
completely delivered.
I have set at the head of this Group Herbert's
profoundest philosophic study, PROVIDENCE. The
first impression it will give is that it is queer. Cer
tain lines will seem positively comic. I do not
think this fact would have disturbed Herbert, or
have brought him to admit the need of change,
any more than similar facts in the poetry of Words
worth, Browning, and Emerson ever worried those
explorers of the human soul. Such poets write
for themselves, and merely allow other men to
listen while they think. PROVIDENCE is a mas
terly survey of a closely ordered universe which
culminates in man. While lacking modern scien
tific equipment, trusting too to Aristotelic methods
more than would to-day be generally approved,
and consequently often mistaking small things for
great, Herbert shows a keenness of observation,
an ability to group together similar but outwardly
BEMERTON STUDY 71
unlike facts, and a prevision even of modern
evolutional points of view, which prove him to have
been a man of real grasp in subjects lying outside
his special religious themes. The wording is strong
throughout, in parts rising to an easy majesty not '
reached by him elsewhere.
After PROVIDENCE I place discussions of several
features of the Church and its partially detached
members, which lead to consideration of the dif
ferences between the Biblical Church and our
own. CONSTANCIE and THE FOIL show how un
shakable a man may become through righteous
ness ; and then his complex and vacillating nature
is shown in MAN'S MEDLEY, GIDDINESSE, VAN-
ITIE, DOTAGE, BUSINESSE, SINNES ROUND, and
THE WATER-COURSE. The pessimistic view of j\
man's condition is a favorite with Herbert both
on religious and poetic grounds. It shows the need
of Atonement, and lends itself to decidedly pic
turesque treatment. THE PULLEY and MARIE /
MAGDALENE point out our way of delivery from
restlessness. The Passion of our Lord is set forth
in several poems which from style I should sup
pose to be written early, but which are not in
cluded in the Williams Manuscript. At the end
of the Group I have placed half-a-dozen trifles in
which the fancy of Herbert plays sweetly with its
own ingenuities.
BEMEBTON STUDY
74 TO MY SUCCESSOR
INTRODUCTORY :
These lines, though not originally included in THE
TEMPLE, may well find a place here. They were
first printed in Walton's Life: "He then proceeded
to rebuild the greatest part of the Parsonage-house,
which he did also very compleatly, and at his own
charge; and having done this good work, he caus'd
these Verses to be writ upon or ingraven in, the
Mantle of the Chimney in his Hall. " If this inscrip
tion ever existed at Bemerton, it long ago disap
peared. In recent years it has again been inscribed
on the side of the Parsonage facing the Church.
Thomas Fuller gives a variant of it in his Holy
and Profane State, 1642: "A clergyman who built
his house from the ground wrote on it this counsel
to his successor :
"If thou dost find
An house built to thy mind,
Without thy cost,
Serve thou the more
God and the poor;
My labour is not lost."
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 75
TO MY SUCCESSOR
IF them chance for to find
A new House to thy mind,
And built without thy Cost,
Be good to the Poor,
As God gives thee store,
And then my Labour's not lost.
PROVIDENCE
DATE:
Not found in W. This is the most considerable
poem of the Bemerton years, in style far removed
from THE CHURCH-PORCH. Possibly it was begun
at Cambridge, where MAN was written, but, being
reserved for correction and addition, was on this
account not included in W. It certainly was fin
ished after Herbert's poetic powers had become fully
formed, and was intended, as its closing stanzas
indicate, as a kind of climax and epitome of all his
thought. Seldom elsewhere does he treat facts in
so objective a fashion. PROVIDENCE was translated
into Latin in 1678 by William Dillingham.
METRE:
Unique in stanza form. But alternate rhyming
pentameters are also used by Herbert in A WREATH,
II, 319, LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 179, and GRIEF,
III, 323. This stanza, the heroic quatrain, first
used by Surrey, had been consecrated to philo
sophical reflection by Sir John Davies in his Nosce
Teipsum. It was also used by Sylvester in his
Urania, by Southwell in his Vale of Tears, and by
Donne in several of his Epistles (among them one
to Herbert's mother); subsequently by Beaumont
in his Psyche, by Davenant in Gondibert, by
Dryden in his Oliver Cromwell and Annus Mira-
bilis, and by Gray in his Elegy.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 77
SUBJECT:
"O Lord, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom
hast thou made them all :" Psalm civ, 24. Through
out this poem Herbert has in mind the 104th Psalm,
which in King James' Version is entitled, "An ex
hortation to bless the Lord for his mighty power
and wonderful providence." But the Psalm merely
sets forth the many marvels of the world; while the
poem is a description of a world so ordered by
evolutionary plan that the higher grades continually
grow out of the lower and bring the significance
of these to light. The conception of an organized
universe with man as its crown (cf. MAN, II, 215)
was first announced by Aristotle. Herbert may
have derived his thought from some such passage as
Metaph. XI, 10: "Whatever exists — fish, bird, or
plant — has its special place in the scheme of things.
There is nothing isolated and unrelated. All have
reference to a common unity. While each part has
its separate sphere, all also unite and contribute to
the good of the whole." The poem has four parts:
1. An Introduction (1. 1-28) on man's supreme and
priestly character; after which comes the Psalm
itself in two divisions; 2, the first (1. 29-92), cele
brating the fulness of God's house; and 3, the
second (1. 93-140), pointing out God's curious
art in marshalling his goods. 4. A conclusion fol
lows (1. 141-152), announcing the obligation and
inadequacy of praise. «
78 PROVIDENCE
NOTES:
1. Wisdom viii, 1. "Attingit a fine usque ad finem
fortiter et disponit omnia suaviter." Wisdom
reacheth from one end to another mightily; and
sweetly doth she order all things.
4. Do thee right (one of Herbert's few puns) = do thee
justice.
8. Donne had already written (Satire, 1. 6): "Here is
Nature's Secretary, the philosopher;" and Walton
in his Life of Herbert calls Lord Bacon "the great
Secretary of Nature." When Sylvester in Urania
is urging the poets to write on sacred instead of
secular themes, he says that then " all would admire
your rymes and do you honour As Secretaries of
the Heav'nly Court," 1. 185.
9. Dittie, — seek to give words to their songs, as in
THE SACRIFICE, II, 137, 1. 142, and THE FORE
RUNNERS, III, 317,1. 11. The thought is repeated
in MISERIE, II, 255, 1. 55-60.
12. Psalm cxlv, 10.
13. On the publication of Bacon's Instauratio Magna
Herbert addressed him in a Latin poem as Mun~
dique et animarum Sacerdos unicus.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 79
PROVIDENCE
O SACRED Providence, who from end to end
Strongly and sweetly movest! Shall I write,
And not of thee through whom my fingers bend
To hold my quill ? Shall they not do thee right ?
Of all the creatures both in sea and land 5
Onely to Man thou hast made known thy wayes,
And put the penne alone into his hand,
And made him Secretarie of thy praise.
Beasts fain would sing; birds dittie to their notes;
Trees would be tuning on their native lute 10
To thy renown; but all their hands and throats
Are brought to Man, while they are lame and
mute.
Man is the world's high Priest. He doth present
The sacrifice for all; while they below
Unto the service mutter an assent, 15
Such as springs use that fall and windes that
blow.
80 PROVIDENCE
21-24. A tongue exists in you, beasts, that you may eat,
in me that I may praise; as your fingers, O trees,
can only offer fruit, while mine must write.
27. Rent= recompense for use, not merely that derived
from lands and houses as with us (cf. CONTENT,
II, 355, 1. 28), but here from reason and speech.
31. Repeated from 1. 2.
32. So THE CHURCH MILITANT, HI, 359, 1. 8.
33-35. In Herbert's mind there is probably some cor
respondence between the pair of terms of this
stanza, command and permission, and the pair of
the previous one, power and love. But if so, it is
far from clear what the nature of the correspond
ence is. It is not easy to see how loving permis
sion should operate negatively as a curb, in contrast
to the stimulating influence of command. In none
of the four poems where power and love are coupled
(PRAYER, II, 185, 1. 20; THE TEMPER, II, 317,
1. 27; THE METHOD, III, 197, 1. 7; THE CHURCH
MILITANT, III, 359, 1. 10) is love represented as
either permissive or restrictive. Perhaps this stanza
may be explained thus: Action springs either from
a sense of duty (divine command) or from natural
instincts (permitted by God), which check that
sluggishness and waste through indolence which
are seldom absent from Herbert's thought of sin.
(Cf. THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 19, 1. 38-96, and
55, 1. 337-342; EMPLOYMENT, II, 103.)
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 81
He that to praise and laud thee doth refrain
Doth not refrain unto himself alone,
But robs a thousand who would praise thee fain,
And doth commit a world of sinne in one. 20
The beasts say, Eat me; but if beasts must teach,
The tongue is yours to eat, but mine to praise.
The trees say, Pull me; but the hand you stretch
Is mine to write, as it is yours to raise.
Wherefore, most sacred Spirit, I here present 25
For me and all my fellows praise to thee.
And just it is that I should pay the rent,
Because the benefit accrues to me.
We all acknowledge both thy power and love
To be exact, transcendent, and divine; 30
Who dost so strongly and so sweetly move,
While all things have their will, yet none but
thine.
For either thy command or thy permission
Lay hands on all. They are thy right and left.
The first puts on with speed and expedition, 35
The other curbs sinne's stealing pace and theft.
PROVIDENCE
40. The mention of tuning and tempering in the preced
ing lines suggests to Herbert how deeply we should
be affected if all divine concords could be rendered
audible, as in the supposed music of the spheres.
(ARTILLERIE, II, 361, 1. 9.)
41-44. Cf. THE CHURCH MILITANT, III, 359, 1. 1-4.
42. Even= balanced, constant. An equally unusual
use of uneven appears in FAITH, II, 235, 1. 32.
45. Psalm Ixv, 7.
48. Jeremiah v, 22; Job xxxviii, 11.
49. Psalm civ, 27; MAN, II, 219,1. 29.
51. The net of the fish is its wide mouth.
53. Nothing comes into the world before its fit food is
provided.
56. Their, i. e. the creatures of the preceding line.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 83
Nothing escapes them both. All must appeare,
And be disposed, and dress'd, and tun'd by thee,
Who sweetly temper' st all. If we could heare
Thy skill and art, what musick would it be! 40
Thou art in small things great, not small in any,
Thy even praise can neither rise nor fall.
Thou art in all things one, in each thing many,
For thou art infinite in one and all.
Tempests are calm* to thee. They know thy hand,
And hold it fast, as children do their father's,
Which crie and follow. Thou hast made poore
sand 47
Check the proud sea, ev'n when it swells and
gathers.
Thy cupboard serves the world. The meat is set
Where all may reach. No beast but knows his
feed. 50
Birds teach us hawking; fishes have their net;
The great prey on the lesse, they on some weed.
Nothing ingendred doth prevent his meat:
Flies have their table spread, ere they appeare;
Some creatures have in winter what to eat, 55
Others do sleep, and envie not their cheer.
84 PROVIDENCE
58. Twist=coid. So THE PEARL, II, 383, 1. 38.
61-72. In these three stanzas Herbert traces the economy
of the universe, and shows how in each created thing
there is a provision for maintaining its type. The
old bird helps the young one, and so makes him
strong enough to help himself. Nowhere does na
ture allow real loss, but through some circuitous
process what has been spent is eventually restored.
Bees draw food from flowers, but without harm to
flower, bee, or man. Flowers are consumed by cat
tle, yet from cattle obtain their needed nutriment.
Such nutriment feeds trees, which contribute their
leaves to make soil for other trees. Out of the soil
streams run into the sea, and from it, by way of the
clouds, are themselves renewed. Clouds, produced
by the sun's heat, become cooled and descend to
form fresh springs. And springs can boil up in obe
dience to inner heat only when they at the same
time send off from their cool upper surface that
vapor from which they are ultimately resupplied.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 85
How finely dost thou times and seasons spin,
And make a twist checker' d with night and day !
Which as it lengthens windes, and windes us in,
As bouls go on, but turning all the way. 60
Each creature hath a wisdome for his good.
The pigeons feed their tender off-spring, crying,
When they are callow; but withdraw their food
When they are fledge, that need may teach them
flying. 64
Bees work for man; and yet they never bruise
Their master's flower, but leave it, having done,
As fair as ever and as fit to use;
So both the flower doth stay, and hony run.
Sheep eat the grasse and dung the ground for
more.
Trees, after bearing, drop their leaves for soil,
Springs vent their streams, and by expense get
store. 71
Clouds cool by heat, and baths by cooling boil.
86 PROVIDENCE
75-76. That=foT expression. Herbert, always longing
for larger powers of expression (cf. PRAISE, II, 95,
DULNESSE, HI, 207, and THE FORERUNNERS, III,
317), wonders if an herb may not one day be
discovered which will quicken speech. The subtle
influence of certain herbs over mental conditions
was at that time attracting attention. Tobacco
and tea had just been introduced. Macbeth al
ready knows "the insane root that takes the reason
captive;*' and Othello "the poppy and mandragora
and all the drowsy syrops of the world."
77-80. Herbert has great interest in the stars, and ever
inclines to a belief in astrology. Such passages as
THE PEARL, II, 381, 1. 5, THE FOIL, III, 123, and
VANITIE, III, 133, 1. 7, are frequent; and the three
strange poems which are wholly dedicated to the
stars — ARTILLERIE, II, 361, THE STARRE, II, 365,
and THE STORM, III, 263 — suggest, whatever else,
an easy access of celestial influence. The thought
of this verse is compressed. A star, like the rose,
is beautiful. Perhaps its virtues will eventually
be directed, like those of the rose, to our heal
ing. Undoubtedly there is in it abundant power
for weal or woe, did we but know how to use it.
Astrology is true, but the astrologist cannot find it :
JACULA PRUDENTUM. On the medicinal powers
of the flower, see THE ROSE, II, 391, 1. 18.
83-84. Repeated in AVARICE, III, 113, 1. 14.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 87
Who hath the vertue to expresse the rare
And curious vertues both of herbs and stones ?
Is there an herb for that ? O that thy care 75
Would show a root that gives expressions!
And if an herb hath power, what have the starres ?
A rose, besides his beautie, is a cure.
Doubtlesse our plagues and plentie, peace and
warres
Are there much surer then our art is sure. 80
Thou hast hid metals. Man may take them thence,
But at his perill. When he digs the place,
He makes a grave; as if the thing had sense,
And threatned man that he should fill the space.
88 PROVIDENCE
86. No creature is allowed through want of know
ledge to be destroyed by poison or to miss the
antidote it needs. With this and with 1. 105 com
pare Herbert's ORATION ON THE RETURN OF
CHARLES FROM SPAIN: Unamquamque regionem
suam sibi sufficere, neque externis indigere auxiiiis
88. The fear=the dreaded object.
96. South, where cool surfaces are welcome; North,
where protection is needed against cold.
97. Good-cheap is dear : JACULA PRUDENTUM.
100. The harsh but stimulating cold is as needful for
man as the easily gathered fruits.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 89
Ev'n poysons praise thee. Should a thing be lost ?
Should creatures want for want of heed their
due?
Since where are poysons, antidots are most; 87
The help stands close and keeps the fear in view.
The sea, which seems to stop the traveller,
Is by a ship the speedier passage made. 90
The windes, who think they rule the mariner,
Are rul'd by him and taught to serve his trade.
And as thy house is full, so I adore
Thy curious art in marshalling thy goods.
The hills with health abound; the vales with
store; 95
The South with marble; North with furres and
woods.
Hard things are glorious; easie things good cheap.
The common all men have; that which is rare
Men therefore seek to have and care to keep.
The healthy frosts with summer-fruits compare.
90 PROVIDENCE
102. Shade=the shelter formed by overhanging branches.
103-4. Tall and low are contrasted, the one meaning
far from the ground, the other near to it. Low
is used in the same sense in THE BANQUET, III,
57, 1. 40.
104. Hawks are mentioned in 1. 51, in THE SACRIFICE,
II, 131, 1. 91, and alluded to in THE PEARL, II,
383, 1. 32. Other sports named by Herbert are
bowling, fencing, archery, and cards; but he no
where mentions ball-play, hunting, or dancing.
112. In desire=as much as he needs. Cf. 1. 105.
114. Lay gathered, i. e. into lakes and the ocean. —
Broach=tap, so as to make streams run, as in
DIVINITIE, III, 99, 1. 9.
118. Hony drops = drops which make honey.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 91
Light without winde is glasse; warm without
weight 101
Is wooll and furres; cool without closenesse,
shade;
Speed without pains, a horse; tall without height,
A servile hawk; low without losse, a spade.
All countreys have enough to serve their need. 105
If they seek fine things, thou dost make them run
For their offence; and then dost turn their speed
To be commerce and trade from sunne to sunne.
Nothing wears clothes but Man; nothing doth
need
But he to wear them. Nothing useth fire 110
But Man alone, to show his heav'nly breed.
And onely he hath fuell in desire.
When th' earth was dry, thou mad'st a sea of wet.
When that lay gathered, thou didst broach the
mountains.
When yet some places could no moisture get, 115
The windes grew gard'ners, and the clouds good
fountains.
Rain, do not hurt my flowers, but gently spend
Your hony drops! Presse not to smell them
here.
When they are ripe, their odour will ascend 119
And at your lodging with their thanks appeare.
92 PROVIDENCE
121-124. Good qualities are sometimes divided, as
in this stanza; sometimes united, as in the next.
126. Indian 7m£=cocoanut.
127. jfiTcm=drinkmg-cup.
129-132. Besides the medical observations of this
verse, others occur in 1. 78, 87, 100. For Herbert's
general interest in medicine, see his COUNTRY
PARSON, XXIII; and for the similar interest of
his brother, Lord Herbert, see Autobiography,
Lee's ed., p. 52-59.
133. Leap not: "Natura non facit saltum." There is
no gap in nature or unfilled gradation, all parts
are interlinked. This and the following line well
sum up the fundamental doctrine of the poem, viz.
that creation is ordered, compact, full (1. 93),
evolutional, as Aristotle had suggested. So MAN,
II, 217, 1. 15; EMPLOYMENT, II, 349, 1. 21; LONG
ING, III, 285, 1. 53.
135. Marry = form a connecting link between.
136. Out of the earth come coal and diamonds, which
once were plants. Perhaps there is also allusion
to the popular fancy that minerals grow.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 93
How harsh are thorns to pears ! And yet they make
A better hedge, and need less reparation.
How smooth are silks compared with a stake,
Or with a stone ! Yet make no good foundation.
Sometimes thou dost divide thy gifts to man, 125
Sometimes unite. The Indian nut alone
Is clothing, meat and trencher, drink and kan,
Boat, cable, sail and needle, all in one.
Most herbs that grow in brooks are hot and dry.
Cold fruits' warm kernells help against the
winde. 130
The lemmon's juice and rinde cure mutually.
The whey of milk doth loose, the milk doth binde.
Thy creatures leap not, but expresse a feast
Where all the guests sit close, and nothing wants.
Frogs marry fish and flesh; bats, bird and beast;
Sponges, non-sense and sense; mines, th5 earth
and plants. 136
94 PROVIDENCE
138. Changest thy mode of action. Variation is as
important a principle in nature as uniformity.
140. Donne, Progress of the Soul, First Song, 385, says
of the elephant:
" Nature hath given him no knees to bend,
Himself he up-props, on himself relies,
Still sleeping stood."
Sir Thomas Browne in his Vulgar Errors, Bk. Ill,
ch. i, examines at length the popular belief that
the elephant has no joints in his legs and conse
quently "sleepeth against a tree."
141. Psalm cvi, 2.
144. Owes, for owns. But Herbert also uses own, THE
ELIXER, II, 101, 1. 23.
145-152. These last two stanzas are alternative render
ings of a single theme, paralleling each other
clause by clause. Probably at his death Herbert
had not decided which of the two to keep as his
ending; but though on the whole preferring 1. 145-
148, he still wished to preserve in his manuscript
1. 149-152 for future estimate. Ferrar, not noticing
the duplicate character of the stanzas, printed
them both.
148. Twice, i. e. for me and all my fellows, 1. 26. This
poem, then, would seem to have been written later
than a large body of his verse.
152. One waye more, i. e. as the world's high Priest, 1. 13.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 95
To show thou art not bound, as if thy lot
Were worse then ours, sometimes thou shiftest
hands.
Most things move th' under-jaw; the Crocodile
not.
Most things sleep lying; th' Elephant leans or
stands. 140
But who hath praise enough ? Nay who hath any ?
None can expresse thy works but he that knows
them.
And none can know thy works, which are so many
And so complete, but onely he that owes them.
All things that are, though they have sev'rall
wayes, 145
Yet in their being joyn with one advise
To honour thee. And so I give thee praise
In all my other hymnes, but in this twice.
[Each thing that is, although in use and name
It go for one, hath many wayes in store 150
To honour thee. And. so each hymne thy fame
Extolleth many wayes, yet this one more.]
96 DIYINITIE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Used also in CnuRCH-MusicK, n, 199, and CON
TENT, II, 353.
SUBJECT:
We may easily be over-curious in theology, where in
reality the plain truths are the important ones. Cf.
VANITIE, III, 133. This sort of distinction between
needless truth and practical truth nowhere appears
in THE COUNTRY PARSON, but on the contrary,
Ch. V says: The Countrey Parson hath compiled a
book and body of Divinity, which is the storehouse
of his Sermons and which he preacheth all his Life.
NOTES:
1. This stanza well illustrates the kind of intellectual
humor of which Herbert is fond (I, 65). Men
devise celestial globes to mark the courses of the
stars, and books of divinity to mark the ways of God,
— fantastic, mechanical representations, harder to
comprehend than the realities which they inter
pret. On the nature of these spheres, see the note
on PRATER, II, 183, 1. 9.
8. Faith is manned by the incisiveness of reason.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 97
DIVINITIE
As men, for fear the starres should sleep and nod
And trip at night, have spheres supplied,
As if a starre were duller then a clod,
Which knows his way without a guide;
Just so the other heav'n they also serve, 5
Divinitie's transcendent skie,
Which with the edge of wit they cut and carve.
Reason triumphs, and faith lies by.
98 DIVINITIE
9. To broach is to make an opening in a cask for liquid
to run out, as in THE AGONIE, III, 153, 1. 15. The
blood of Christ's wounded side is mentioned in
seven other passages. See THE BAG, III, 157.
1 1 . Fine = had it been a fashionably cut garment. " The
metaphor was suggested, no doubt, by the quaintly
carved, cut, slashed, and paned dresses of Herbert's
time:" A. B. Grosart. — Jag=to cut into points.
We still use it in the adjective jagged.
15. Which onely save = are the only ones which save.
24. And is not obscure.
25. A term of the Ptolemaic astronomy. Do not keep
making finer and finer hypotheses to explain the
subtleties of heavenly facts.
26. The spheres of 1. 2. Save yourself such mental
strain, 1. 7.
27. The staffe may here be the surveyor's staff of THE
AGONIE, III, 153, 1. 3.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 99
Could not that wisdome which first broacht the
wine
Have thicken'd it with definitions ? 10
And jagg'd his seamlesse coat, had that been fine,
With curious questions and divisions ?
But all the doctrine which he taught and gave
Was cleare as heav'n, from whence it came.
At least those beams of truth which onely save 15
Surpasse in brightnesse any flame.
Love God and love your neighbour. Watch and
pray.
Do as ye would be done unto.
O dark instructions! Ev'n as dark as day!
Who can these Gordian knots undo ? 20
But he doth bid us take his bloud for wine.
Bid what he please! Yet I am sure
To take and taste what he doth there designe
Is all that saves, and not obscure.
Then burn thy Epicycles, foolish man. 25
Break all thy spheres and save thy head.
Faith needs no staffe of flesh, but stoutly can
To heav'n alone both go and leade.
100 THE BRITISH CHURCH
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT :
The English Church, a beautiful mean between the
tawdry Romish and barren Presbyterian. So Epi-
grammata Apologetica, XXVIII. Cf . Donne, Satire
III, 43-62.
NOTES:
5. It might be thought that Herbert is here approving
the ecclesiastical practice of dating by the Church
Year. But all his letters, even those from Bemer-
ton, are dated by the secular month and day.
10. Outlandish=foTeigD. and strange, as in FAITH, II,
233, 1. 9, and in the title of JACULA PRTTDENTUM,
"Outlandish Proverbs."
11. Painted— artificial, unreal, as in JORDAN, II, 87,1. 5.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 101
THE BRITISH CHURCH
I JOY, deare Mother, when I view
Thy perfect lineaments, and hue
Both sweet and bright.
Beautie in thee takes up her place,
And dates her letters from thy face 5
When she doth write.
A fine aspect in fit array,
Neither too mean, nor yet too gay,
Shows who is best.
Outlandish looks may not compare, 10
For all they either painted are,
Or else undrest.
102 THE BRITISH CHURCH
14. The Church of Rome, throned on her seven hills,
a world-church, was more attractive to ambitious
men than the local church of England.
16. Rome has tolerated a sentimental artificiality in so
many details of her worship that her whole system
of religion has come to seem artificial, her face to
be daubed with paint, 1. 11.
26. The mean=the middle path, Aristotle's ficcror^s.
Cf. THE COUNTRY PARSON, XIII: All this he doth
not as old of necessity, or as putting a holiness in
the things, bid as desiring to keep the middle way
between superstition and slovenlinesse.
29. To make thee as secure as a castle with two moats,
protected against the twofold dangers of ostenta
tion and disorder. The religious disturbances of
his time Herbert discusses also in the next poem,
in THE PRIESTHOOD, 11,375,1. 33, and allegorically
in HUMILITIE, II, 239.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 103
She on the hills which wantonly
Allureth all, in hope to be
By her preferr'd, 15
Hath kiss'd so long her painted shrines
That ev'n her face by kissing shines,
For her reward.
She in the valley is so shie
Of dressing that her hair doth lie 20
About her eares;
While she avoids her neighbour's pride,
She wholly goes on th* other side,
And nothing wears.
But dearest Mother, (what those misse,) 25
The mean, thy praise and glorie is
And long may be.
Blessed be God, whose love it was
To double-moat thee with his grace,
And none but thee. 30
104 CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Divisions within the church (schismes) are more
serious than attacks from without (rents).
NOTES:
1. Perhaps he is led to figure the Church, Christ's
body, as a rose on account of the Rose of Sharon,
(Song of Solomon ii, 1). But quite as likely the
rose is employed merely as the object which is fair
est; cf. THE ROSE, II, 391, 1. 17.— C/wir=throne,
stately place. So, too, 1. 10, and THE TEMPER, II,
313, 1. 9.
2. Triumph, accented on the last syllable as in DIVIN-
ITIE, III, 97, 1. 8.
5. So PEACE, II, 377, 1. 17.
6. Perhaps bottome here means not the under part, but
the stem. Cf. THE DISCHARGE, III, 191, 1. 45.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 105
CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES
BRAVE rose, (alas !) where art thou ? In the chair
Where thou didst lately so triumph and shine
A worm doth sit, whose many feet and hair
Are the more foul the more thou wert divine.
This, this hath done it, this did bite the root 5
And bottome of the leaves ; which when the
winde
Did once perceive, it blew them under foot,
Where rude unhallow'd steps do crush and
grinde
Their beauteous glories. Onely shreds of thee,
And those all bitten, in thy chair I see. 10
106 CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES
14. Martyrdoms. Foxe's Book of Martyrs was pub
lished thirty years before Herbert was born.
17. Cf. THE WORLD, II, 227, 1. 13.
22. North-winde; cf. 1. 6. The influence of Scotch
Presbyterianism was continually increasing in
England. Possibly we may find here an allusion
to Melville's Anti-Tami-Cami-Categoria, which in
early life Herbert had answered (I, 25).
23. Them=your several parts (1. 21).
27. When only this little spot of earth is awake to the
Gospel, shall we here be disunited ?
29. The thought of these two lines is expanded in
GRIEF, III, 323, 1. 1-10.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 107
Why doth my Mother blush? Is she the rose
And shows it so? Indeed Christ's precious
bloud
Gave you a colour once; which when your foes
Thought to let out, the bleeding did you good,
And made you look much fresher then before. 15
But when debates and fretting jealousies
Did worm and work within you more and more,
Your colour faded, and calamities
Turned your ruddie into pale and bleak.
Your health and beautie both began to break. 20
Then did your sev'rall parts unloose and start.
Which when your neighbours saw, like a north-
winde
They rushed in and cast them in the dirt,
Where Pagans tread. O Mother deare and
kinde,
Where shall I get me eyes enough to weep, 25
As many eyes as starres ? Since it is night,
And much of Asia and Europe fast asleep,
And ev'n all Africk. Would at least I might
With these two poore ones lick up all the dew
Which falls by night, and poure it out for you !
108 THE JEWS
INTRODUCTORY:
Vaughan has enlarged this in his poem, The Jews.
There is a curious passage on the Jews in THE
COUNTRY PARSON, XXXIV.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique, but differs only in rhyming system from
JUSTICE, III, 253.
SUBJECT :
Christianity grafted upon Judaism has absorbed
the vitality of the Jews, and should now repay. Cf.
Romans xi, 17-21.
NOTES :
2. Cyens= scions, grafts.
3. By Apostolic succession. Cf. WHITSUNDAY, II,
157, 1. 17.
6. By keeping the letter, they lose it.
8. Revelation viii, 6.
12. Job xiv, 9.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 109
THE JEWS
POORE nation, whose sweet sap and juice
Our cyens have purloin'd, and left you drie;
Whose streams we got by the Apostles' sluce
And use in baptisme, while ye pine and die;
Who, by not keeping once, became a debter, 5
And now by keeping lose the letter;
Oh that my prayers! mine, alas!
Oh that some Angel might a trumpet sound,
At which the Church falling upon her face
Should crie so loud untill the trump were drown'd,
And by that crie of her deare Lord obtain 11
That your sweet sap might come again !
1 10 SELF-CONDEMNATION
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The preferring of Barabbas (popularity with the
multitude), or of Judas (gold), to Christ has not
ceased in our day.
NOTES :
6. That choice = the choosing of Barabbas. Thy
storie=the description of you. Storie is used five
times by Herbert in this sense, and also rhyming
with glorie : THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 21, 1. 52, and
25, 1. 94, COMPLAINING, III, 267, 1. 7, and A DIA
LOGUE- ANTHEME, III, 343, 1. 3. Cf., too, Crashaw's
Wishes to his Supposed Mistress: "Be you my fic
tions, but her story."
10. John viii, 44.
12. Her where we should use its, which was hardly es
tablished in Herbert's time.
18. So Vaughan in his Rules and Lessons, p. 45 : "Who
sells Religion is a Judas- Jew." In THE COUNTRY
PARSON, II, Herbert writes: They who for the hope
of promotion neglect any necessary admonition or
reproof e, sell (with Judas) their Lord and Master.
19. Prevent= anticipate. 1 Corinthians xi, 31.
20. That light= conscience. Proverbs xx, 27; John i, 9.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 111
SELF-CONDEMNATION
THOU wko condemnest Jewish hate
For choosing Barabbas, a murderer,
Before the Lord of glorie,
Look back upon thine own estate,
Call home thine eye (that busie wanderer), 5
That choice may be thy storie.
He that doth love, and love amisse,
This world's delights before true Christian joy,
Hath made a Jewish choice.
The world an ancient murderer is; 10
Thousands of souls it hath, and doth destroy
With her enchanting voice.
He that hath made a some wedding
Between his soul and gold, and hath preferred
False gain before the true, 15
Hath done what he condemnes in reading;
For he hath sold for money his deare Lord,
And is a Judas-Jew.
Thus we prevent the last great day,
And judge our selves. That light which sin and
passion 20
Did before dimme and choke,
When once those snuffes are ta'ne away,
Shines bright and cleare, ev'n unto condemnation,
Without excuse or cloke.
112 AVARICE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Of seventeen sonnets, six — like this — are in the
Shakespearian form.
SUBJECT:
Money, though created by man, has become his
master.
NOTES:
1. 1 Timothy vi, 10.
9. Forcing; cf. THE PEARL, II, 381, 1. 6.
10. The face of mon=the king's head on the coin.
14. So, too, PROVIDENCE, III, 87, 1. 82-84.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 113
AVARICE
MONEY, thou bane of blisse and sourse of wo,
Whence com'st thou that thou art so fresh and
fine?
I know thy parentage is base and low,
Man found thee poore and dirtie in a mine.
Surely thou didst so little contribute 5
To this great kingdome which thou now hast
got
That he was fain, when thou wert destitute,
To digge thee out of thy dark cave and grot.
Then forcing thee by fire, he made thee bright.
Nay, thou hast got the face of man, for we 10
Have with our stamp and seal transferr'd our right ;
Thou art the man, and man but drosse to thee.
Man calleth thee his wealth, who made thee rich,
And while he digs out thee, falls in the ditch.
114 DECAY
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique, but differs only in rhyming system from
JORDAN, II, 87.
SUBJECT:
Throughout recorded history the field of inter
course between God and man has steadily nar
rowed. Cf. WHITSUNDAY, II, 157.
NOTES :
1-3. Genesis xix, 3; xxxii, 24; xviii, 33; Judges vi, 11.
4. To-day God silently endures human complaints;
with Moses He was so intimate that He could
speak and check them. Exodus xxxii, 14.
5. Exodus xxxii, 10.
7. Judges vi, 11; Exodus iii, 2; 1 Kings xix, 9; Genesis
xxiv, 11.
9. Exodus xix, 20.
10. Exodus xxviii, 33-35. Cf. AARON, III, 11, 1. 3.
12. Luke xvii, 21.
13. Sinne= original sin ; Satan may refer to present
ill-doing. Cf. SELF-CONDEMNATION, III, 111,
1. 20.
15. The portion left by Sin and Satan, who are here
figured as independent.
16. Whenas= since thy love — once widespread, but
now forced back by sin — keeps itself hidden,
awaiting the flames of the judgment day.
18. Closet up itself. Cf. WHITSUNDAY, II, 159, 1. 21.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 115
DECAY
SWEET were the dayes when thou didst lodge with
Lot,
Struggle with Jacob, sit with Gideon,
Advise with Abraham, when thy power could not
Encounter Moses' strong complaints and mone.
Thy words were then, Let me alone. 5
One might have sought and found thee presently
At some fair oak, or bush, or cave, or well.
Is my God this way ? No, they would reply,
He is to Sinai gone as we heard tell. 9
List, ye may heare great Aaron's bell.
But now thou dost thy self immure and close
In some one corner of a feeble heart,
Where yet both Sinne and Satan, thy old foes,
Do pinch and straiten thee and use much art
To gain thy thirds and little part. 15
I see the world grows old, whenas the heat
Of thy great love once spread, as in an urn
Doth closet up itself and still retreat,
Cold sinne still forcing it, till it return,
And calling Justice, all things burn. 20
116 JUSTICE
INTRODUCTORY:
Another poem with this title is given, III, 253. This
much resembles DEATH, II, 263.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The justice of God, as revealed by Christ, is friendly,
not hostile.
NOTES :
5. Discolour = take away the living color, make thee
ghastly. The word is used again in AFFLICTION,
III, 269, 1. 10.
7. The dishes are the pans of the scales of justice. The
beam is the cross-piece from which the dishes hang;
the scape, the upright part at right angles with the
beam.
10. TorCring, thus spelled in ed. 1633, meaning tortur
ing, has often been erroneously printed tottering.
13. 2 Corinthians iii, 14. — Pure= transparent.
19, 21. The emphatic words are me and thee.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 117
JUSTICE
O DBEADFTJLL Justice, what a fright and terrour
Wast thou of old,
When sinne and errour
Did show and shape thy looks to me,
And through their glasse discolour thee ! 5
He that did but look up was proud and bold.
The dishes of thy ballance seem'd to gape,
Like two great pits.
The beam and scape
Did like some tort'ring engine show. 10
Thy hand above did burn and glow,
Danting the stoutest hearts, the proudest wits.
But now that Christ's pure vail presents the sight,
I see no fears.
Thy hand is white, 15
Thy scales like buckets, which attend
And interchangeably descend,
Lifting to heaven from this well of tears.
For where before thou still didst call on me,
Now I still touch 20
And harp on thee.
God's promises have made thee mine.
Why should I justice now decline ?
Against me there is none, but for me much.
118 CONSTANCIE
INTRODUCTORY :
Several writers of ' Herbert's time — N. Breton,
Chapman, J. Earle, Bishop Hall, Sir T. Overbury,
and, in modified form, Sir J. Davies — had made
elaborate studies of single human traits, much in the
manner of Theophrastus in his Characters. This
poem, so unlike Herbert's other work, is an experi
ment in following the current fashion. Vaughan
imitates it in his Righteousness. The Standard of
Equality, by Philo-Decaeus, was dedicated in 1647
to Sir John Danvers, the stepfather of Herbert, in
these words: "Lighting casually on the poems of
Mr. George Herbert, lately deceased, (whose pious
life and death have converted me to a full belief
that there is a St. George,) and therein perusing
the description of a constant man, it directed my
thoughts unto yourself; having heard that the au
thor in his lifetime had therein designed no other
title than your character in that description." These
are the words of a flattering dedicator. Few persons
could be found less like Herbert's Constant Man
than Sir John Danvers. See I, 24.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The sturdy righteousness which is not prompted
or checked by expediency. Perhaps he has in mind
the 101st Psalm, which in THE COUNTRY PARSON,
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 119
CONSTANCIE
WHO is the honest man ?
He that doth still and strongly good pursue,
To God, his neighbour, and himself most true.
Whom neither force nor fawning can
Unpinne or wrench from giving all their due. 5
Whose honestie is not
So loose or easie that a ruffling winde
Can blow away, or glittering look it blinde.
Who rides his sure and even trot 9
While the world now rides by, now lags behinde.
Who, when great trials come,
Nor seeks nor shunnes them; but doth calmly
stay
Till he the thing and the example weigh.
All being brought into a summe,
What place or person calls for, he doth pay. 15
120 CONSTANCIE
X, he advises should be expressed in a fayre table as
being the rule of a family, and hung upon the wall.
NOTES :
1. Cf. Psalm xv, and Horace's Integer Vitae. A vig
orous paraphrase of the latter had just appeared in
Campion's The Man of Life Upright. The virtue
of Constancie was a favorite one with Herbert;
cf. THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 27, 1. 115-120.
6. Vaughan has paraphrased this stanza in his Rules
and Lessons, stanza ix.
8. Glittering look, a dazzling glance of the great can
not make the honest man shut his eyes to iniquity.
13. The thing and the example = the principle and its
special application.
20. Cf. Donne, Letter to Lady Carey, 1. 34. The
three words in Herbert's stanza which formerly
rhymed are now all pronounced differently.
24. Others do right so long as eyes can see them. He
regards only Virtue's all-observing eye.
26-30. / forget all things so I may do them good who
want it. So I do my part to them, let them think
of me what they will or can. If I should regard
such things, it were in another's 'power to defeat
my charity, and evil should be stronger than good :
Herbert's letter to his brother Henry, 1630.
31. When the world's game runs counter to his right
eous purposes (cf. AFFLICTION, II, 345, 1. 53), no
thing can induce him to distort his movements
away from his purpose into conformity with evil.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 121
Whom none can work or wooe
To use in any thing a trick or sleight,
For above all things he abhorres deceit.
His words and works and fashion too
All of a piece, and all are cleare and straight. 20
Who never melts or thaws
At close tentations. When the day is done,
His goodnesse sets not, but in dark can runne.
The sunne to others writeth laws,
And is their vertue. Vertue is his Sunne. 25
Who, when he is to treat
With sick folks, women, those whom passions
sway,
Allows for that and keeps his constant way.
Whom others' faults do not defeat; 29
But though men fail him, yet his part doth play.
Whom nothing can procure,
When the wide world runnes bias, from his will
To writhe his limbes, and share, not mend the ill.
This is the Mark-man, safe and sure,
Who still is right, and prayes to be so still. 35
122 THE FOIL
INTRODUCTORY:
A foil is a piece of metal employed as a setting for
a jewel, in order to give it richer color. Cf . To THB
QUEENE OF BOHEMIA, III, 425, 1. 16. So Shake
speare, Lover's Complaint, 1. 153:
"Which remain'd the foil
Of this false jewel, and his amorous spoil."
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Grief brings out the nature of sin as heaven does
that of virtue.
NOTES :
1. If we below could see.
8. Grief. Is this possibly a misprint for sin ? In 1. 6
vertues and sinning are parallel. The sense seems
to require that they should be so here.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 123
THE FOIL
IF we could see below
The sphere of vertue and each shining grace
As plainly as that above doth show,
This were the better skie, the brighter place.
God hath made starres the foil
To set off vertues, griefs to set off sinning.
Yet in this wretched world we toil
As if grief were not foul, nor vertue winning.
124 MAN'S MEDLEY
INTRODUCTORY:
Translated into Latin in 1678 by William Dilling-
ham, with the title GAUDIUM.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
"Man has double joys and sorrows, answering
to his double nature; but the soul's joys are to
be preferred, as lasting into the world beyond :"
H. C. Beeching.
NOTES:
8. Make their pretence=l&y hold upon. See JORDAN,
II, 93, 1. 16.
VIH. BEMERTON STUDY 125
MAN'S MEDLEY
HEAEK, how the birds do sing,
And woods do ring!
All creatures have their joy, and man hath his.
Yet if we rightly measure,
Man's joy and pleasure 5
Rather hereafter then in present is.
To this life things 01 sense
Make their pretence;
In th' other Angels have a right by birth.
Man ties them both alone, 10
And makes them one,
With th' one hand touching heav'n, with th' other
earth.
126 MAN'S MEDLEY
15. A dark passage, the difficulties mainly connecting
themselves with the significance of lace, the mean
ing of after, and the subject of should. The curious
lace may represent that beauty (cf . PEACE, II, 377,
1. 9; THE PEARL, II, 381, 1. 16) which, everywhere
fringing physical objects, seems never really to be
long to them. Still further along in the spiritual
direction, next after this beautiful trimming, —
rather than after, or in accordance with, his ma
terial stuff, — man (he of 1. 15) should take his place
or get his significance. So interpreted, the passage
would be a characteristic bit of Herbert's Plato-
nism. But the sense of after is severely strained. In
EMPLOYMENT, II, 347, 1. 12, the stuff or material
of our life is said to be with God.
30. Herbert uses the same rhyme in the second stanza,
and often elsewhere. Throughout the seventeenth
century the word one was pronounced not like our
won, but like our own; as we still pronounce it
in alone, and sometimes in none and only. See
SEPULCHRE, III, 155, 1. 3.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 127
In soul he mounts and flies,
In flesh he dies. 14
He wears a stuffe whose thread is coarse and round,
But trimm'd with curious lace,
And should take place
After the trimming, not the stuffe and ground.
Not that he may not here
Taste of the cheer; 20
But as birds drink and straight lift up their head,
So must he sip and think
Of better drink
He may attain to after he is dead.
But as his joyes are double, 25
So is his trouble.
He hath two winters, other things but one.
Both frosts and thoughts do nip
And bite his lip,
And he of all things fears two deaths alone. 30
Yet ev'n the greatest griefs
May be reliefs,
Could he but take them right and in their wayes.
Happie is he whose heart
Hath found the art 35
To turn his double pains to double praise.
128 GIDDINESSE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Used also in DULNESSE, III, 207.
SUBJECT:
"Unite my heart to fear thy name:" Psalm Ixxxvi,
11. There is likeness of thought between this
poem and MISERIE, II, 251, where man's wretch
edness is attributed to his instability.
NOTES :
11. Smidge=to lie snug, to sleep. So Vaughan under
stands it in his Misery, 1. 65 :
" The age, the present times, are not
' To snudge in and embrace a cot."
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 129
GIDDINESSE
OH, what a thing is man ! How farre from power,
From setled peace and rest!
He is some twentie sev'rall men at least
Each sev'rall houre. 4
One while he counts of heav'n as of his treasure;
But then a thought creeps in
And calls him coward who for fear of sinne
Will lose a pleasure.
Now he will fight it out and to the warres;
Now eat his bread in peace 10
And snudge in quiet. Now he scorns increase;
Now all day spares.
130 GIDDINESSE
12. Spares = saves his money, is sparing, — its usual
meaning in Herbert. Spare in its other sense — to
part with — occurs in Herbert only rarely. MOR
TIFICATION, II, 261, 1. 34.
15. It is partly true that a whirlwind blows, for his
mind is like a whirlwind.
17. Cf. THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 17, 1. 23.
19. In dying the dolphin takes on a variety of colors,
which Herbert attributes to its changing feelings.
So Byron, Childe Harold, IV, stanza xxix:
" Parting day
Dies like the dolphin, whom each pang imbues
With a new colour as it gasps away."
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 131
He builds a house, which quickly down must go,
As if a whirl winde blew 14
And crusht the building ; and it 's partly true,
His minde is so.
O what a sight were Man if his attires
Did alter with his minde;
And like a Dolphin's skinne, his clothes combin'd
With his desires! 20
Surely if each one saw another's heart,
There would be no commerce,
No sale or bargain passe. All would disperse,
And live apart.
Lord, mend or rather make us. One creation 25
Will not suffice our turn.
Except thou make us dayly, we shall spurn
Our own salvation.
132 VANITIE
INTRODUCTORY:
Another poem with this title is given, II, 357.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Man's zeal and success in pursuing things remote
and unimportant. Cf. DIVINITIE, III, 97.
NOTES:
1. For the appropriateness of these words bore and
thred see note on PRAYER, II, 183, 1. 9.
3. Cf. THE AGONIE, m, 153, 1. 3.
7. " Aspects=\he appearance of the planets in their re
lation to each other, and therefore in their supposed
influence on earthly matters : " A. R. Waller. — Full-
ey'd is used again in THE GLANCE, III, 331, 1. 20.
14. A similar thought appears in PROVIDENCE, III,
87, 1. 81.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 133
VANITIE
THE fleet Astronomer can bore
And thred the spheres with his quick-piercing
minde.
He views their stations, walks from doore to doore,
Surveys as if he had design'd 4
To make a purchase there. He sees their dances,
And knoweth long before
Both their full-ey'd aspects and secret glances.
<
The nimble Diver with his side
Cuts through the working waves, that he may
fetch 9
His dearely-earned pearl, which God did hide
On purpose from the ventrous wretch;
That he might save his life, and also hers
Who with excessive pride
Her own destruction and his danger wears.
134 VANITIE
15. From any created object the chemist can strip the
outward traits, and by analysis lay bare the ulti
mate elements, studying these in their detachment
instead of in those composite forms in which they
usually present themselves to our senses.
17. Callow= unfledged. PROVIDENCE, III, 85, 1. 63.
23. So in THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 15, 1. 9, we read
of God's lesson written in the soul. Jeremiah xxxi,
QQ
OO.
26. Romans x, 6-8.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 135
The subtil Chymick can devest 15
And strip the creature naked, till he finde
The callow principles within their nest.
There he imparts to them his minde,
Admitted to their bed-chamber, before 19
They appeare trim and drest
To ordinarie suitours at the doore.
What hath not man sought out and found,
But his deare God ? Who yet his glorious law
Embosomes in us, mellowing the ground 24
With showres and frosts, with love and
aw,
So that we need not say, Where's this command ?
Poore man, thou searchest round
To finde out death, but missest life at hand.
136 DOTAGE
DATE
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique, but differs only in rhyming system from
THE PRIESTHOOD, II, 373.
SUBJECT:
Doting man mistakes nothing for something.
NOTES:
1. Glozing= flatteringly deceptive. So Milton, Para
dise Lost, III, 93: "Man will hearken to his gloz-
ing lies/* — Casks= empty barrels. Dr. Grosart
proposes the emendation husks to correspond with
rooted miseries in the next stanza.
2. Night-fires=ignes fatui, will-o'-the-wisps.
3. Chases in A rras= hunting-parties in silk, instead
of in flesh and bone, — contrasted with the sure
footed griefs of 1. 9.
4. Career = full tilt, as in JOSEPH'S COAT, III, 301,
1.6.
5. In VANITIE, II, 357, 1. 4, solid work is contrasted
with false embroyderies. There is a Spanish pro
verb: "Nada entre duos platos."
7. Same phrase in OBEDIENCE, II, 387, 1. 28.
8. In grain= going through and through. — Ripe and
blown— in full flower.
14. In THE COUNTRY PARSON, XV, Herbert speaks
of the miserable comparison of the moment of griefs
here with the weight of joyes hereafter.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 137
DOTAGE
FALSE glozing pleasures, casks of happinesse,
Foolish night-fires, women's and children's
wishes,
Chases in Arras, guilded emptinesse,
Shadows well mounted, dreams in a career, 4
Embroider'd lyes, nothing between two dishes;
These are the pleasures here.
True earnest sorrows, rooted miseries,
Anguish in grain, vexations ripe and blown,
Sure-footed griefs, solid calamities,
Plain demonstrations, evident and cleare, 10
Fetching their proofs ev'n from the very bone;
These are the sorrows here.
But oh the folly of distracted men,
Who griefs in earnest, joyes in jest pursue;
Preferring, like brute beasts, a lothsome den 15
Before a court, ev'n that above so cleare,
Where are no sorrows, but delights more true
Then miseries are here!
138 BUSINESSE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
The couplets are like those of ANTIPHON, II, 107.
The triplets are unique. The rhyming vowel at the
beginning and near the end is a. All the other
rhymes are in e or o.
SUBJECT :
After sinning, there is only one business, — ener
getic repentance. Lines 3-14 (the human side of
sin) correspond with lines 17-28 (the divine side).
NOTES :
1. Idle here and in 1. 15 = indifferent, doing nothing
about it, the quality described at length in MISERIE,
II, 251.
3. Elsewhere waters know their work and seek their
end. How is it with the waters of the eye ?
8. The man of faults and fears will need tears.
9. Plot : it is their plan or scheme to be never at rest.
14. If you will not put yourself to the slight pain of
repentance, it is a pity you have a body in which
pungent effects of sin must be recorded. These
lines correspond with 1. 7 and 8.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 139
BUSINESSE
CANST be idle ? Canst thou play,
Foolish soul, who sinn'd to day ?
Rivers run, and springs each one
Know their home, and get them gone.
Hast thou tears, or hast thou none ? 5
If, poore soul, thou hast no tears,
Would thou hadst no faults or fears!
Who hath these, those ill forbears.
Windes still work; it is their plot,
Be the season cold or hot. 10
Hast thou sighs, or hast thou not ?
If thou hast no sighs or grones,
Would thou hadst no flesh and bones!
Lesser pains scape greater ones.
But if yet thou idle be, 15
Foolish soul, who di'd for thee ?
140 BUSINESSE
22. The death of the body and of the soul. Revelation
xxi, 8. Cf. MAN'S MEDLEY, III, 127, 1. 30.
24. Everything in this poem is antithetic: rivers and
tears are offset against windes and sighs; Christ's
life against his death; our losing gold against our
finding silver; and all in illustration of the great
antithesis of sin and salvation.
28. The present life, and the life of misery hereafter.
29. Can man properly take time to breathe between
committing sin and accepting the new life offered
by Christ's death ?
32. His crosse—his affliction.
33. Shall he not tell his Lord of his loss ?
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 141
Who did leave his Father's throne
To assume thy flesh and bone ?
Had he life, or had he none ?
If he had not liv'd for thee, 20
Thou hadst di'd most wretchedly,
And two deaths had been thy fee.
He so farre thy good did plot
That his own self he forgot.
Did he die, or did he not ? 25
If he had not di'd for thee,
Thou hadst liv'd in miserie.
Two lives worse then ten deaths be.
And hath any space of breath 29
'Twixt his sinnes and Saviour's death ?
He that loseth gold, though drosse,
Tells to all he meets his crosse.
He that sinnes, hath he no losse ?
He that findes a silver vein
Thinks on it, and thinks again. 35
Brings thy Saviour's death no gain ?
Who in heart not ever kneels
Neither sinne nor Saviour feels.
142 SINNES ROUND
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
The same as that of THE CHURCH-PORCH, except
that this is a case of "link-verse," i. e. the last
line of each stanza is the first line of the next, and
the last line of the poem connects with the first.
This structure, which at first seems merely ingen
ious, really expresses as no other could the self-
perpetuating character of sin. Such beginnings
touch their end. — Southwell in his St. Peter's
Complaint, stanza cxiii (1595), has this stanza:
" My eye reades mournfull lessons to my hart,
My hart doth to my thought the greefes expound,
My thought the same doth to my tongue impart,
My tongue the message in the eares doth sound;
My eares back to my hart their sorrowes send ;
Thus circling greefes runne round without an end."
And Donne had already employed the device, though
with far less delicacy and appropriateness, in his
Corona or circlet of Divine Sonnets, where the
last line of each is repeated as the first line of
the next, and the last line of the seventh sonnet
is the first line of the first. Several of Daniel's son
nets are similarly linked. In the following poem
Herbert uses this metre with another fanciful
modification of the last line.
SUBJECT:
Admit the beginnings of sin, and evil thoughts,
words, and deeds follow in a never-ending round.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 143
SINNES ROUND
SORRIE I am, my God, some I am
That my offences course it in a ring.
My thoughts are working like a busie flame
Untill their cockatrice they hatch and bring. 4
And when they once have perfected their draughts,
* My words take fire from my inflamed thoughts.
144 SINNES ROUND
NOTES:
4. For ancient beliefs about this fabulous monster,
see Isaiah lix, 5, and xiv, 29. For both ancient and
modern beliefs that "he proceedeth from a cock's
egg, hatched under a toad or serpent, killeth at a
distance and poisoneth by the eye," see Sir T.
Browne's Vulgar Errors, III, 7. Spenser has him
in The Amoretti, XLIX : " Kill with looks as cocka
trices do."
8. Mount Aetna.
9. This rhyme occurs in three other poems.
10. To bring evil out into the air kindles its flame
anew. Cf. THE ODOUR, III, 25, 1. 25.
12. So JACULA PRUDENTUM: Sins are not known till
they be acted.
15. Genesis xi, 4.
17. The same sinful sequence appears in MARIE MAG
DALENE, III, 151, 1. 12.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 145
My words take fire from my inflamed thoughts,
Which spit it forth like the Sicilian hill.
They vent the wares and passe them with their
faults,
And by their breathing ventilate the ill. 10
But words suffice not where are lewd intentions;
My hands do joyn to finish the inventions.
My hands do joyn to finish the inventions.
And so my sinnes ascend three stories high,
As Babel grew before there were dissentions. 15
Yet ill deeds loyter not, for they supplie
New thoughts of sinning. Wherefore, to my shame,
Some I am, my God, some I am.
146 THE WATER-COURSE
INTRODUCTORY :
Dualism is deep in Herbert. His universe presents
itself in antithetic pairs. Man and God, nature
and spirit, pleasure and duty, death and life, — to
these irreconcilable opposites his thought continu
ally recurs. Between them he recognizes no inner
kinship, as do Vaughan, Crashaw, and the Mys
tics. For him approach to the one is ever denial
of the other. This pessimistic little poem, with its
two stanzas and contrasted endings, is an extreme
exhibit of his temper.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
A special adaptation of the metre of THE CHURCH-
PORCH, II, 15, and SINNES ROUND, III, 143.
SUBJECT:
What befits affliction is not complaint, but repent
ance.
NOTES :
6. Water pipes are mentioned also in WHITSUNDAY,
II, 159, 1. 17.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 147
THE WATER-COURSE
THOU who dost dwell and linger here below,
Since the condition of this world is frail
Where of all plants afflictions soonest grow,
If troubles overtake thee, do not wail;
For who can look for lesse that loveth \ _
Strife.
But rather turn the pipe and water's course
To serve thy sinnes, and furnish thee with store
Of sov'raigne tears, springing from true remorse;
That so in purenesse thou mayst him adore 9
™T_ . „. ( Salvation.
Who gives to man as he sees fit { _
( Damnation.
148 THE PULLEY
INTRODUCTORY :
God's means of drawing us to himself. J. Churton
Collins writes in his Treasury of Minor British
Poetry: " This is the one poem of Herbert's which
is not marred by his characteristic defects, affected
quaintness, extravagance, prosaic baldness, and dis
cordant rhythm. " I cannot agree with this estimate.
The poetry of Herbert does not seem to me in
general to be marked with these characteristics, nor
the present poem to be singularly free from them.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
"Thou hast made us for Thyself, and our heart
is restless until it finds rest in Thee;" Augustine,
Confessions, I, 1.
NOTES :
7. These good gifts to man are often referred to by
Herbert under slightly varying names: as in THE
WORLD, II, 225; THE PEARL, II, 381; THE QUIP,
III, 33.
16, 17. Rest, restlessnesse. There are not above half-a-
dozen puns in Herbert. Few poets of his day are
so free from them.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 149
THE PULLEY
WHEN God at first made man,
Having a glasse of blessings standing by,
Let us (said he) poure on him all we can.
Let the world's riches, which dispersed lie,
Contract into a span. 5
So strength first made a way,
Then beautie flow'd, then wisdome, honour, plea
sure.
When almost all was out, God made a stay,
Perceiving that alone of all his treasure
Rest in the bottome lay. 10
For if I should (said he)
Bestow this Jewell also on my creature,
He would adore my gifts instead of me,
And rest in Nature, not the God of Nature.
So both should losers be. 15
Yet let him keep the rest,
But keep them with repining restlesnesse.
Let him be rich and wearie, that at least,
If goodnesse leade him not, yet wearinesse
May tosse him to my breast. 20
150 MARIE MAGDALENE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique. Rhyming system same as CHURCH-MONU
MENTS, II, 201.
SUBJECT:
The sinner must share, at least by tears, in his own
cleansing.
NOTES :
1. Luke vii, 38, and John xii, 3.
11. Tears like seas, again in THE SIZE, III, 195, 1. 47.
12. This threefold aspect of sin is treated in SINNES
ROUND, III, 143.
14. Dash= bespatter.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 151
MARIE MAGDALENE
WHEN blessed Marie wip'd her Saviour's feet,
(Whose precepts she had trampled on before,)
And wore them for a Jewell on her head,
Shewing his steps should be the street
Wherein she thenceforth evermore 5
With pensive humblenesse would live and tread;
She being stain'd her self, why did she strive
To make him clean who could not be defil'd ?
Why kept she not her tears for her own faults,
And not his feet ? Though we could dive 10
In tears like seas, our sinnes are piPd
Deeper then they, in words, and works, and
thoughts.
Deare soul, she knew who did vouchsafe and
deigne
To bear her filth, and that her sinnes did dash
Ev'n God himself; wherefore she was not loth, 15
As she had brought wherewith to stain,
So to bring in wherewith to wash.
And yet, in washing one, she washed both.
152 THE AGONIE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used also in THE CROSSE, III, 231.
SUBJECT :
The two greatest forces of the world and the least
understood, Sin and Love, meet at their height
in Christ's last hours; where the one had power to
crush him in the Garden, the other to bring from
his Cross life for all.
NOTES :
3. Two strains of thought, as frequently with Her
bert, blend in this expression: Scientific men have
applied their measuring-rods to determine the dis
tance of the earth from the stars. The use of the
measuring-rod then suggests the staff in the hand
of the traveller. Cf. DIVINITIE, III, 99, 1. 27. J.
Howell, in a letter dated 1627, writes: "The
philosopher can fathom the Deep, measure Moun
tains, reach the Stars with a Staff, and bless
Heaven with a Girdle."
11. Perhaps an allusion to Isaiah Ixiii, 3. Cf. PRAISE,
III, 47, 1. 38.
15. Set abroach=set running. The word is used again
in the same connection in DIVINITIE, III, 99, 1. 9.
18. John vi, 55. Cf. THE INVITATION, III, 49, 1. 12.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 153
THE AGONIE
PHILOSOPHERS have measured mountains,
Fathom'd the depths of seas, of states, and kings,
Walk'd with a staffe to heav'n, and traced foun
tains ;
But there are two vast, spacious things,
The which to measure it doth more behove, 5
Yet few there are that sound them : Sinne and
Love.
Who would know Sinne, let him repair
Unto Mount Olivet; there shall he see
A man so wrung with pains that all his hair,
His skinne, his garments bloudie be. 10
Sinne is that presse and vice which forceth pain
To hunt his cruell food through ev'ry vein.
Who knows not Love, let him assay
And taste that juice which on the crosse a pike
Did set again abroach; then let him say 15
If ever he did taste the like.
Love is that liquor sweet and most divine
Which my God feels as bloud; but I, as wine.
154 SEPULCHRE
DATE:
Not found in W.; but early in style.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The contrast between hearts and stones as regards
their openness to Christ: the former should be ten
der, hospitable, clean, restful, impressible. Christ
found only the latter so.
NOTES :
5. I suppose this to mean, Our hearts have room
enough, and to spare; and I so punctuate. But ed.
1633 reads our hearts good store, without comma or
apostrophe.
9. Large, i. e. with room for sins and trifles by the
score.
10. Whatever, the impatient interrogative = what pos
sible, what in the world, could the rock have done
to need thee for its purification ?
16. Order; a noun to be joined with quiet.
20. And therefore must employ stone. 2 Corinthians
iii, 3.
23. Loving =from offering love to.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 155
SEPULCHRE
O BLESSED bodie ! Whither art thou thrown ?
No lodging for thee but a cold hard stone ?
So many hearts on earth, and yet not one
Receive thee ? 4
Sure there is room within our hearts — good store!
For they can lodge transgressions by the score.
Thousands of toyes dwell there, yet out of doore
They leave thee.
But that which shews them large, shews them unfit.
Whatever sinne did this pure rock commit, 10
Which holds thee now ? Who hath indited it
Of murder ?
Where our hard hearts have took up stones to brain
thee,
And missing this, most falsly did arraigne thee,
Onely these stones in quiet entertain thee, 15
And order.
And as of old, the law by heav'nly art
Was writ in stone; so thou, which also art
The letter of the word, find'st no fit heart
To hold thee. 20
Yet do we still persist as we began,
And so should perish, but that nothing can,
Though it be cold, hard, foul, from loving man
Withold thee.
156 THE BAG
INTRODUCTORY :
This curious piece is more like Giles Fletcher's
work than anything else of Herbert's. It approaches
its subject from the side of God and not of man,
reporting heavenly events rather than — as is Her
bert's way — human longings. Its style, too, is
Fletcher's, treating the gravest matters sweetly and
with a kind of sportive romance. Fletcher preceded
Herbert both at Westminster School and Trinity
College by only four years. His poem, Christ's Vic
tories, was published in 1610. — #40=mail-bag.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
We cannot despair, since Christ is open to all our
desires. Christ's wounded side seems greatly to
have impressed Herbert. Allusions to it occur in
THE SACRIFICE, II, 147, 1. 246; PRAYER, II, 181,
1. 6; H. BAPTISME, II, 191, 1. 6; DIVINITIE, III,
99, 1. 9; THE AGONIE, III, 153,1. 14; THE CHURCH
MILITANT, III, 363, 1. 69.
NOTES:
5. The reference of this stanza is to the storm on the
Sea of Galilee. Matthew viii, 24.
6. Well= possibly, as in H. COMMUNION, II, 197, 1. 31.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 157
THE BAG
AWAT despair! My gracious Lord doth heare.
Though windes and waves assault my keel,
He doth preserve it; he doth steer,
Ev'n when the boat seems most to reel.
Storms are the triumph of his art. 5
Well may he close his eyes, but not his heart.
Hast thou not heard that my Lord JESUS di'd ?
Then let me tell thee a strange storie.
The God of power, as he did ride
In his majestick robes of glorie, 10
Resolv'd to light; and so one day
He did descend, undressing all the way.
The starres his tire of light and rings obtained,
The cloud his bow, the fire his spear,
The sky his azure mantle gain'd. 15
And when they ask'd what he would wear,
He smiPd and said, as he did go,
He had new clothes a making here below.
158 THE BAG
15. In early Christian art the outer mantle of Christ is
always blue, his inner tunic red ; the latter color
signifying love, the former wisdom. This seems
to be the reason for the employment of azure in
HUMILITIE, II, 239, 1. 2.
18. Cf. Hebrews ii, 17.
20. Luke ii, 7.
26. John xix, 34.
28. Man= guard, attendant. This poem has inspired
Vaughan's Incarnation and Passion.
42. So 1. 1.
VHI. BEMERTON STUDY 159
When he was come, as travellers are wont,
He did repair unto an inne. 20
Both then and after, many a brunt
He did endure to cancell sinne.
And having giv'n the rest before,
Here he gave up his life to pay our score.
But as he was returning, there came one 25
That ran upon him with a spear.
He who came hither all alone,
Bringing nor man, nor arms, nor fear,
Receiv'd the blow upon his side; 29
And straight he turn'd and to his brethren cry'd,
If ye have anything to send or write,
(I have no bag, but here is room)
Unto my father's hands and sight
(Beleeve me) it shall safely come.
That I shall minde what you impart, 35
Look, you may put it very neare my heart.
Or if hereafter any of my friends
Will use me in this kinde, the doore
Shall still be open; what he sends
I will present, and somewhat more, 40
Not to his hurt. Sighs will convey
Any thing to me. Heark despair, away!
160 THE SONNE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Of seventeen sonnets, eleven — like this — depart
in the third quatrain from the Shakespearian form.
SUBJECT:
Similarities of language often correspond with
similarities of meaning. See I, 165.
NOTES:
3. The rising admiration for the vernacular had been
expressed by Sidney in his Defence of Poesie:
"Some will say ours is a mingled language: and
why not so much the better, taking the best of both
the other ? For the uttering sweetly and properly
the conceit of the mind, which is the end of speech,
that hath it equally with any tongue in the world."
4. Cf. THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 43, 1. 239.
8-10. When the light of life grows dim in parents, their
fruit or issue takes it up, passing the flame along
from Adam in Paradise to the latest generation
among Western tribes. So in THE CHURCH MILI
TANT, III, 359, 365, 1. 17, 97. Is there an allusion
here to Plato's torch-race? Repub. I, 328.
14. So, too, EVEN-SONG, III, 59,1. 8. But Herbert shows
forbearance in not playing on this double mean
ing in his SUNDAY, II, 175 — as did Vaughan after
wards. Donne, too, writes: "Joy at th* uprising
of this Sunne and Son: " La Corona, VII, 2.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 161
THE SONNE
LET forrain nations of their language boast,
What fine varietie each tongue affords,
I like our language, as our men and coast.
Who cannot dresse it well, want wit, not words. >
How neatly doe we give one onely name 5 ;
To parents' issue and the sunne's bright starre !
A sonne is light and fruit; a fruitful flame t
Chasing the father's dimnesse, carri'd farre
From the first man in th' East to fresh and new ^
Western disco v'ries of posteritie. 10 j)
So in one word our Lord's humilitie
We turn upon him in a sense most true:
For what Christ once in humblenesse began,
We him in glorie call, The Sonne of Man.
162 LOVE-JOY
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Wherever love and gladness are, there too is Christ.
But the association of Christ with the vine is also
in Herbert's mind.
NOTES:
1, 3. Window and anneal* d. The conditions assumed
in this poem are these : A church window of stained
glass (for anneaVd, see THE WINDOWS, III, 15, 1. 6)
bears the design of the True Vine (John xv, 1). A
section of the repeated pattern (cf . every, 1. 3) shows
a group of stem, leaves, and drooping grapes. The
tendrils, curling in opposite directions, suggest by
their forms to Herbert's eye the opposed curves of
the letters J and C; while the bodie, or material
suggestion of the vine, brings to his mind thoughts
of festivity and human fellowship. This double
suggestion is confirmed by him who understands
both the window and the sources of joy.
5. This forward trait of Herbert's character is again
referred to in THE ANSWER, II, 351, 1. 6.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 163
LOVE-JOY
As on a window late I cast mine eye,
I saw a vine drop grapes with J and C
Anneal'd on every bunch. One standing by
Ask'd what it meant. I (who am never loth
To spend my iudgement) said, It seem'd to me
To be the bodie and the letters both 6
Of Joy and Charitie. Sir, you have not miss'd,
The man reply'd: It figures JESUS CHRIST.
164 4_ I MARY
ARMY
INTRODUCTORY :
In B. this is placed between CHURCH-MUSICK and
CHURCH-LOCK AND KEY. R. Southwell writes in
Our Ladies Salutation:
" Spell Eva backe, and ave shall you finde.
The first beganne, the last reversed our harmes."
" An anagram is the transposition of the letters of a
word so as that, without the omission or repeating
of any letter, they compose another of quite differ
ent signification. Poets have been generally fond
of this scrap of ingenuity and have always used it
to the improvement or disgrace of what the word
primarily signified:" G. Ryley (1714).
DATE:
Not found in W.
NOTES :
2. Perhaps a reminiscence of Hebrews viii, 2.
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 165
ANA_ MARY
AJNA
How well her name an Army doth present
In whom the Lard of hosts did pitch his tent !
166 THE CHURCH-FLOORE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique. With wide rhymes, — 1. 3, 9, and 6, 12.
SUBJECT:
"Ye are the temple of God:'* 1 Corinthians iii, 16.
NOTES :
1. Floore, the groundwork of religion.
7. This poem cannot have been suggested by Salis
bury Cathedral, whose choir is on a level with the
nave.
10. Colossians iii, 14.
14. Neat= delicate.
15. The marble weeps. So GRIEVE NOT, III, 257, 1. 23,
and a variation in THE CHURCH PORCH, II, 63,
1. 417. Cf. Milton's Hymn on Christ's Nativity,
1. 195: "And the chill marble seems to sweat."
16. A modification of this figure is used in CHURCH-
MONUMENTS, II, 201, 1. 4.
V
VIII. BEMERTON STUDY 167
THE CHURCH-FLOORE
MARK you the floore ? That square and speckled
stone,
Which looks so firm and strong,
Is Patience.
And th' other black and grave, wherewith each one
Is checkered all along, 5
Humilitie.
The gentle rising, which on either hand
Leads to the Quire above,
Is Confidence.
But the sweet cement, which in one sure band 10
Ties the whole frame, is Love
And Charitie.
Hither sometimes Sinne steals, and stains
The marble's neat and curious veins;
But all is cleansed when the marble weeps. 15
Sometimes Death, puffing at the doore,
Blows all the dust about the floore;
But while he thinks to spoil the room, he sweeps.
Blest be the Architect whose art
Could build so strong in a weak heart. 20
IX
RESTLESSNESS
PREFACE
THERE came a reaction. The little parish '
which had seemed so attractive in its isola
tion, and into which Herbert had thrown himself
with such joyful eagerness, proved painfully small. •
For thirty-seven years he had lived in the full tide
of affairs. Born in high station, he had found his
associates among the leaders of the day. With the
gayest, the most learned, the most widely influen
tial men of his time, Herbert had long been living
on terms of intimacy, and from them had derived
much of that ability to write fine and wittie on
which to the last he prided himself. Inaction had t
always been in his eyes the most dreaded of evils.
Yet for the rest of his life he was to be cut off
from society. He was to minister to a small group
of farm laborers in a village remote from city,
court, and university. His predecessor had not
endured such conditions; but leaving church and
parsonage in decay, had lived "at a better Par
sonage house sixteen or twenty miles from this
place."
At first the restrictions of Herbert's surroundings
were not irksome. After the storms of the Crisis
period he found peace in sacred tasks and in what
he supposed to be a settled mind. It seemed as if
172 PREFACE TO
at length he past changing were, Fast in God's
Paradise, where no flower can wither. According
to Walton, he remarked to a friend just after his
Induction: / now look back upon my aspiring
thoughts, and think myself more happy than if I
had attain' d what then I so ambitiously thirsted for.
In God and his service is a fulness of all joy and
pleasure, and no satiety. Voluntarily cut off from
outward activities, we have seen him joyfully
developing every possibility within his own narrow
bounds. He explores his priestly duties; he calls on
the services of his Church to disclose their inmost
significance; he records with double diligence the
moods of his soul. While it is not necessary to
suppose that a majority of his poems were pro
duced in these three years, still the early manu
script contains only a minority; and a large pro
portion of those which first appear in the later
manuscript allude to the priestly office. Herbert's
art must, therefore, have been busily pursued
during this time of seclusion. A kindred art he
also had. "His chiefest recreation was Musick,*
in which heavenly Art he was a most excellent
Master, and did himself compose many divine
Hymns and Anthems which he set and sung to his
Lute or Viol. And though he was a lover of retired-
ness, yet his love of Musick was such that he went
usually twice every week on certain appointed
days to the Cathedral Church in Salisbury; and
at his return would say that his time spent in
RESTLESSNESS 173
Prayer and Cathedral Musick elevated his Soul
and was his Heaven upon Earth. But before his
return thence to Bemerton, he would usually sing
and play his part at an appointed Musick-meet-
ing."
Such were the occupations accessible in his
small parish. For one who had always lived at the
centre of men and things, the change experienced
could not fail to be great. It had its welcome and
unwelcome sides, corresponding to the diversities
in Herbert's own nature. With one side of himself
— the Elizabethan and Renaissance side — he
loved gayety, pleasure, great place, intellectual
companionship, the stir and glitter of the world.
With the other side, which connected him with
the early half of the seventeenth century, he loved
— profoundly and tenderly loved — an abstract
and exclusive God, the guardian of unity, order,
obedience, silence, one hostile to every species of
earthly attachment. We have seen how on entering
the priesthood he anticipated that in this divine
love there could be no satiety. He did not find it so.
The conflicts of the Crisis were renewed. Human
interests, personal desires, had never died in Her
bert. They never did die. That is what makes him
so attractive a figure. He is ever a struggling soul,
eager for God and unity, but only less eager to
make the wealthy world his own. He is no calm
saint. Nobody can read the stormy poems of this
Group and find the epithet appropriate which has
174 PREFACE TO
been connected with his name by loose admirers
in his and our age. Herbert is not holy. There was
always a noise of thoughts within his heart. How
ever closely joy was locked up, some bad man would
let it out again. He was continually asking of God
whether it were not better to bestow some place and
power on him; and years spent in cold dispute of
what is fit and not were apt to appear as only lost.
Many will feel that this failure of inward unity
was due to the separatist notions under which
Herbert for the most part thought of God, con
ceiving Him not as immanent in human affairs, but
as detached and hostile. No doubt this is true; but
it does not make the conflict in Herbert's soul less
real or instructive. Some readers, remembering
the literary habits of Herbert's age and the sonnets
of its love-poets, may suspect that the extent of the
conflict is exaggerated in the interests of dramatic
art. But even so he paints a conflict judged ap
propriate to the situation. However we approach
these most human of Herbert's songs, we shall
find that in them justice is done to sides of life
from which the saint instinctively turns. Man is
a Medley; and Herbert, never the simple and
"holy" person of popular tradition, depicts that
medley with sympathetic vividness.
The Group begins with one of the greatest of
his autobiographic poems ; and ends with another,
more allegoric, but even more detailed and con
fessional in character. In LOVE UNKNOWN Her-
RESTLESSNESS 175
bert treats imaginatively the three periods of his
manhood. Though he knew himself destined for
the priesthood, his heart was first centred on
Academic and royal honors. A dish of such fruit
he gained, intending eventually to offer it to the
Lord. (This dignity hath no such earthiness in it
but it may very well be joined with heaven : Herbert
to Sir J. Danvers, 1619.) But his heart needed to
be detached from these things and cleansed. Then
came the deaths of his friends and mother (a sac
rifice out of his fold, 1. 30), the resignation of his
Oratorship, and his severe illness. These afflictions
fell upon him when cold toward God, — hard of
heart as regards his own appointed work. Becom
ing supple through affliction and through a taste
of God's forgiving love, he turned to that priest
hood and home where he had always expected
rest. But even in Bemerton he finds dull conditions
and goading thoughts. According to this interpre
tation, the present poem would resurvey at a later
date the career already sketched in AFFLICTION,
II, 339, which is here referred to in 1. 28. A more
detailed but similar account is given in THE PIL
GRIMAGE. In THE FAMILIE, THE DISCHARGE,
THE SIZE, and THE METHOD he considers rea
sons for contentment; in HOPE he perceives how
inadequate these are; in SUBMISSION we hear of
the painful contrast between the empty life at
Bemerton and that to which he had aspired, a con
trast resulting in the DULNESSE of the next poem
176 PREFACE
and the rebellious mood of THE COLLAR. The
sense that in the service of God there is little re
warding joy suggests in the next three poems that
God has withdrawn his favor, and gives rise to
tender lament. CONSCIENCE insists on obedience.
But in one of the most pathetic poems of the series,
THE CROSSE, we learn how partly through illness,
and partly through a restless heart, the priesthood
is proving a disappointment.
RESTLESSNESS
178 LOVE UNKNOWN
INTRODUCTORY:
"This poem is a striking example and illustration
that the characteristic fault of our elder poets is
the reverse of that which distinguishes too many of
our recent versifiers: the one conveying the most
fantastic thoughts in the most correct and natural
language; the other in the most fantastic language
conveying the most trivial thoughts. The latter is a
riddle of words, the former an enigma of thoughts : "
Coleridge, Biog. Lit. XIX.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Used also in A WREATH, II, 319, and GRIEF, III,
323.
SUBJECT :
Unperceived by us, the severities of God express
his love and wisdom. John xiii, 7.
NOTES :
1. This is the only poem in which Herbert professes to
speak with a friend; and the friend is but another
mood of Herbert himself (1. 11).
3. Complie=jom, sympathize.
4. Cf. REDEMPTION, II, 237, 1. 1.
5. For the twb lives see MAN'S MEDLEY, III, 125.
6-18. Cf. AN OFFERING, II, 393, 1. 3-5.
6. The Cambridge scholarship and poetry.
8. A similar partition of a poem by refrains occurs in
THE CHURCH MILITANT, III, 361, 1. 48.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 179
LOVE UNKNOWN
DEARE Friend, sit down, the tale is long and sad,
And in my faintings I presume your loue
Will more compile then help. A Lord I had,
And have, of whom some grounds which may
improve
I hold for two lives, and both lives in me. 5
To him I brought a dish of fruit one day,
And in the middle plac'd my heart. But he
(I sigh to say)
Lookt on a servant who did know his eye
Better then you know me, or (which is one) 10
Then I my self. The servant instantly,
Quitting the fruit, seiz'd on my heart alone
And threw it in a font wherein did fall
A stream of bloud which issu'd from the side
Of a great rock. I well remember all 15
And have good cause. There it was dipt and
di'd,
And washt and wrung; the very wringing yet
Enforceth tears. Your heart was foul, I fear.
Indeed 'tis true. I did and do commit
Many a fault more then my lease will bear, 20
Yet still askt pardon and was not deni'd.
But you shall heare. After my heart was well,
And clean and fair, as I one even-tide
(I sigh to tell)
180 LOVE UNKNOWN
14. Here, as in the popular hymn, Rock of Ages, there
appears to be a double allusion to the striking of
the rock by Moses and the piercing of Christ's side.
Numbers xx, 11, and John xix, 34; A similar blend
ing occurs in THE SACRIFICE, II, 139, 1. 170.
22. Was well. Cf. AFFLICTION, II, 343, 1. 31. When
my heart was cleansed of desire for worldly honor
and I had decided on the priesthood.
25. Walkt by my self abroad, the Crisis period.
28. Herbert has five poems with this title. The refer
ence here is to the one in II, 341, written after the
death of his mother.
40. Matthew xxvi, 28.
42. Cf. THE INVITATION, III, 49, 1. 12.
43. For good=foT my good. The church ordinances,
which to those around me were routine matters,
had gained for me an inner meaning, in which as a
priest I hoped now to rest.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 181
Walkt by my self abroad, I saw a large 25
And spacious fornace flaming, and thereon
A boyling caldron round about whose verge
Was in great letters set AFFLICTION.
The greatnesse shew'd the owner. So I went
To fetch a sacrifice out of my fold, 30
Thinking with that which I did thus present
To warm his love, which I did fear grew cold.
But as my heart did tender it, the man
Who was to take it from me slipt his hand 34
And threw my heart into the scalding pan —
My heart, that brought it (do you understand ?)
The offerer's heart. Your heart was hard, I fear.
Indeed 't is true. I found a callous matter
Began to spread and to expatiate there;
But with a richer drug then scalding water 40
I bath'd it often, ev'n with holy bloud,
Which at a board, while many drunk bare wine,
A friend did steal into my cup for good,
Ev'n taken inwardly, and most divine
To supple hardnesses. But at the length 45
Out of the caldron getting, soon I fled
Unto my house, where to repair the strength
Which I had lost, I hasted to my bed.
But when I thought to sleep out all these faults
(I sigh to speak) 50
182 LOVE UNKNOWN
51. Home and the quiet of Bemerton brought restless
thoughts.
55. Cf. CHURCH-LOCK AND KEY, II, 301, 1. 1.
56. The dulnesse which is lamented in the poem of
that name, III, 207.
59. So THE METHOD, III, 197, 1. 15.
60. THE BAG, III, 159, 1. 24.
70. In these adjectives are summed up some of the
most constant desires of Herbert and of his age, —
to be ever fresh, sensitive, and alert, — desires
which in Herbert's case were continually thwarted
by feeble health.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 183
I found that some had stuff 'd the bed with thoughts,
I would say thorns. Deare, could my heart not
break,
When with my pleasures ev'n my rest was gone ?
Full well I understood who had been there,
For I had giv'n the key to none but one. 55
It must be he. Your heart was dull, I fear.
Indeed a slack and sleepie state of minde
Did oft possesse me, so that when I pray'd,
Though my lips went, my heart did stay behinde.
But all my scores were by another paid, 60
Who took the debt upon him. Truly, Friend,
For ought I heare, your Master shows to you
More favour then you wot of. Mark the end:
The Font did onely what was old renew, 64
The Caldron suppled what was grown too hard,
The Thorns did quicken what was grown too dull,
All did but strive to mend what you had marr'd.
Wherefore be cheer'd, and praise him to the full
Each day, each houre, each moment of the week,
Who fain would have you be new, tender, quick.
184 THE FAMILIE
DATE:
Not found in W. He finds murmurings lurking in
his priestly heart.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Peace, Silence, Order, Obedience, Joy, Grief, are
the true members of God's Household.
NOTES :
2. A part, a musical part ; as noise in the preceding
line is probably intended for jarring music. So
AARON, III, 11, 1. 8.
4. Ride or eares. Rule refers to pulling, in the previ
ous line, and eares to loud.
5. Cf. MAN, II, 215, 1. 2-4.
7. Mark xi, 15-17.
8. 7Veo*=refinedly beautiful. So MAN, II, 221, 1. 42.
10. Plaies. The preposition is omitted, as when we
speak of playing the harp.
12. The rank growths of the soul are brought into
order. Cf. PARADISE, III, 39.
20. Shrill= penetrating. Milton's "Shrill matin song,"
Par. Lost, V, 7. But that the expression was a dar
ing one, even for Herbert, is plain from Vaughan's
repeating it in the first line of his Admission : " How
shrill are silent tears!"
IX. RESTLESSNESS 185
THE FAMILIE
WHAT doth this noise of thoughts within my heart,
As if they had a part ?
What do these loud complaints and pulling fears,
As if there were no rule or eares ?
But, Lord, the house and familie are thine, 5
Though some of them repine.
Turn out these wranglers which defile thy seat,
For where thou dwellest all is neat.
First Peace and Silence all disputes controll,
Then Order plaies the soul; 10
And giving all things their set forms and houres,
Makes of wilde woods sweet walks and bowres.
Humble Obedience neare the doore doth stand,
Expecting a command; 14
Then whom in waiting nothing seems more slow,
Nothing more quick when she doth go.
Joyes oft are there, and griefs as oft as joyes,
But griefs without a noise;
Yet speak they louder then distemper'd fears.
What is so shrill as silent tears ? 20
This is thy house, with these it doth abound.
And where these are not found,
Perhaps thou com'st sometimes and for a day,
But not to make a constant stay.
186 THE DISCHARGE
DATE:
Not found in W. He finds himself reprehensibly
wondering if he has been wise in taking orders.
METRE:
Unique, but differs only in rhyming system from
JUDGEMENT, II, 271.
SUBJECT:
Having now committed myself to God, let anxieties
cease. Away, distrust! Matthew vi, 25-34.
NOTES:
3. "Licorous, probably from the licking of the lips of
men and animals when slavering and greedy-desir
ous ; and is metaphorically applied to the eyes.
Lecherous is in fact the same word, but more con
fined by present custom to one form of desire:"
A. B. Grosart. He that for quality is licorous after
dainties is a glutton : COUNTRY PARSON, XXVI.
8. Depart = dispense, part with. Cf. OBEDIENCE, II,
385, 1. 8. Throughout this poem there is constant
reference to OBEDIENCE, where his decision to be
come a priest was originally reached.
11. Is gone— is determined already by your past act.
13. Exodus xiii, 21.
16. This — the disasters and comforts of the Crisis time.
He made thee a priest, as in 1. 11.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 187
THE DISCHARGE
BUSIE enquiring heart, what wouldst thou know ?
Why dost thou prie,
And- turn, and leer, and with a licorous eye
Look high and low,
And in thy lookings stretch and grow ? 5
Hast thou not made thy counts and summ'd up
all?
Did not thy heart
Give up the whole and with the whole depart ?
Let what will fall,
That which is past who can recall ? 10
Thy life is God's, thy time to come is gone,
And is his right.
He is thy night at noon, he is at night
Thy noon alone.
The crop is his, for he hath sown. 15
And well it was for thee, when this befell,
That God did make
Thy businesse his, and in thy life partake;
For thou canst tell,
If it be his once, all is well. 20
188 THE DISCHARGE
22-25. Fortunate to know what the present demands,
without cudgelling your brains over the future.
30. It will grow fast enough without your digging for it.
31. Provide=look forward..
32. "The reverse of going upon or acting on the square
=acts disloyally, breaks the agreement that the
present is his and the future his God's:" A. B. Gro-
sart. John the Baptist squared out [i. e. assigned] to
every one what to do : COUNTRY PARSON, XXXII.
34. Same use of wide in H. BAPTISME, II, 191, 1. 8.
39. Those grounds =the future, separated from us by
death.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 189
Onely the present is thy part and fee.
And happy thou
If, though thou didst not beat thy future brow,
Thou couldst well see
What present things requir'd of thee. 25
They ask enough. Why shouldst thou further go ?
Raise not the mudde
Of future depths, but drink the cleare and good.
Dig not for wo
In times to come, for it will grow. 30
Man and the present fit; if he provide,
He breaks the square.
This houre is mine; if for the next I care,
I grow too wide,
And do encroach upon death's side. 35
For death each houre environs and surrounds.
He that would know
And care for future chances, cannot go
Unto those grounds
But through a Church-yard which them
bounds. 40
190 THE DISCHARGE
45. "The phrase is taken from tilting a cask on end
to get all out of the tap:" A. B. Grosart. This does
not fit the context, which requires that an end shall
mean at great length. The explanation is found in
an early use of bottom in the sense of a spool or
holder on which thread is wound. So Herbert uses
it in 1622 in a letter to his mother in her sickness:
/ have alwaies observed the thred of life to be like other
threds or skenes of silk, full of snarles and incum-
brances. Happy is he whose bottome is wound up and
laid ready for work in the New Jerusalem. The New
English Dictionary cites an example from Ralegh's
History of the World: "He receiveth from her
[Ariadne] a bottom of thread." The meaning here
accordingly is that, by anticipating, men pull an end
from the spool of grief and unroll the whole ball.
And this, so far from putting away the trouble, gives
length to it. The same figure is applied in a differ
ent way in THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 29, 1. 124.
The word may possibly have a similar meaning in
CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES, III, 105, 1. 6.
46. Causes of fear are tied up in the future. Do not
release them, 1. 48, nor make to-morrow sad. Our
proverb says: " Let sleeping dogs lie."
54. So THE BAG, III, 157 1. 1.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 191
Things present shrink and die. But they that spend
Their thoughts and sense
On future grief, do not remove it thence,
But it extend,
And draw the bottome out an end. 45
God chains the dog till night. Wilt loose the chain,
And wake thy sorrow ?
Wilt thou forestall it, and now grieve tomorrow,
And then again
Grieve over freshly all thy pain ? 50
Either grief will not come, or if it must,
Do not forecast.
And while it cometh it is almost past.
Away distrust!
My God hath promised, he is just. 55
192 THE SIZE
INTRODUCTORY :
How great may one be who would also be a servant
of God ? Size is used in this sense in FAITH, II,
235, 1. 28, and in THE ROSE, II, 389, 1. 4.
DATE:
Not found in W. He is trying to adjust himself to
narrow conditions.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
In this world there come to the Christian small joys,
— and it is well.
NOTES :
5, 6. As streams in the lowlands are kept alive by
waters higher up, so let your gentle joys be stirred
by those on high.
7. Fraught = freight.
9. Enough pleasure to render grief endurable.
21. Those have. The great joys are already in pos
session of their hopes.
22. On score, i. e. on trust, as in THE BAG, III, 159,
1.24.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 193
THE SIZE
CONTENT thee, greedie heart.
Modest and moderate joyes to those that have
Title to more hereafter when they part,
Are passing brave.
Let th' upper springs into the low 5
Descend and fall, and thou dost flow.
What though some have a fraught
Of cloves and nutmegs, and in cinamon sail;
If thou hast wherewithall to spice a draught,
When griefs prevail, 10
And for the future time art heir
To th' Isle of spices, is't not fair ?
To be in both worlds full
Is more then God was, who was hungrie here.
Wouldst thou his laws of fasting disanull ? 15
Enact good cheer ?
Lay out thy joy, yet hope to save it ?
Wouldst thou both eat thy cake and have it ?
Great joyes are all at once,
But little do reserve themselves for more. 20
Those have their hopes ; these what they have
renounce,
And live on score. -
Those are at home, these journey still
And meet the rest on Sion's hill.
194 THE SIZE
25. Luke vi, 24-26.
29. Cf. AFFLICTION, II, 339, 1. 10.
35. The split infinitive is rare in Herbert's verse. I
have not found another instance.
36. Like one still in pursuit, not in assured and happy
possession. Pretend is used in this sense in UN-
KINDNESSE, II, 309, 1. 16.
38. 1 Timothy vi, 10.
40. An absent line here, omitted both in 1632 and in B.,
is thus supplied by Dr. Grosart: At all times fatt.
Ernest Rhys proposes: Did always fall.
41. Instead of reckoning time from the last great storm,
some joy would mark our epoch.
42. Dr. Grosart thinks seam is used here in the sense
of pocket. Do not expect to pocket up blessings.
46. An emblem, like those described by Quarles, or
like that of HOPE, III, 203.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 195
Thy Saviour sentenc'd joy, 25
And in the flesh condemn'd it as unfit,
At least in lump, for such doth oft destroy;
Whereas a bit
Doth tice us on to hopes of more,
And for the present health restore. 30
A Christian's state and case
Is not a corpulent, but a thinne and spare
Yet active strength ; whose long and bonie
face
Content and care
Do seem to equally divide — 35
Like a pretender, not a bride.
Wherefore sit down, good heart.
Grasp not at much, for fear thou losest all.
If comforts fell according to desert, 39
They would great frosts and snows destroy;
For we should count, Since the last joy.
Then close again the seam
Which thou hast open'd. Do not spread thy robe
In hope of great things. Call to minde thy
dream,
An earthly globe, 45
On whose meridian was engraven,
These seas are tears, and heav'n the haven.
196 THE METHOD
DATE:
Not found in W. He questions why he is not nearer
God.
METRE :
Used also in GOOD FRIDAY, II, 149, but with dif
ferent rhyming system.
SUBJECT:
Our method of treating God, and his of treating
us. A slight early sketch of this theme is found
in CHURCH-LOCK AND KEY, II, 301.
NOTES :
3. Rub= hindrance. Hamlet's, "Ay, there's the rub : "
iii, 1.
6. Move= propose, used much as in parliamentary
proceedings. So motion is used in 1. 19 and 23. Cf.
PRAISE, II, 397, 1. 4, THE CALL, III, 9, 1. 10, and
PERSEVERANCE, III, 395, 1. 3. Lord Herbert entitles
one of his poems An Ode on a Question Moved
Whether Love Should Continue For Ever.
10. Tumble thy breast; so CHURCH-PORCH, II, 31,
1. 148.
15. So LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 183, 1. 59.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 197
THE METHOD
POORE heart, lament.
For since thy God refuseth still,
There is some rub, some discontent,
Which cools his will.
Thy Father could 5
Quickly effect what thou dost move,
For he is Power ; and sure he would,
For he is Love.
Go search this thing,
Tumble thy breast and turn thy book. 10
If thou hadst lost a glove or ring,
Wouldst thou not look?
What do I see
Written above there ? Yesterday
I did behave me carelesly 15
When I did pray.
198 THE METHOD
18. Indifferents= careless persons.
23. I conceive the restraining motions are much more
frequent to the godly then inviting motions : To THE
49TH CONSIDERATION OF VALDESSO.
27. The rhyme was already used in 1. 19.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 199
And should God's eare
To such indifferents chained be
Who do not their own motions heare ?
Is God lesse free ? 20
But stay! What's there?
Late when I would have something done,
I had a motion to forbear,
Yet I went on.
And should God's eare, 25
Which needs not man, be ty'd to those
Who heare not him, but quickly heare
His utter foes ?
Then once more pray.
Down with thy knees, up with thy voice. 30
Seek pardon first, and God will say,
Glad heart rejoyce.
HOPE
INTRODUCTORY :
Emblems, both of word and picture, were much
in fashion in Herbert's day. Quarles' Emblems
(1635) well met the current taste. An emblem en
graved upon a ring similar to the emblems men
tioned here was sent to Herbert by Dr. Donne. It
is described in Walton's Life, and in Herbert's
verses of acknowledgment, III, 401. According to
the prints of it that have come down to us, it had
on one side an anchor used as a cross, and on the
other side a growing plant bearing a few green eares.
If this poem was in any way suggested by Donne's
seal, its date is not earlier than 1630-31. Walton
says the seals were engraved a little before Donne's
death in 1631. About the interpretation of this
poem there are discussions in Notes and Queries,
IX, 154; X, 18, 333.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 201
SUBJECT:
Herbert's constant subject, the contradictions of
love, which may here be entitled The Weariness of
Hope. It is the theme of THE COLLAR, III, 211,
but does not, like that poem, find a conclusion in
the acceptance of love.
To Love I gave my time, prayers, tears. Serving
Love long and getting small return, I remind him
of time passing, prayers offered, tears shed. Still
he gives only hopes, visions, immature fruit. I
despair. Translating into abstract terms Herbert's
imagery of things, the sequence of his thought might
be represented thus:
To Love I said, " Hast thou forgotten Time? "
"Time counts for naught with Love, for Love is Hope."
But I prayed still the prayer I ever prayed.
" Look far away," said Love, " Not on things near."
I wept.
" Nay, here and now is fruit," he said. " Unripe, indeed."
" Why such delay ? " cried I. " Give all or none! "
202 HOPE
NOTES:
2. Hebrews vi, 9.
4. Optick= telescope. The word occurs again in the
lines To THE QUEENE OF BOHEMIA, III, 425, 1. 13.
Milton, remembering Galileo, speaks of "The moon
whose orb Through optic glass the Tuscan artist
views: "Par. Lost, I, 287.
5. Cf. PRAISE, III, 47, 1. 27.
y
IX. RESTLESSNESS 203
HOPE
I GAVE to Hope a watch of mine; but he
An anchor gave to me.
Then an old prayer-book I did present;
And he an optick sent. *
With that I gave a viall full of tears; 5
But he a few green eares.
Ah Loyterer! Fie no more, no more Fie bring.
I did expect a ring.
204 SUBMISSION
DATE:
Not found in W. His hopes of greatness blighted
in Bemerton parish.
METRE :
Used also in THE 23 PSALME, III, 19.
SUBJECT :
The ambitious heart, knowing its blindness, re
luctantly accepts the small appointed work.
NOTES :
2. My power and right of judgment are given up to
God.
4. My designe, i. e. of political preferment.
10. My private judgment, 1. 2.
12. Disseize= dispossess. Love, II, 85, 1. 26.
17. Gift; cf. 1. 2 and 11.
19. The same thought occurs again in OBEDIENCE,
II, 387, 1. 23-25. Psalm cxxxix, 10.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 205
SUBMISSION
Bur that Thou art my wisdome, Lord,
And both mine eyes are thine,
My minde would be extreamly stirr'd
For missing my designe.
Were it not better to bestow 5
Some place and power on me ?
Then should thy praises with me grow,
And share in my degree.
But when I thus dispute and grieve,
I do resume my sight, 10
And pilfring what I once did give,
Disseize thee of thy right.
How know I, if thou shouldst me raise,
That I should then raise thee ?
Perhaps great places and thy praise 15
Do not so well agree.
Wherefore unto my gift I stand;
I will no more advise.
Onely do thou lend me a hand,
Since thou hast both mine eyes. 20
206 DULNESSE
DATE:
Not found in W. Mental inertness deplored.
METRE :
Used also in GIDDINESSE, HI, 129.
SUBJECT:
Why, when gay wits celebrate their mistresses on
every trivial occasion, have I such torpor in honor
ing my love ? A first sketch of THE FORERUN
NERS, III, 317.
NOTES:
3. Quicknesse= vivacity of mind (1. 25).
7. The phrase is repeated in JORDAN, II, 91, 1. 5.
12. As truly as the fairest fair (1. 6).
IX. RESTLESSNESS 207
DULNESSE
WHY do I languish thus, drooping and dull,
As if I were all earth ?
O give me quicknesse, that I may with mirth
Praise thee brim-full!
The wanton lover in a curious strain 5
Can praise his fairest fair,
And with quaint metaphors her curled hair
Curl o're again.
Thou art my lovelinesse, my life, my light,
Beautie alone to me. 10
Thy bloudy death and undeserved makes thee
Pure red and white.
208 DULNESSE
i
13. Taking up again 1. 10.
14. A parenthetic line — And that perfection those
which, etc.
18. For a window-song, Dr. Grosart refers to Sidney's
Astrophel and Stella, LIIJ.
19. Pretending = stretching forth, aspiring, as in JOR
DAN, II, 93, 1. 16.
21. Sugred lyes. The phrase is used also in THE ROSE,
II, 389, 1. 2.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 209
When all perfections as but one appeare —
That, those thy form doth show —
The very dust where thou dost tread and go 15
Makes beauties here.
Where are my lines then ? My approaches ? Views ?
Where are my window-songs ?
Lovers are still pretending, and ev'n wrongs
Sharpen their Muse. 20
But I am lost in flesh, whose sugred lyes
Still mock me and grow bold.
Sure thou didst put a minde there, if I could
Finde where it lies. 24
Lord, cleare thy gift, that with a constant wit
I may but look towards thee.
Look onely; for to love thee, who can be,
What angel fit?
210 THE COLLAR
INTRODUCTORY :
THE COLLAR** restraint.
DATE:
Not found in W. Herbert has already entered the
priesthood, but finds the experience of it irksome.
METRE :
Unique. Rhymes irregular and very widely spaced,
those of 1. 3-10 and 13-23 being the widest in
Herbert.
SUBJECT :
The irritating restraints of righteousness only ap
peased by love.
NOTES:
4. Lines and life; cf. THE BANQUET, III, 57, 1. 51.
5. Store= amplest abundance. So THE PEARL, II, 383,
1. 26. Dr. Grosart gives the amazing explanation,
"As abounding in choice vanities as a store."
6. Shall I always be a petitioner, never a master ?
IX. RESTLESSNESS 311
THE COLLAR
I STRUCK the board, and cry'd, No more !
I will abroad.
What ? Shall I ever sigh and pine ?
My lines and life are free, free as the rode,
Loose as the winde, as large as store. 5
Shall I be still in suit ?
Have I no harvest but a thorn
To let me bloud, and not restore
What I have lost with cordiall fruit ?
Sure there was wine 10
Before my sighs did drie it. There was corn
Before my tears did drown it.
Is the yeare onely lost to me ?
Have I no bayes to crown it ?
No flowers, no garlands gay ? All blasted ? 15
All wasted ?
212 THE COLLAR
18. The same turn in THE QUIP, III, 33, 1. 7.
24. Of binding power, though really only a rope of
sand.
26. Wink= intentionally shut the eyes. So MISERIE,
II, 257, 1. 62, and Acts xvii, 30.
29. Take away the scarecrows. Manufactured fears
shall no longer stop my breaking away.
33-36. Dr. Grosart well refers to Parentalia, VIII,
1. 7-10:
Tandem prehensa comiter lacernula
Susurrai aure quispiam,
Haec ftierat olim potio Domini tui.
Gusto proboque dolium.
35. Me thoughts: so ARTILLEBIE, II, 361, 1. 2.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 213
1
Not so, my heart! But there is fruit,
And thou hast hands.
Recover all thy sigh-blown age
On double pleasures. Leave thy cold dispute 20
Of what is fit and not. Forsake thy cage,
Thy rope of sands,
Which pettie thoughts have made, and made to thee
Good cable, to enforce and draw,
And be thy law, 25
While thou didst wink and wouldst not see.
Away! Take heed!
I will abroad.
Call in thy death's head there. Tie up thy fears.
He that forbears 30
To suit and serve his need
Deserves his load.
But as I rav'd and grew more fierce and wilde
At every word,
Me thoughts I heard one calling, Childe ! 35
And I reply'd, My Lord.
214 THE BUNCH OF GRAPES
INTRODUCTORY:
The grapes of Eshcol. Numbers xiii, 23.
DATE:
Not found in W. See notes on 1. 4 and 9.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
We experience all that the Israelites did in the
wilderness, except the welcome clusters at the
journey's end. But no: instead of the refreshment
which those who were under the Law from time to
time obtained, we have continually the new wine
of Christ's blood.
NOTES:
4. Sev'n may be used merely as a round number. Yet
if, as is probable, this poem was written somewhere
near the middle of his Bemerton life, the time here
indicated would fall before the death of King
James, of Herbert's mother, and of those other
friends lamented in AFFLICTION, II, 343, 1. 31-36.
This was Herbert's last period of secular employ
ment. Whatever the special reference of this date
may be, it places the poem late in his life. — " Vogue
=a free course with a full sail; and hence aire in
line 5:" A. B. Grosart.
7. Numbers xxxiii, 10.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 215
THE BUNCH OF GRAPES
JOY, I did lock thee up, but some bad man
Hath let thee out again;
And now, me thinks, I am where I began
Sev'n yeares ago. One vogue and vein,
One aire of thoughts usurps my brain. 5
I did toward Canaan draw, but now I am
Brought back to the Red sea, the sea of shame.
216 THE BUNCH OF GRAPES
8. The course of thought in this stanza is not at once
obvious. It is something like this: On account of
rebellions, God did not permit the Israelites to reach
an abiding city. But their story is our story. No
thing which has moved men widely is an individual
affair ; each step in a divine transaction is typical
and for all time. So God's justice to the Jews will
be proved his justice to us.
9. It is in the isolation of Bemerton, his desert, far
from London and Cambridge, that Herbert feels
the hardship of the march toward Canaan, i. e. the
priesthood. The sacred wine — his priestly work —
must be his comfort.
10. Spann'd=ha,ve journeys of the same span or length.
1 Corinthians x, 11.
24. Herbert gathers together the notable cases of
grapes: the grapes of Eshcol, 1. 19; the vineyard
of Noah, fruitful to his injury (Genesis ix, 20, and
THE CHURCH MILITANT, III, 359, 1. 15) ; the wine
press of Isaiah (Isaiah km, 3); and Christ the true
vine (John xv, 1).
28. Mark xiv, 24.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 217
For as the Jews of old by God's command
Travelled and saw no town, 9
So now each Christian hath his journeys spann'd.
Their stone pennes and sets us down.
A single deed is small renown.
God's works are wide, and let in future times.
His ancient justice overflows our crimes. 14
Then have we too our guardian fires and clouds.
Our Scripture-dew drops fast.
We have our sands and serpents, tents and shrowds.
Alas! Our murmurings come not last.
But where's the cluster? Where's the taste
Of mine inheritance ? Lord, if I must borrow, 20
Let me as well take up their joy as sorrow.
But can he want the grape who hath the wine ?
I have their fruit and more.
Blessed be God, who prosper'd Noah's vine
And made it bring forth grapes good store. 25
But much more him I must adore
Who of the law's sowre juice sweet wine did make,
Ev'n God himself being pressed for my sake.
218 THE SEARCH
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
"Oh that I knew where I might find him!" Job
xxiii, 3.
NOTES :
3. Psalm xlii, 3.
4. Prove^ reach certainty and success.
6. The sphere is the skie of I. 5, and the centre the
earth, as in PRAYER, II, 183, 1. 9.
8. The opposite of Psalm cxxxix, 8.
14. Simper = change countenance, twinkle. In THE
CHURCH-PORCH, II, 29, 1. 123, and AFFLICTION, II,
343, 1. 44, as here, a simper is the smile worn when
one meets his superiors.
20. Genesis viii, 9.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 219
THE SEARCH
WHITHER, O, whither art thou fled,
My Lord, my Love ?
My searches are my daily bread,
Yet never prove.
My knees pierce th' earth, mine eies the skie,
And yet the sphere 6
And centre both to me denie
That thou art there.
Yet can I mark how herbs below
Grow green and gay, 10
As if to meet thee they did know,
While I decay.
Yet can I mark how starres above
Simper and shine,
As having keyes unto thy love, 15
While poore I pine.
I sent a sigh to seek thee out,
Deep drawn in pain,
Wing'd like an arrow; but my scout
Returns in vain. 20
220 THE SEARCH
25. Dost thou withhold thy visits because somewhere
thou art making a new, good world, and abandon
ing the old bad one?
29. Psalm Ixxvii, 7-9.
33. Let not thai, — i. e. thy will, — of all things, be what
cuts me off from thee. The next three stanzas call
upon God to exercise that will in Herbert's behalf.
35. Ring= fence, barrier.
36. Passe= overcome, surmount them.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 221
I tun'd another (having store)
Into a grone,
Because the search was dumbe before;
But all was one.
Lord, dost thou some new fabrick mold, 25
Which favour winnes
And keeps thee present, leaving th' old
Unto their sinnes ?
Where is my God ? What hidden place
Conceals thee still ? 30
What covert dare eclipse thy face ?
Is it thy will ?
O let not that of any thing!
Let rather brasse,
Or steel, or mountains be thy ring, 35
And I will passe.
Thy will such an intrenching is
As passeth thought.
To it all strength, all subtilties
Are things of nought. 40
222 THE SEARCH
41. As this stanza partially repeats the thought of the
preceding, so the rhyme of that is partially repeated.
47. Charge= burden.
52. Cf. JUSTICE, III, 117, 1. 24.
55. Romans viii, 35.
58. Referring to 1. 41.
59. Excels all else. Cf. CHURCH-PORCH, II, 37, 1. 187.
60. So ANTIPHON, II, 107, 1. 23.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 223
Thy will such a strange distance is
As that to it
East and West touch, the poles do kisse,
And parallels meet.
Since then my grief must be as large 45
As is thy space,
Thy distance, from me; see my charge,
Lord, see my case.
O take these barres, these lengths away!
Turn, and restore me. 50
Be not Almightie, let me say,
Against, but for me.
When thou dost turn and wilt be neare,
What edge so keen,
What point so piercing, can appeare 55
To come between ?
For as thy absence doth excell
All distance known,
So doth thy nearenesse bear the bell,
Making two one. 60
224 ASSURANCE
INTRODUCTORY :
ASSURANCE =The ground of confidence. Cf.
AARON, III, 11.
DATE:
Not found in W. He is failing in his work as a
priest.
METRE :
Used also in AFFLICTION, II, 247.
SUBJECT :
From suspicious thoughts about God's favor I take
refuge in Himself.
NOTES :
6. There is no poison so deadly as the inventions of
distrust.
9-12. All this is the allegation of his spitefvll thought.
In 1. 11 and elsewhere in this poem there seems to
be allusion to the covenant of OBEDIENCE, II, 385.
13. Can anything be worse than this ?
IX. RESTLESSNESS 225
ASSURANCE
O SPITEFULL bitter thought!
Bitterly spitefull thought! Couldst thou invent
So high a torture ? Is such poyson bought ?
Doubtlesse but in the way of punishment,
When wit contrives to meet with thee, 5
No such rank poyson can there be.
Thou said'st but even now
That all was not so fair as I conceiv'd
Betwixt my God and me: that I allow 9
And coin large hopes, but that I was deceived ;
Either the league was broke or neare it,
And that I had great cause to fear it.
And what to this ? What more 13
Could poyson, if it had a tongue, expresse ?
What is thy aim ? Wouldst thou unlock the
doore
To cold despairs and gnawing pensivenesse ?
Wouldst thou raise devils ? I see, I know,
I writ thy purpose long ago.
226 ASSURANCE
22. If the ground of my confidence were myself and
not thee, 1. 25.
24. The joes are inner foes, sins.
28. Does the league here and in 1. 11 refer to the priest
hood? Cf. OBEDIENCE, II, 387, 1. 32-35.
35. Psalm xxxi, 3; Mark xiii, 31.
38. This fancy that God is against thee, a fancy which
merely hides thy own shame, — that thou art against
God. Genesis iii, 7.
39-40. "Thou hast cast a bone of contention which
has rebounded on thyself and chokes thee:" A. B.
Grosart. Cf. THE COUNTRY PARSON, XXVIII:
He thai throws a stone at another hits himself e. In
a letter dated 1622, J. Howell, describing the
former English alliance with the Netherlands,
writes: "This was the Bone that Secretary Wal-
singham told Queen Elizabeth he would cast the
King of Spain, that should last him twenty years
and perhaps make his teeth shake in his head."
41, 42. To satisfy his own nature God went forth to
man, and He will not fail to finish his work. John
xiii, 1.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 227
But I will to my Father,
Who heard thee say it. O most gracious Lord, 20
If all the hope and comfort that I gather
Were from my self, I had not half a word,
Not half a letter to oppose
What is objected by my foes.
But thou art my desert, 25
And in this league, which now my foes invade,
Thou art not onely to perform thy part,
But also mine; as when the league was made
Thou didst at once thy self indite,
And hold my hand while I did write. 30
Wherefore if thou canst fail,
Then can thy truth and I. But while rocks stand,
And rivers stirre, thou cansf not shrink or quail.
Yea, when both rocks and all things shall disband,
Then shalt thou be my rock and tower, 35
And make their mine praise thy power.
Now foolish thought go on,
Spin out thy thread and make thereof a coat
To hide thy shame ; for thou hast cast a bone
Which bounds on thee, and will not down thy
throat. 40
What for it self love once began,
Now love and truth will end in man.
228 CONSCIENCE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The stern exactions of Conscience stilled by
Christ.
NOTES:
5. Chatting— chattering.
6. All that I see or hear is distorted.
10. The rhyme there and sphere had already been used
in PRATER, II, 183, 1. 11.
13-24. Not only does the blood of Christ, accepted in
the Communion wine, cleanse us (my physick, 1. 15)
so that conscience can no longer accuse, but the
love of Christ as a moral principle is so at issue with
the self-conscious calculations of the Law that it
may be said to be a bill-hook or staff capable of
turning the attack against conscience itself (my
sword, 1. 24).
IX. RESTLESSNESS 229
CONSCIENCE
PEACE pratler, do not lowre!
Not a fair look but thou dost call it foul.
Not a sweet dish but thou dost call it sowre.
Musick to thee doth howl.
By listning to thy chatting fears 5
I have both lost mine eyes and eares.
Pratler, no more, I say!
My thoughts must work, but like a noiselesse
sphere;
Harmonious peace must rock them all the day.
No room for pratlers there. 10
If thou persistest, I will tell thee
That I have physick to expell thee.
And the receit shall be
My Saviour's bloud. Whenever at his board
I do but taste it, straight it cleanseth me 15
And leaves thee not a word;
No, not a tooth or nail to scratch,
And at my actions carp or catch.
Yet if thou talkest still, 19
Besides my physick know there 's some for thee ;
Some wood and nails to make a staffe or bill
For those that trouble me.
The bloudie crosse of my deare Lord
Is both my physick and my sword.
230 THE CROSSE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Used also in THE AGONIE, III, 153.
SUBJECT:
What I have obtained after years of desire I am
now powerless to use. With this poem compare the
close of LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 183, and of THE
PILGRIMAGE, III, 239.
NOTES :
5, 6. These lines give some of the reasons which induced
Herbert to accept the living of Bemerton from his
great kinsman. He hoped through the influence of
the neighboring Pembroke family at Wilton House
to strengthen his work as a parish priest.
8. This deare end = the priesthood, the aim described
in 1. 3.
10. For myself, dear mother, I alwaies fear'd sickness
more then death ; because sickness hath made me
unable to perform those offices for which I came into
the world ; Herbert's letter, 1622.
13. Cf. AFFLICTION, II, 341, 1. 27.
16. Cf. GRATEFULNESSE, III, 43, 1. 22.
18. I still retain a strong desire for thy work, embit
tering my feebleness.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 231
THE CROSSE
WHAT is this strange and uncouth thing ?
To make me sigh, and seek, and faint, and die,
Untill I had some place where I might sing,
And serve thee; and not onely I,
But all my wealth and familie might combine 5
To set thy honour up as our designe.
And then when after much delay,
Much wrastling, many a combate, this deare
end,
So much desir'd, is giv'n, to take away
My power to serve thee! To unbend 10
All my abilities, my designes confound,
And lay my threatnings bleeding on the ground !
One ague dwelleth in my bones,
Another in my soul (the memorie
What I would do for thee if once my grones 15
Could be allowed for harmonic).
I am in all a weak disabled thing,
Save in the sight thereof where strength doth sting.
THE CROSSE
21. On me = against me. The edge is the means of
wounding. Cf. AFFLICTION, II, 343, 1. 33.
22. Psalm cii, 10. So Donne, Hymn to God in My Sick
ness, 1. 30 :
" Be this my text, my sermon to mine own:
Therefore, that he may raise, the Lord throws down."
30. A weed, as in EMPLOYMENT, II, 349, 1. 22, instead
of such a flower as is described in THE FLOWER,
III, 307, 1. 23. At present he is in Paradise (III,
39), but suffers from lack of occupation. Cf. THE
COUNTRY PARSON, XXXII: Even in Paradise man
had a calling, and how much more out of Paradise,
when the evills which he is now subject unto may be
prevented, or diverted by reasonable imployment.
36. My words = thy words made mine.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 233
Besides, things sort not to my will
Ev'n when my will doth studie thy renown. 20
Thou turnest th' edge of all things on me still,
Taking me up to throw me down.
So that ev'n when my hopes seem to be sped
I am to grief alive, to them as dead.
To have my aim, and yet to be 25
Farther from it then when I bent my bow;
To make my hopes my torture and the fee
Of all my woes another wo,
Is in the midst of delicates to need,
And ev'n in Paradise to be a weed. 30
Ah my deare Father, ease my smart!
These contrarieties crush me. These crosse
actions
Doe winde a rope about, and cut my heart.
And yet since these thy contradictions
Are properly a crosse felt by thy sonne — 35
With but foure words, my words, Thy will be done.
THE PILGRIMAGE
INTRODUCTORY :
Hebrews xi, 14. "The characteristic of Herbert's
fancy is fruitfulness. The poetry, like the theology,
of that age, put all learning into an abridgement. A
course of lectures flowed into the rich essence of a
single sermon. A month's seed bloomed in an ode.
The 17th was the contradiction of the 19th century;
the object being then to give the most thought in
the smallest space, as now to sow the widest field
with the frugallest corn. Herbert's PILGRIMAGE is
an example. Written, probably, before Bunyan was
born, — certainly while he was an infant, — it con
tains all the Progress of the Pilgrim in outline. We
are shown the gloomy cave* of Desperation, the
Rock of Pride, the Mead of Fancy, the Copse of
Care, the Wild Heath where the traveller is robbed
of his gold, and the gladsome Hill that promises
a fair prospect, but only yields a lake of brackish
water on the top. Such a composition would hardly
escape the notice of that Spenser of the people, who
afterwards gave breadth and animation and figures
to the scene:" R. A. Willmott.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 235
DATE:
Not found in W. I place this later than LOVE UN
KNOWN because that contains no mention of coming
death, and advances no farther than the fifth stanza
of this. Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress was pub
lished in 1678.
METRE :
Used only here, but it closely resembles that of
PEACE, II, 377.
SUBJECT:
Herbert's autobiography, such as he had given
before in AFFLICTION, II, 339, and in LOVE UN
KNOWN, III, 179 ; and such as Tennyson gave in
Merlin and the Gleam.
236 THE PILGRIMAGE
NOTES:
1. The M/=the priesthood, which, from a boy, he
expected to attain.
4. Desperation^ distrust of himself, as shown in THE
PRIESTHOOD, II, 373.
5. At one time he doubts whether he is fit for the
priesthood; at another whether the priesthood is
fit for a man of his high breeding.
7. He was Reader in Rhetoric at Trinity College,
Orator of the University, and had already acquired
a name in poetry and fine letters.
10. Life was passing.
11. Care's cops = bewildering woods. This and the fol
lowing stanza refer to the period which I have
called The Crisis, and particularly to the experi
ences described in VANITIE, 11,357, and FRAILTIE,
II, 359.
17. A play on the double meaning of Angett=& coin
worth ten shillings, and a heavenly guardian. In
the latter sense it may refer to his marriage, whhh
immediately preceded his taking orders. The work
of a friend in saving Herbert is also alluded to in
LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 181, 1. 43, and possibly in
PEACE, II, 379, 1. 19.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 237
THE PILGRIMAGE
I TRAVELL'D on, seeing the hill where lay
My expectation.
A long it was and weary way.
The gloomy cave of Desperation
I left on th' one, and on the other side 5
The rock of Pride.
And so I came to phansie's medow strow'd
With many a flower.
Fain would I here have made abode,
But I was quicken'd by my houre. 10
So to care's cops I came, and there got through
With much ado.
That led me to the wilde of passion, which
Some call the wold;
A wasted place, but sometimes rich. 15
Here I was robb'd of all my gold
Save one good Angell, which a friend had ti'd
Close to my side.
238 THE PILGRIMAGE
19. The priesthood at Bemerton, which he found dis
appointing ; cf. LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 181, 183,
1. 50-53, and THE CROSSE, III, 233, 1. 19-31.
23. His parish life was stagnant and tasteless.
28. It had not proved what he had imagined in THE
CALL, III, 9, 1. 2.
31. The heavenly priesthood.
33. Cf. THE DISCHARGE, III, 189, 1. 38-40.
36. A chair = the sedan-chair, a noble mode of convey
ance, which was being introduced into England in
Herbert's later years. Cf . MORTIFICATION, II, 261 ,
1. 29.
IX. RESTLESSNESS 239
At length I got unto the gladsome hill,
Where lay my hope, 20
Where lay my heart. And climbing still,
When I had gain'd the brow and top,
A lake of brackish waters on the ground
Was all I found. 24
With that abash'd and struck with many a sting
Of swarming fears,
I fell and cry'd, Alas my King!
Can both the way and end be tears ?
Yet taking heart I rose, and then perceiv'd
I was deceived; 30
My hill was further. So I flung away,
Yet heard a crie
Just as I went, None goes that way
And lives! If that be all, said I,
After so foul a journey death is fair, 35
And but a chair.
X
SUFFERING
PREFACE
IN one of the closing poems of the preceding
Group, THE CROSSE, Herbert complains that
ill health is crippling his powers and rendering
him unfit for work. Undoubtedly illness had much
to do with the restlessness and despondency which
the poems of Group IX describe. The fear of it
had long been in his mind, and was expressed as
early as 1622 in that letter to his mother from
which I have already quoted. During the Crisis
period it comes out in THE PRIESTHOOD as an
other reason for hesitation when he is just coming
to a decision.
Should I presume
To wear thy habit, the severe attire
My slender compositions might consume.
I am both foul and brittle.
Herbert's constitution was naturally frail. Speak
ing of his sicknesses in EASTER WINGS he says, My
tender age in sorrow did beginne. In the letter of 1 6 1 0
to his mother he mentions my late ague. In 1617 he
writes his stepfather: You know I was sick last
vacation, neither am I yet recovered, so that I am
fain ever and anon to buy somewhat tending towards
my health. Walton says that "He had often de-
244 PREFACE TO
sign'd to leave the University and decline all Study,
which he thought did impair his health, for he had
a body apt to a Consumption and to Fevers and
other infirmities." Later, Walton writes: "About
the year 1629 Mr. Herbert was seiz'd with a sharp
Quotidian Ague. He became his own Physitian
and cur'd himself of his Ague by forbearing Drink,
and not eating any Meat, no not Mutton nor a
Hen or Pidgeon, unless they were salted. And by
such a constant Dyet he remov'd his Ague, but
with inconveniencies that were worse; for he
brought upon himself a disposition to Rheumes
and other weaknesses and a supposed Consump
tion."
Probably this severe illness occurred somewhat
earlier in the Crisis period than Walton here states;
for Herbert married in March, 1629, and Walton
in another passage says that before "he declar'd
his resolution both to marry and to enter into the
Sacred Orders of Priesthood ... his health was
apparently improv'd to a good degree of strength
and chearfulness." In any case, it was but a few
years later that he undertook his work at Bemerton
with consumption well under way. The seeds of
it were provided by his natural constitution; its
development was advanced by the physical and
mental experiences of the Crisis; and its end was
assured by his taking up a new and anxious form of
life under circumstances where introspection and
depression were inevitable.
SUFFERING 245
There is no sharp dividing line parting this
Group of poems from the preceding. They are
separated rather by the varying degrees of empha
sis laid on motives common to the two. Through
out them both ring notes of disappointment over •
the priesthood, despondency, rebellion, dulness,
self-reproach, penitence, mental perplexity, bodily
pain, fear of God's alienation, and the bitterness of
lifelong purposes coming to an end. This sad ma
terial I have tried to set in order. The poems which
are chiefly dominated by the earlier emotions
mentioned, I place in Group IX; those ruled by
the later, in Group X. In the former, the mental
side of his distress is uppermost, — his intellectual-
discontent. In the second, physical suffering .
declares itself, which still, after the manner of
the love-poets, he attributes to some possible fault
in himself and negligence on the part of the great
Friend.
It is noticeable how comparatively slight a place
in these laments Herbert gives to regrets for the
broken priesthood. While it seems certain that two
clear purposes ran together throughout Herbert's
life, the purpose to be a priest and that to be a poet,
the former remained only a purpose until twelve
thirteenths of his short life were gone. The latter
passed out of the stage of resolution and became a
diligently prosecuted reality as early as 1610. That
his poetic work is to end he mourns in GRIEF, *
DULNESSE, and THE FORERUNNERS, and to it he
246 PREFACE TO
alludes at the close of THE FLOWER. But there is
little direct mention of the cessation of his priestly
work. I think this must be explained by the highly
individualistic conception of religion which he held.
Repeatedly I have pointed out how his holy aspira
tions confine themselves to drawing close the ties
between God and his own soul. Possibly he may
have regarded these essentially personal relations
as those best fitted for expression in poetry. At any
rate, it is of his own salvation that he regularly
speaks. He will be God's child ; will love Him and
be loved. The desire to sanctify himself for the
sake of others rarely appears. We cannot compre
hend a great nature unless we are willing to ob
serve its limitations. Herbert shared those of his
age. Its noblest work was to take the single soul
and set it before God. Piety as personal allegiance
was its special Gospel, a partial Gospel no doubt,
as are the thoughts about religion of each succeed
ing age. But partial as it was, it was a real and
weighty part, and it made a permanent contribu
tion to the spiritual resources of our race. His
priesthood Herbert accordingly thought of as pri
marily the dedication of himself to God. When it
appeared that God wanted him not here, but above,
he experienced few regrets over priestly work left
undone. Regrets he has. Sighs and groans abound.
But they are those of the lover conscious of his
own lack of desert, and uncertain whether at last
he may find favor in the loved one's sight.
SUFFERING 247
On the other hand, Herbert has for more than
twenty years been studious of poetry. In it he has
been conscious of something more like public ser- *
vice than even the priesthood yielded. The latter
has been principally a means of effecting his own
salvation; the former, of obeying the laws of
beauty, and counteracting certain evil tendencies
of his time. To its delicate demands he still steadily
holds himself. These closing cries of pain are
guarded, and given as beautiful a form as ever
THE ELIXER or MORTIFICATION had in the proud
Cambridge days. I find no falling off, no slov
enliness, in all this preoccupied period. THE
FLOWER is one of his most subtly beautiful pieces,
though declaring itself to be very late. And THE
FORERUNNERS, VERTUE, LIFE, and THE GLANCE,
which I believe must stand in the Death Group,
stand also in the very front rank of Herbert's
performance.
I have already indicated the scheme of my
arrangement. It follows the gradually increasing
prominence of the consciousness of bodily ill.
There runs through the early poems of the Group
— GRIEVE NOT, CONFESSION, THE STORM, COM
PLAINING — a fear that God has withdrawn Him
self. This changes in the AFFLICTIONS, SIGHS AND
GRONES, and LONGING, to a sense of physical pain, \
a pain which he believes, though sent by God, is
sent in love. In THE GLIMPSE, A PARODIE, JO
SEPH'S COAT, and JESU, there springs up a kind of
248 PREFACE
tender playfulness between him, the sufferer, and
the Friend who brings the bitter gift. And in one
of the sweet intervals of suffering, reported in
THE FLOWER, full joy and peace are felt in the
presence of the loved one.
SUFFERING
250 BITTER-SWEET
INTRODUCTORY:
In contrast with Revelation x, 9, God's dealings
with us, if bitter at first, are sweet afterwards. A
poem similarly paradoxical is CLASPING OF HANDS,
III, 37.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
Contradictions involved in the life of love. 2 Corin
thians iv, 8-10, and vi, 10.
X. SUFFERING
BITTER-SWEET
AH my deare angrie Lord,
Since thou dost love, yet strike,
Cast down, yet help afford,
Sure I will do the like.
I will complain, yet praise;
I will bewail, approve;
And all my sowre-sweet dayes
I will lament, and love.
252 JUSTICE
INTRODUCTORY :
Another poem with this title is given, HI, 117.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique, but differs only in rhyming system from
THE JEWS, III, 109. Equally wide rhymes are
found in UNGRATEFULNESSE, II, 243; COMPLAIN
ING, III, 267; SIGHS AND GRONES, III, 277.
SUBJECT:
God's ways are incomprehensible, made so by the
incomprehensibility of our own. The first stanza
describes God's ways, the second ours. As God's
are always connected, the lines are inwoven (as in
A WREATH, II, 319). But ours are essentially dis
jointed and contradictory. Ezekiel xviii, 25, 29.
NOTES :
7. Thou givest me a fitting return for my own way
wardness. The former four paradoxes seemed,
these four are, insoluble.
9. Me<m=intend, aim at. So THE CHURCH-PORCH,
II, 53, 1. 334. For the thought, cf. LOVE UN
KNOWN, III, 183, 1. 59; THE METHOD, III, 197,
I. 15.
11. Cf. AFFLICTION, II, 343, 1. 48, and THE ANSWER,
II, 351, 1. 7.
X. SUFFERING 253
JUSTICE
I CANNOT skill of these thy wayes.
Lord, thou didst make me, yet thou woundest me;
Lord, thou dost wound me, yet thou dost relieve
me;
Lord, thou relievest, yet I die by thee; 4
Lord, thou dost kill me, yet thou dost reprieve me.
But when I mark my life and praise,
Thy justice me most fitly payes;
For I do praise thee, yet I praise thee not;
My prayers mean thee, yet my prayers stray;
I would do well, yet sinne the hand hath got; 10
My so\d doth love thee, yet it loves delay.
I cannot skill of these my wayes.
254 GRIEVE NOT THE HOLY SPIRIT
INTRODUCTORY :
Cf. Vaughan's Jesus Weeping. One other poem
Herbert has entitled with a verse of Scripture,
OUR LIFE is HID WITH CHRIST IN GOD, II, 283.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
That God is grieved over my sins shall make me
grieve the more. Cf. AFFLICTION, III, 271, 1. 15.
The Holy Spirit is addressed in the first stanza,
himself in the next three, God in the last two.
NOTES :
1. Dove, the emblem of the Holy Spirit, as in WHIT
SUNDAY, II, 157, 1. 1.
5. /, emphatic, in contrast with God. — In three other
passages in which a worm is mentioned (THE
CHURCH-PORCH, II, 55, 1. 339; PEACE, II, 377,
1. 17; CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES, III, 105, 1. 3)
it appears as a destructive creature. Here and in
THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 45, 1. 261, and in SIGHS
AND GRONES, III, 277, 1. 5, it is a type of insignifi
cance. Psalm xxii, 6.
10. Tears being impossible in death (DEATH, II, 263,
1. 12), as long as you weep you may live. Or if, my
heart, you do separate from the body, then melt
X. SUFFERING 255
GRIEVE NOT THE HOLY SPIRIT, &c.
(EPHESIANS VI, 30)
AND art thou grieved, sweet and sacred Dove,
When I am sowre
And crosse thy love ?
Grieved for me ? The God of strength and power
Griev'd for a worm, which when I tread 5
I passe away and leave it dead ?
Then weep mine eyes, the God of love doth grieve.
Weep foolish heart,
And weeping live.
For death is drie as dust. Yet if ye part, 10
End as the night whose sable hue
Your sinnes expresse: melt into dew.
256 GRIEVE NOT THE HOLY SPIRIT
into such drops as mark the close of night. The
same allusion in CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES,
III, 107, 1. 30.
15. As punctuated here and in ed. 1633 this must mean,
"Give mirth no answer."
19. The Ivie was the favorite musical instrument of
Herbert's day, chiefly employed, like our guitar,
to furnish accompaniment to song. It was pear-
shaped, with a rounded back and many strings.
In THE TEMPLE Herbert names it four times and
alludes to it as many more.
23. So THE CHURCH-FLOORE, III, 167, 1. 15.
24. Bowels =pity, sympathy.
28. If water never ceases to run from a spring, and
run not merely to relieve thirst, what shall I do
who have much greater need to cleanse myself by
continual flowing? DENIALL, II, 299, 1. 27, has
Deferre no time.
30. I am no Crystall=noi clear and free from stain.
31. S^-=always.
X. SUFFERING 257
When sawcie mirth shall knock or call at doore,
Cry out, Get hence,
Or cry no more. 15
Almightie God doth grieve, he puts on sense.
I sinne not to my grief alone,
But to my God's too; he doth grone.
Oh take thy lute, and tune it to a strain
Which may with thee 20
All day complain.
There can no discord but in ceasing be.
Marbles can weep; and surely strings
More bowels have then such hard things.
Lord, I adjudge my self to tears and grief, 25
Ev'n endlesse tears
Without relief.
If a cleare spring for me no time forbears,
But runnes although I be not drie,
I am no Crystall, what shall I ? 30
Yet if I wail not still, since still to wail
Nature denies,
And flesh would fail
If my deserts were masters of mine eyes, 34
Lord, pardon, for thy sonne makes good
My want of tears with store of bloud.
258 CONFESSION
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
No peace in secret sin.
NOTES :
5. Till=a compartment within a drawer, usually for
money. Cf. UNGRATEFTJLNESSE, II, 245, 1. 29.
8. Work and winde. Herbert uses this combination
twice elsewhere, JORDAN, II, 93, 1. 13, and THE
WORLD, II, 227, 1. 13, and characteristically modi
fied in BUSINESSE, III, 139, 1. 9.
12. A curious parallel in JACULA PRUDENTUM: Wealth
is like rheum ; it falls on the weakest part.
X. SUFFERING .. 259
CONFESSION
O WHAT a cunning guest
Is this same grief! Within my heart I made
Closets; and in them many a chest;
And like a master in my trade,
In those chests, boxes; in each box, a till: 5
Yet grief knows all, and enters when he will.
No scrue, no piercer can
Into a piece of timber work and winde
As God's afflictions into man,
When he a torture hath design'd. 10
They are too subtill for the subt'llest hearts,
And fall, like rheumes, upon the tendrest parts.
260 CONFESSION
14. The mole is again mentioned in GRACE, II, 311,
1. 13.
15. Cf. THE AGONIE, III, 153, 1. 12.
17. Keyes. This is Herbert's regular pronunciation
(EASTER, II, 153, 1. 11; H. COMMUNION, II, 195,
1. 21). He may seem to give it our sound in THE
PEARL, II, 381, 1. 9, and LONGING, III, 285, 1. 48,
but probably does not.
19. All his house knowes that there is no help for a fault
done but confession: COUNTRY PARSON, X.
22. This rhyme occurs again in CONTENT, II, 353, 1. 20.
29. T 'hem = day and diamond.
30. To = compared to.
X. SUFFERING 261
We are the earth, and they,
Like moles within us, heave, and cast about;
And till they foot and clutch their prey 15
They never cool, much lesse give out.
No smith can make such locks but they have keyes.
Closets are halls to them ; and hearts, high-wayes.
Onely an open breast
Doth shut them out, so that they cannot enter. 20
Or, if they enter, cannot rest
But quickly seek some new adventure.
Smooth open hearts no fastning have, but fiction
Doth give a hold and handle to affliction.
Wherefore my faults and sinnes, 25
Lord, I acknowledge. Take thy plagues away.
For since confession pardon winnes,
I challenge here the brightest day,
The clearest diamond. Let them do their best,
They shall be thick and cloudie to my breast. 30
262 THE STORM
DATE:
The natural place for this poem seems to be here,
because it pictures distresses of the inner life, and is
not included in W. But it may have been written
shortly after ARTILLERIE, II, 361, and THE STARRE,
II, 365, and still not have been copied into W.
METRE :
Used also in EASTER, II, 153.
SUBJECT:
The calm of God's abode invaded by human sup
plication.
NOTES :
6. Object= objectify, set before their faces.
7. Storms = meteor showers, like those which give
occasion to the poems, ARTILLERIE, II, 361, and
THE STARRE, II, 365. The reason for mentioning
them here, however, is not very plain. Perhaps hav
ing spoken in the previous verse of tempests of wind
and rain as storms here below, his thought passes
on to the celestial storms as more nearly resembling
those with which he proposes to assail high heaven.
12. So reversed thunder of PRAYER, II, 181, 1. 6.
13. The musick here may be that musick in the spheres
mentioned in ARTILLERIE, II, 361, 1. 9, or the
tunes mentioned in GRATEFULNESSE, III, 43, 1. 22,
or most probably the acclamations of Revelation
v,13.
X. SUFFERING 263
THE STORM
IP as the windes and waters here below
Do flie and flow,
My sighs and tears as busie were above,
Sure they would move
And much affect thee, as tempestuous times 5
Amaze poore mortals and object their crimes.
Starres have their storms, ev'n in a high degree,
As well as we.
A throbbing conscience spurred by remorse 9
Hath a strange force.
It quits the earth, and mounting more and more,
Dares to assault thee and besiege thy doore.
There it stands knocking, to thy musick's wrong,
And drowns the song.
Glorie and honour are set by till it 15
An answer get.
Poets have wrong'd poore storms. Such dayes are
best;
They purge the aire without, within the breast.
264 SIGN
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The Christian Temple, in contrast with the Jewish,
is built within the heart, and has human aspirations
for its liturgy. 1 Corinthians iii, 16; 2 Corinthians
vi, 16; Revelation xxi, 22; John ii, 21. For other
places where Herbert uses the word temple, see note
on THE WINDOWS, III, 15, 1. 3.
NOTES :
9. Habakkuk i, 3, 4.
17. 1 Kings vii, 23, 51; Acts vii, 47, 48.
21. Quick= living in contrast with dead, 1. 20. The
thought occurs again in GRATEFUI/NESSE, III, 43,
1. 19.
X. SUFFERING 265
SIGN
LORD, with what glorie wast thou serv'd of old,
When Solomon's temple stood and flourished!
Where most things were of purest gold.
The wood was all embellished
With flowers and carvings, mysticall and rare. 5
All show'd the builder's, crav'd the seer's care.
Yet all this glorie, all this pomp and state
Did not affect thee much, was not thy aim;
Something there was that sow'd debate.
Wherefore thou quitt'st thy ancient claim, 10
And now thy Architecture meets with sinne;
For all thy frame and fabrick is within.
There thou art struggling with a peevish heart,
Which sometimes crosseth thee, thou sometimes it.
The fight is hard on either part. 15
Great God doth fight, he doth submit.
All Solomon's sea of brasse and world of stone
Is not so deare to thee as one good grone.
And truly brasse and stones are heavie things,
Tombes for the dead, not temples fit for thee. 20
But grones are quick and full of wings,
And all their motions upward be.
And ever as they mount, like larks they sing.
The note is sad, yet musick for a king.
266 COMPLAINING
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique. In each pair of verses the last lines rhyme
together, while the third line of each stanza is
broken in the middle.
SUBJECT:
Why so severe, — great as thou art and I so small ?
NOTES :
3. So SUBMISSION, III, 205, 1. 1, and 1 Corinthians
i, 24.
5. So in DENIALL, II, 299, 1. 16.
7. The deed and stone = all that has ever been done
and said, corresponding with power and wisdome
of 1. 3.
13. Shall I have but a single attribute, grief, correspond
ing to thine only one, justice ?
16. Feeble and brief as I am, make me less so or more.
So GRACE, II, 311, 1. 22. The rhyming of the
stanza expresses these alternatives.
X. SUFFERING 267
COMPLAINING
Do not beguile my heart,
Because thou art
My power and wisdome. Put me not to shame,
Because I am 4
Thy clay that weeps, thy dust that calls.
Thou art the Lord of glorie.
The deed and storie
Are both thy due. But I a silly flie,
That live or die
According as the weather falls. 10
Art thou all justice, Lord ?
Shows not thy word
More attributes ? Am I all throat or eye,
To weep or crie ?
Have I no parts but those of grief ? 15
Let not thy wrathfull power
Afflict my houre,
My inch of life. Or let thy gracious power
Contract my houre,
That I may climbe and finde relief. 20
268 AFFLICTION
INTRODUCTORY :
Besides the poems which follow, two others with
this title are given, II, 247 and 339.
DATE :
Not found in W.
METRE : »
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The same as that of THE THANKSGIVING, II, 287,
the impossibility of matching Christ's sufferings
with our own. Only the turn is added here: Why,
then, should I have these perpetual and useless
griefs ? ,
NOTES:
5. 1 Corinthians xv, 31. In partial payment of thy
death, I die daily during a life as long as Methuse
lah's.
10. They would show a color less vivid than thy blood
stained sweat. Luke xxii, 44. Cf. JUSTICE, III, 117,
1. 5.
15. Imprest— earnest-money. From the French pret=
ready. "Earnest-money was called prest-money,
and to give a man such money was to imprest him : "
Skeat.
X. SUFFERING 269
AFFLICTION
KILL me not ev'ry day,
Thou Lord of life; since thy one death for me
Is more then all my deaths can be,
Though I in broken pay
Die over each houre of Methusalem's stay. 5
If all men's tears were let
Into one common sewer, sea, and brine,
What were they all compar'd to thine ?
Wherein if they were set, 9
They would discolour thy most bloudy sweat.
Thou art my grief alone,
Thou Lord, conceal it not. And as thou art
All my delight, so all my smart.
Thy crosse took up in one,
By way of imprest, all my future mone. 15
270 AFFLICTION
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Fellowship of Christ in our sufferings. Cf . GRIEVE
NOT, III, 255.
NOTES :
7. Job xxxiii, 4.
8. My tallies = my measure, how much breath I can
spare.
9. What 's then behinde ?= what is there left ?
10. Referring to the popular belief that strength is im
paired by sighing. So H. COMMUNION, II, 197,
1. 31, L'ENVOY, III, 381, 1. 14, and Shakespeare,
Hamlet, iv, 7: " Like a spendthrift sigh that hurts
by easing."
17. Those who bemoan thy sufferings on the cross dis
parage what thou art doing for us now; for thou
diest daily. 1 Corinthians xv, 31.
X. SUFFERING 271
AFFLICTION
MY heart did heave, and there came forth, O
God!
By that I knew that thou wast in the grief,
To guide and govern it to my relief,
Making a scepter of the rod.
Hadst thou not had thy part, 5
Sure the unruly sigh had broke my heart.
But since thy breath gave me both life and shape,
Thou knowst my tallies ; and when there's assigned
So much breath to a sigh, what's then behinde ?
Or if some yeares with it escape, 10
The sigh then onely is
A gale to bring me sooner to my blisse.
Thy life on earth was grief, and thou art still
Constant unto it, making it to be
A point of honour now to grieve in me, 15
And in thy members suffer ill.
They who lament one crosse,
Thou dying dayly, praise thee to thy losse.
272 AFFLICTION
INTRODUCTORY:
In W. this poem is entitled TENTATION.
DATE:
Not found in W. Possibly 1. 25-28 allude to his
being in the priesthood.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
"Unite my heart to fear thy name:" Psalm Ixxxvi,
11.
NOTES :
3. Psalm xxxi, 12.
4. Psalm Ixxi, 7.
9. Scattered. My thoughts sprinkle my heart with
piercing pains, as watering-pots do flowers with
life-giving drops.
X. SUFFERING 273
AFFLICTION
BROKEN in pieces all asunder,
Lord, hunt me not,
A thing forgot,
Once a poore creature, now a wonder,
A wonder tortur'd in the space 5
Betwixt this world and that of grace.
My thoughts are all a case of knives,
Wounding my heart
With scattered smart,
As watring pots give flowers their lives. 10
Nothing their furie can controll
While they do wound and prick my soul.
274 AFFLICTION
13. All my attendants = the many physical functions
which wait upon my life. He rightly connects his
melancholy with bodily disturbance.
15. Before my very face.
18. Contend with one another.
25. As described in 1. 13.
30. And — what is better still — reach thee.
X. SUFFERING 275
All my attendants are at strife,
Quitting their place
Unto my face. 15
Nothing performs the task of life.
The elements are let loose to fight,
And while I live trie out their right.
Oh help, my God! Let not their plot
Kill them and me, 20
And also thee,
Who art my life. Dissolve the knot,
As the sunne scatters by his light
All the rebellions of the night.
Then shall those powers which work for grief
Enter thy pay, 26
And day by day
Labour thy praise and my relief;
With care and courage building me,
Till I reach heav'n, and much more thee.
276 SIGHS AND GRONES
DATE:
Not found in W. Is thy steward of 1. 8 a priest ?
METRE:
Unique. Equally wide rhymes are found in UN
GRATEFULNESS, II, 243, in JUSTICE, III, 253, and
in COMPLAINING, III, 267.
SUBJECT:
An appeal for mercy on grounds of insignificance.
NOTES:
9. Stock may mean tree trunk, as in GRACE, II, 311,
1. 1. But more probably it has its agricultural
meaning, of cattle on a farm.
X. SUFFERING 277
SIGHS AND GRONES
O DO not use me
After my sinnes! Look not on my desert,
But on thy glorie! Then thou wilt reform
And not refuse me; for thou onely art
The mightie God, but I a sillie worm. 5
O do not bruise me!
O do not urge me!
For what account can thy ill steward make ?
I have abus'd thy stock, destroyed thy woods,
Suckt all thy magazens. My head did ake, 10
Till it found out how to consume thy goods.
O do not scourge me!
S78 SIGHS AND GRONES
14. Exodus x, 22.
16. Sow'd fig-leaves. Genesis iii, 7.
17. Cf. THE PRIESTHOOD, II, 373, 1. 11.
20. Turn'd=" up-turned, that the dregs may be drunk.
The word full shows this is the allusion:" A. B.
Grosart. But there is also a recollection of Revela
tion xvi, 1.
28. Cordicdl and Corrosive = that which renews the life
or wastes it away. So Shakespeare: "Care is no
cure, but rather corrosive:" 1 Henry VI, iii, 3.
29. The bitter 6oa?=that which contains death, judg
ment, the rod, the corrosive.
X. SUFFERING 279
O do not blinde me!
I have deserv'd that an Egyptian night
Should thicken all my powers, because my lust
Hath still sow'd fig-leaves to exclude thy light. 16
But I am frailtie, and already dust.
O do not grinde me!
O do not fill me
With the turn'd viall of thy bitter wrath! 20
For thou hast other vessels full of bloud,
A part whereof my Saviour empti'd hath,
Ev'n unto death. Since he di'd for my good,
O do not kill me!
But O reprieve me! 25
For thou hast life and death at thy command.
Thou art both Judge and Saviour, feast and
rody
Cordiall and Corrosive. Put not thy hand
Into the bitter box, but O my God,
My God, relieve me! 30
280 LONGING
INTRODUCTORY :
Set to music by Henry Purcell (1658-1695) in the
Treasury of Music.
DATE :
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The plan of the poem is to have no plan, but to
be only a succession of disjointed cries, lamenting
absence. The poem bears throughout a general
resemblance to Psalm cii.
NOTES:
9. Genesis iii, 17.
X. SUFFERING 281
LONGING
WITH sick and famisht eyes,
With doubling knees and weary bones,
To thee my cries,
To thee my grones,
To thee my sighs, my tears ascend. 5
No end ?
My throat, my soul is hoarse.
My heart is withered like a ground
Which thou dost curse.
My thoughts turn round 10
And make me giddie. Lord, I fall,
Yet call.
From thee all pitie flows.
Mothers are kinde because thou art,
And dost dispose 15
To them a part.
Their infants them; and they suck thee
More free.
282 LONGING
21. Psalm xxxi, 2.
26. Isaiah xlviii, 10. A furnace is also mentioned in
LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 181, 1. 26.
35. Psalm xciv, 9. Cf. DENIALL, II, 297, 1. 14.
41. So in THE TEMPER, II, 317, 1. 14, derived from
Genesis ii, 7.
X. SUFFERING 283
Bowels of pitie, heare!
Lord of my soul, love of my minde, 20
Bow down thine eare!
Let not the winde
Scatter my words, and in the same
Thy name!
Look on my sorrows round! 25
Mark well my furnace! O what flames,
What heats abound!
What griefs, what shames!
Consider, Lord ! Lord, bow thine eare
And heare! 30
Lord Jesu, thou didst bow
Thy dying head upon the tree;
O be not now
More dead to me!
Lord heare! Shall he that made the eare, 35
Not heare ?
Behold, thy dust doth stirre,
It moves, it creeps, it aims at thee.
Wilt thou deferre
To succour me, 40
Thy pile of dust, wherein each crumme
Sayes, Come?
284 LONGING
45-48. To things hast thou given free rein, locking thy
self from all appeal against their course ? So in THE
COUNTRY PARSON, XXXIV : Those that he findes in
the peaceable state, he adviseth to be very vigilant and
not to let go the raines as soon as the horse goes easie.
49-52. In the divine order of the world, thought of
as a kind of book of contracts which assigns to
each thing its own procedure, the appealing look of
a humble soul has been known to intervene. So
PRAYER, II, 181, 1. 7.
53. Cf. PROVIDENCE, III, 93, 1. 133. The figure of
life as a banquet with human beings as the guests
was first brought forward by Lucretius, Bk. Ill,
938:
" Cur non ut plenus vitae con viva recedis
Aequo animoque capis securam, stulte, quietem ? "
X. SUFFERING 285
To thee help appertains.
Hast thou left all things to their course,
And laid the reins 45
Upon the horse ?
Is all lockt ? Hath a sinner's plea
No key ?
Indeed the world's thy book,
Where all things have their lease assigned;
Yet a meek look 51
Hath interlin'd.
Thy board is full, yet humble guests
Finde nests.
Thou tarriest, while I die 55
And fall to nothing. Thou dost reigne
And rule on high,
While I remain
In bitter grief. Yet am I stil'd
Thy childe. 60
Lord, didst thou leave thy throne
Not to relieve ? How can it be
That thou art grown
Thus hard to me ?
Were sinne alive, good cause there were 65
To bear.
286 LONGING
67. Romans vi, 11.
69. That=sm.
70. These=thy promises.
79. This iterated rhyme occurs also in 1. 19, 30, and 36.
X. SUFFERING 287
But now both sinne is dead,
And all thy promises live and bide.
That wants his head;
These speak and chide, 70
And in thy bosome poure my tears
As theirs.
Lord JESU, heare my heart,
Which hath been broken now so long,
That ev'ry part 75
Hath got a tongue!
Thy beggars grow; rid them away
To day.
My love, my sweetnesse, heare!
By these thy feet, at which my heart 80
Lies all the yeare,
Pluck out thy dart
And heal my troubled breast which cryes,
Which dyes.
288 THE GLIMPSE
DATE:
Not found in W. See also 1. 30.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT :
The tantalizing shortness of delight. In contrast to
the jull-ey'd love of THE GLANCE, III, 331, 1. 20.
NOTES:
8-10. Be not like winds and waves which quickly pass,
though hardly blamable. Be rather like flowers
which linger. Herbert usually views the flower as a
type of fragility. See THE FLOWER, III, 305.
15. So delight, which should refresh like water, makes
me burn the more.
X. SUFFERING 289
4 THE GLIMPSE
WHITHER away delight ?
Thou cam'st but now; wilt thou so soon depart,
And give me up to night ?
For many weeks of lingring pain and smart
But one half houre of comfort for my heart ? 5
Me thinks delight should have
More skill in musick and keep better time.
Wert thou a winde or wave,
They quickly go and come with lesser crime. 9
Flowers look about, and die not in their prime.
Thy short abode and stay
Feeds not, but addes to the desire of meat.
Lime begg'd of old (they say)
A neighbour spring to cool his inward heat,
Which by the spring's accesse grew much more
great 15
290 THE GLIMPSE
19. r/m=the probable brevity of thy stay.
23-25. Though fulness of delight is stored in the world
to come, yet bliss-bringing glimpses need not too
much disclose what rightly is kept sealed.
26-28. Do not think thy coming will interfere with work
of mine. Grief and sin interfere. While thou art
with me, I will keep my wheel in motion, making
indeed thy stay seem short, 1. 11. If, however, stay
is used, as frequently by Herbert (HOME, III, 325,
327, 329, 1. 2, 31, 76), in the sense of be absent, then
the meaning must be, " My wheel is of no impor
tance, if only thy absence be short."
30. Court —a, place of festival; and probably there is
in Herbert's mind the farther suggestion, I shall
be borne away from Bemerton to where I formerly
was gay.
X. SUFFERING 291
In hope of thee my heart
Pickt here and there a crumme, and would not die;
But constant to his part
Whenas my fears foretold this, did replie,
A slender thread a gentle guest will tie. 20
Yet if the heart that wept
Must let thee go, return when it doth knock.
Although thy heap be kept
For future times, the droppings of the stock 24
May oft break forth, and never break the lock.
If I have more to spinne,
The wheel shall go so that thy stay be short.
Thou knowst how grief and sinne
Disturb the work. O make me not their sport,
Who by thy coming may be made a court! 30
292 A PARODIE
INTRODUCTORY:
In modern parody a serious poem is given a comic
turn. The word originally did not imply this de
basement. Any readjustment of a poem to a new
meaning was a parody. Herbert has here taken one
of Donne's exquisite love-songs and recast it in a
religious sense. The subject of both poems is the
same, — the pain of absence. The first half of
Donne's poem, which Herbert copies most closely,
runs thus:
"Soul's joy, now I am gone,
And you alone —
Which cannot be,
Since I must leave myself with thee,
And carry thee with me —
Yet when unto our eyes
Absence denies
Each other's sight,
And makes to us a constant night,
When others change to light;
O, give no way to grief,
But let relief
Of mutual love
This wonder to the vulgar prove,
Our bodies, not we, move."
Vaughan has parodied Herbert in more than
twenty poems.
X. SUFFERING 293
A PARODIE
SOUL'S joy, when thou art gone,
And I alone —
Which cannot be,
Because thou dost abide with me
And I depend on thee — 5
Yet when thou dost suppresse
The cheerfulnesse
Of thy abode,
And in my powers not stirre abroad,
But leave me to my load; 10
O what a damp and shade
Doth me invade!
No stormie night
Can so afflict or so affright
As thy eclipsed light. 15
294 A PARODIE
DATE:
Not found in W. The date of Donne's poem is not
known.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The pain of absence.
NOTES :
8. Abode : see 1. 4.
20. The subject of say is Sinne. Cf. 1. 24, 29.
23. Cf. ASSURANCE, III, 225, 1. 7.
X. SUFFERING 295
Ah Lord! Do not withdraw,
Lest want of aw
Make Sinne appeare,
And when thou dost but shine lesse cleare,
Say that thou art not here. 20
And then what life I have,
While Sinne doth rave,
And falsly boast
That I may seek but thou art lost,
Thou, and alone thou, know'st. 25
O what a deadly cold
Doth me infold!
I half beleeve
That Sinne sayes true. But while I grieve,
Thou com'st and dost relieve. 30
296 DISCIPLINE
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Love is more effective than anger, and more worthy
of thee.
NOTES :
2. Jeremiah x, 24.
12. Thy 6oofc=the H. Scriptures; see II, 187.
X. SUFFERING 297
DISCIPLINE
THROW away thy rod,
Throw away thy wrath.
0 my God,
Take the gentle path.
For my heart's desire 5
Unto thine is bent.
1 aspire
To a full consent.
Not a word or look
I affect to own, 10
But by book,
And thy book alone.
Though I fail, I weep.
Though I halt in pace,
Yet I creep 15
To the throne of grace.
298 DISCIPLINE
22. I believe this is the only case where Herbert figures
Love as a man.
27. Love brought Christ from heaven to earth.
X. SUFFERING
Then let wrath remove.
Love will do the deed:
For with love
Stonie hearts will bleed. 20
Love is swift of foot.
Love's a man of wane,
And can shoot,
And can hit from farre.
Who can scape his bow? 25
That which wrought on thee,
Brought thee low,
Needs must work on me.
Throw away thy rod.
Though man frailties hath, 30
Thou art God.
Throw away thy wrath.
300 JOSEPH'S COAT
INTRODUCTORY :
Joseph's coat was of many colors. Genesis xxxvii , 3 .
In 1640 Thomas Fuller published a volume of
sermons under the title of Joseph's Party-Coloured
Coat.
DATE:
Not found in W. Last two lines show that it is late.
METRE :
Of seventeen sonnets, six — like this — are in the
Shakespearian form.
SUBJECT:
My grief is diverse. If single, it would destroy me;
but since God gives it the changefulness of joy, I
can even sing it.
NOTES :
3. I would suggest that in the place of mill we read
right. There is no other case in Herbert of a pair of
unrhymed lines in a sonnet.
6. His=its.
8. Both= grief and smart, mental and physical dis
tress. These, having seized my heart, would find
means to carry off my body too, claiming both heart
and body as theirs.
10. The race = same as runne of 1. 8.
11. Herbert frequently abbreviates entice to tice; so
THE FORERUNNERS, III, 319, 1. 21.
X. SUFFERING 301
JOSEPH'S COAT
WOUNDED I sing, tormented I indite,
Thrown down I fall into a bed and rest.
Sorrow hath chang'd its note; such is his will
Who changeth all things as him pleaseth best.
For well he knows if but one grief and smart 5
Among my many had his full career,
Sure it would carrie with it ev'n my heart,
And both would runne untill they found a biere
To fetch the bodie, both being due to grief.
But he hath spoil'd the race, and giv'n to an
guish 10
One of Joye's coats, ticing it with relief
To linger in me, and together languish.
I live to shew his power who once did bring
My joyes to weep, and now my griefs to sing.
302 JESU
DATE :
Not found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
Even when broken by calamity, my heart finds rest
in Christ. The reverse of this theme is played with
in THE ALTAR, II, 121, where the unorganized but
sacred parcels of the heart are seeking unity.
NOTES :
9. Herbert rarely puns. With all his readiness to trace
remote intellectual relations, he has no fondness for
word-play as has Shakespeare and the majority of
his contemporaries. Perhaps in this strange poem
he has in mind Donne's Broken Heart, especially
its last verse with the lines:
" I think my breast hath all
Those pieces still, though they be not unite."
Queen Mary said when dying that if her heart were
opened, the word Calais would be found there.
Browning refers to this saying of Queen Mary's
when writing in De Gustibus:
"Open my heart and you will see
Graved inside of it, 'Italy.'"
X. SUFFERING 303
JESU
JESU is in my heart, his sacred name
Is deeply carved there. But th' other week
A great affliction broke the little frame,
Ev'n all to pieces; which I went to seek.
And first I found the corner where was J, 5
After where E <S, and next where U was
graVed.
When I had got these parcels, instantly
I sat me down to spell them; and perceived
That to my broken heart he was I ease you,
And to my whole isJESU. 10
304 THE FLOWER
INTRODUCTORY:
First sketches of this poem may be found in RE
PENTANCE, II, 305, and EMPLOYMENT, II, 347. Imi
tated by Vaughan in his Unprofitableness.
DATE:
Not found in W. See also 1. 36.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
In liability to change, my soul is like a flower. Job
xiv, 2; Psalm ciii, 15; Isaiah xl, 6.
NOTES :
3. Demean. Dr. Grosart thinks this equivalent to
demesne or domain. I cannot join it to the con
text in this sense. May it not be another form of
demeanor = bearing, or carriage ? The passage
would then signify : Flowers give positive pleasure
by their own gay show, but a negative pleasure also
when we recall the wintry time preceding. Cf . Psalm
xc, 15. So God's coming gives pleasure, through
presence felt and absence remembered.
4. Coleridge, speaking of this whole poem as "deli
cious," calls attention to the beautiful succession of
delayed syllables in the first hah* of this line.
X. SUFFERING 305
^ THE FLOWER
How fresh, O Lord, how sweet and clean
Are thy returns! Ev'n as the flowers in spring,
To which, besides their own demean,
The late-past frosts tributes of pleasure bring.
Grief melts away 5
Like snow in May,
As if there were no such cold thing.
Who would have thought my shrivel'd heart
Could have recover'd greennesse ? It was gone
Quite under ground, as flowers depart 10
To see their mother-root when they have blown;
Where they together
All the hard weather,
Dead to the world, keep house unknown.
These are thy wonders, Lord of power, 15
Killing and quickning, bringing down to hell
And up to heaven in an houre;
Making a chiming of a passing-bell.
We say amisse,
This or that is; 20
Thy word is all, if we could spell.
306 THE FLOWER
10. So in PARENTALIA, V, 13, describing his mother's
garden after she has left it, he bids the flowers
Cuncta dd radices redeant, tumidosque paternos.
16. So Wisdom xvi, 13.
18. Turning a funeral knell into a bridal peal.
21. Spell= interpret. So THE TEMPER, II, 317, 1. 16,
and A DIALOGUE-ANTHEME, III, 343, 1. 4.
25. Off ring = uplifting itself toward.
28. Joining to produce tears.
34. The coldest experience on earth is warm com
pared with thy chilling frown. Same phrase in THE
SEARCH, III, 223, 1. 53.
36. In age. The poem was written late.
39. "The poem, THE FLOWER, is especially affecting,
and to me such a phrase as and relish versing ex
presses a sincerity, a reality which I would unwill
ingly exchange for the more dignified 'and once
more love the muse : ' " S. T. Coleridge in a letter to
W. Collins.
45. Which=ihis knowledge.
48. Store, a favorite word with Herbert = abundance,
superfluity. Proud through prosperity. Shake
speare in Sonnet LXIV pictures the land border
ing the ocean as "Increasing store with loss and
loss with store."
X. SUFFERING 307
0 that I once past changing were,
Fast in thy Paradise, where no flower can wither!
Many a spring I shoot up fair, 24
Off ring at heav'n, growing and groning thither;
Nor doth my flower
Want a spring-showre,
My sinnes and I joining together.
But while I grow in a straight line, 29
Still upwards bent, as if heav'n were mine own,
Thy anger comes, and I decline.
What frost to that ? What pole is not the zone
Where all things burn,
When thou dost turn,
And the least frown of thine is shown ? 35
And now in age I bud again,
After so many deaths I live and write;
1 once more smell the dew and rain,
And relish versing. O my onely light,
It cannot be 40
That I am he
On whom thy tempests fell all night.
These are thy wonders, Lord of love,
To make us see we are but flowers that glide.
Which when we once can finde and prove,
Thou hast a garden for us where to bide. 46
Who would be more,
Swelling through store,
Forfeit their Paradise by their pride.
XI
DEATH
PREFACE
IN the parish record of Bemerton appears this
entry: "Mr. George Herbert Esq., Parson of
Fuggleston and Bemerton, was buried 3 day of
March 1632." This record is confirmed by Her
bert's will, which was proved on March 12, 1632.
As the new year then began on Lady Day, March
25, the year would be our 1633. This date is con
firmed by Herbert's letter to Ferrar, inclosing his
Notes on Valdesso, which bears date of September
29, 1632 ; and by the will of his niece, which was
proved by Herbert in October, 1632. Herbert
was instituted on April 26, 1630, so that the life
at Bemerton covered almost exactly three years.
Aubrey tells how Herbert " was buried (according
to his own desire) with the singing service for the
burial of the dead, by the singing men of Sarum."
He was laid, according to Walton, "in his own
Church under the Altar, and cover'd with a Grave
stone without any inscription." He died without
issue. His wife, whom Aubrey thought a strikingly
handsome woman, a few years later married Sir
Robert Cook, and by him had children.
Herbert had long notice of death. Consumption
overcame him slowly, and allowed him to retain
his mental powers to the last. Until within a few
312 PREFACE TO
months of the end, he read Prayers each day in the
little chapel opposite his house. And though a
month before his death Mr. Duncon, sent by Fer-
rar, found him unable to sit up, his discourse was
such, Mr. Duncon told Walton, " that after almost
forty years it remained still fresh in his memory."
The Sunday before he died he sang his own songs,
accompanying himself as usual on the lute. Ac
cording to Walton he died without pain, in his last
hour speaking with his family and friend about
religion, business, and the care of those he was to
leave.
To this fact, that Herbert's long dying was a life
in death, we owe the splendid series of his death-
songs. A few of those included in the preceding
Group may possibly belong to the period of Crisis ;
but the great body of them, and probably all that
appear in the present Group, spring from the last
year or two of Herbert's life. As we have seen,
every phase of his inner moods was interesting to
him, and easily became a poetic subject out of
which something beautiful might be fashioned. If
because our distresses do not so readily put on
a coat of joy, we sometimes hold it half a sin that
Herbert should put in words the grief he feels,
we should remember that he published none of
his poems, and that in poetry he probably found
one of his few defences against pain. Wounded I
sing ; tormented I indite, he says. By objectifying
his experiences he detaches himself from them.
DEATH 313
Donne in his Triple Fool had tried this pallia
tive:
" As th* earth's inward narrow crooked lanes
Do purge sea-water's fretful salt away,
I thought if I could draw my pains
Through rhyme's vexation, I should them allay.
Grief brought to numbers cannot be so fierce,
For he tames it that fetters it in verse."
I have thought it well to gather into a brief final
Group Herbert's poems which refer to approaching
death. How unlike they are to the clever verses
written at Cambridge on the same subject ! All the f
poems of this Group have in them the note_ofjeal-
hy, whether like THE FORERUNNERS and LIFE
they mourn the cessation of his verse, like GRIEF
and HOME utter an anguished cry, like THE
GLANCE and THE DAWNING turn to the sweet
originall joy of God's love, or like VERTUE, TIME,
and A DIALOGUE-ANTHEME, sport with the im
potence of death. In all of them there is veritable
experience carried up into well-ordered beauty.
The methods of Herbert's Life did not forsake
him in the leaving of it.
DEATH
316 THE FORERUNNERS
INTRODUCTORY :
" Though God had magnified him with extraordi
nary Gifts, yet said he, God hath broken into my
study and taken off my Chariot wheels. I have no-
thing worthy of God:" Oley's Life of Herbert. Cf.
DULNESSE, III, 207.
DATE:
Not found in W. He looks back on his work.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The King's messengers have affixed their mark and
seized my beautiful estate. For the King I culti
vated it, and I alone offered him such beauty. If
he will now take it and me, I am content.
NOTES :
1. Harbingers (as in THE CHURCH MILITANT, III,
365, 1. 84), messengers sent before to prepare
lodging and announce the coming of the King. —
The mark here and in 1. 35 is the chalking of the
door with the royal letters. "Alexander Borgia
said of the expedition of the French into Italy that
they came with chalk in their hands to mark up
their lodgings and not with weapons to force their
passage:" Bacon, Novum Organum, Bk. I, XXXV.
" Before him a great prophet, to proclaim
His coming, is sent harbinger."
Milton, Par. Reg. 1. 70.
2. The hair turned gray.
XI. DEATH 317
^ THE FORERUNNERS
THE harbingers are come. See, see their mark !
White is their colour, and behold my head.
But must they have my brain ? Must they dispark
Those sparkling notions, which therein were
bred?
Must dulnesse turn me to a clod ? 5
Yet have they left me, Thou art still my God.
Good men ye be to leave me my best room,
Ev'n all my heart, and what is lodged there.
I passe not, I, what of the rest become,
So Thou art still my God be out of fear. 10
He will be pleased with that dittie;
And if I please him, I write fine and wittie.
318 THE FORERUNNERS
3. Dispark; according to THE CHURCH MILITANT,
III, 369, 1. 147, dispark cannot mean extinguish
sparks, as might erroneously be inferred from the
play on the word sparkling in 1. 4, but must mean
drive from the inclosure.
6. Psalm xxxi, 14. A comforting phrase, like those
in the note to A TRUE HYMNE, III, 27.
9. / passe not=I care not. So Dray ton, Elegy of
Poets and Poesy, 1. 185 (1627) :
" Let such pieces be
Spoke of by those that shall come after me,
I pass not for them."
Herbert has three other senses of pass, i. e. (1) to
go beyond, as in THE SEARCH, III, 221, 1. 38; (2)
to go over, as in THE SEARCH, HI, 221, 1. 36; (3) to
deliver over, as in OBEDIENCE, II, 385, 1. 8. The
thought of these two lines is repeated in JACULA
PRUDENTUM : He loseth nothing that loseth not God.
11. Dittie= words, not music; as in THE BANQUET,
III, 57, 1. 50, and PFOVIDENCE, III, 79, 1. 9.
13. For the value Herbert set on beautiful diction, see
the longer account in JORDAN, II, 91.
15, 16. For his early resolve, see Two SONNETS TO
HIS MOTHER, H, 79.
23. The broider'd coat again in PEACE, II, 377, 1. 9.
26. Arras, the most beautiful of decorations, as can
vas is the coarsest. So THE CHURCH-PORCH, II,
47, 1. 270, and DOTAGE, III, 137, 1. 3.
XI. DEATH 319
Farewell sweet phrases, lovely metaphors.
But will ye leave me thus ? When ye before
Of stews and brothels onely knew the doores, 15
Then did I wash you with my tears, and more,
Brought you to Church well drest and clad.
My God must have my best, ev'n all I had.
Lovely enchanting language, sugar-cane,
Hony of roses, whither wilt thou flie ? 20
Hath some fond lover tic'd thee to thy bane ?
And wilt thou leave the Church and love a stie ?
Fie, thou wilt soil thy broider'd coat,
And hurt thy self and him that sings the note.
Let foolish lovers, if they will love dung, 25
With canvas, not with arras clothe their shame.
Let follie speak in her own native tongue.
True beautie dwells on high. Ours is a flame
But borrowed thence to light us thither. 29
Beautie and beauteous words should go together.
Yet if you go, I passe not. Take your way!
For, Thou art still my God, is all that ye
Perhaps with more embellishment can say.
Go birds of spring ! Let winter have his fee !
Let a bleak palenesse chalk the doore, 35
So all within be livelier then before.
320 LIFE
DATE:
Not found in W. See also 1. 10 and 11.
METRE :
Used also in LENT, II, 171.
SUBJECT:
The same as that of VERTTTE, III, 335. Perhaps
like the previous poem, a lament that his beautiful
work in poetry has been so incomplete.
NOTES:
1. Posie= nosegay, as in THE THANKSGIVING, II, 287,
1. 14, but with a double meaning.
7. Hand and heart = employment and love.
12. Sweetening the sourness of death by the suggestions
of the next stanza.
15. Where the Apothecary useth either for loosing, Ru-
barb, or for binding, Bolearmena, the Parson useth
damask or white Roses for the one, and plantaine,
shepherd's purse, knot-grasse for the other, and that
with better successe : THE COUNTRY PARSON, XXIII.
So THE ROSE, II, 391, 1. 18, and PROVIDENCE, III,
87, 1. 78.
XI. DEATH 321
LIFE
I MADE a posie while the day ran by.
Here will I smell my remnant out, and tie
My life within this band.
But time did becken to the flowers, and they
By noon most cunningly did steal away 5
And withered in my hand.
My hand was next to them, and then my heart.
I took, without more thinking, in good part
Time's gentle admonition;
Who did so sweetly death's sad taste convey, 10
Making my minde to smell my fatall day,
Yet sugring the suspicion.
r Farewell deare flowers ! Sweetly your time ye spent,
\ Fit, while ye liv'd, for smell or ornament,
/ And after death for cures. 15
i I follow straight without complaints or grief,
! Since if my sent be good, I care not if
It be as short as yours.
322 GRIEF
INTRODUCTORY
Compare with the first half of this poem the last
part of THE COUNTRY PARSON, XXXIII.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE :
Used also in A WREATH, II, 319, THE ANSWER,
II, 351, and LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 179.
SUBJECT:
Distress so great should have had greater means of
expression. Cf. GRIEVE NOT, III, 257, 1. 31-36.
NOTES :
1, 2. Jeremiah ix, 1; Lamentations ii, 18.
3. Herbert includes in grief bodily as well as mental
suffering. Writing to Ferrar four months before his
death, he speaks of himself as in the midst of my
griefes.
5. Cf. CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES, III, 107, 1. 29.
10. The lesse world — man — is contrasted with the
greater world. So MAN, II, 223, 1. 47.
15. Let my eyes do the running.
19. Accordingly this line is left without measure, tune,
and time. For other cases see A TRUE HYMNE, III,
27, 1. 20.
XI. DEATH 323
\f GRIEF
O WHO will give me tears ? Come all ye springs,
Dwell in my head and eyes. Come clouds, and
rain.
My grief hath need of all the watry things
That nature hath produced. Let ev'ry vein
Suck up a river to supply mine eyes, 5
My weary weeping eyes, too drie for me
Unlesse they get new conduits, new supplies
To bear them out, and with my state agree.
What are two shallow foords, two little spouts
Of a lesse world ? The greater is but small, 10
A narrow cupboard for my griefs and doubts,
Which want provision in the midst of all.
Verses, ye are too fine a thing, too wise
For my rough sorrows. Cease, be dumbe and
mute,
Give up your feet and running to mine eyes, 15
And keep your measures for some lover's lute,
Whose grief allows him musick and a ryme.
For mine excludes both measure, tune, and time.
Alas, my God!
324 HOME
INTRODUCTORY:
The place of rest.
DATE:
Not found in W. Probably written during the last
Lenten Season (1. 61 and 73) of his life.
METRE :
Used also in CHURCH-MUSICK, II, 199; CONTENT,
II, 353; DIVINITIE, III, 97; but without refrain.
SUBJECT:
A cry for union: Thou with me here, or I with thee
there ! The first five stanzas expand the first line of
the refrain; the remainder, the second.
NOTES :
2. Stay= delay to come.
5. The only double refrain employed by Herbert.
14. Isaiah Ixiii, 5.
20. Cf. THE STARRE, II, 367, 1. 31.
22. Cf. MISERIE, II, 251, 1. 8. Perhaps an allusion to
Adam and Eve (as in the PRAYER BEFORE SER
MON), and also to the apple as the sign of earthly
love.
XI. DEATH 325
HOME
COME Lord, my head doth burn, my heart is sick,
While thou dost ever, ever stay.
Thy long deferrings wound me to the quick.
My spirit gaspeth night and day.
O show thy self to me, 5
Or take me up to thee!
How canst thou stay, considering the pace
The bloud did make which thou didst
waste ?
When I behold it trickling down thy face,
I never saw thing make such haste. 10
O show thy, &c.
When man was lost, thy pitie lookt about
To see what help in th' earth or skie.
But there was none, at least no help without; 15
The help did in thy bosome lie.
O show thy, &c.
There lay thy sonne. And must he leave that nest,
That hive of sweetnesse, to remove 20
Thraldome from those who would not at a feast
Leave one poore apple for thy love ?
O show thy, &c.
326 HOME
27. To me, so long ago baptized, wilt thou not appear ?
31. Referring back to 1. 2 and 7. If thou abidest ab
sent from me, yet why should I from thee ?
39. For Herbert's use of wink see MISERIE, II, 257,
1. 62, and THE COLLAR, III, 213, 1. 26. — Woman-
kinde for him always represents temptation.
51. Men may forget themselves in pleasure; but when
they come to their senses, it is to thee they turn.
XI. DEATH 327
He did, he came. O my Redeemer deare, 25
After all this canst them be strange ?
So many yeares baptiz'd, and not appeare ?
As if thy love could fail or change ?
O show thy, &c.
Yet if thou stayest still, why must I stay ? 31
My God, what is this world to me,
This world of wo ? Hence all ye clouds, away,
Away! I must get up and see.
O show thy, &c. 35
What is this weary world, this meat and drink,
That chains us by the teeth so fast ?
What is this woman-kinde, which I can wink
Into a blacknesse and distaste ? 40
O show thy, &c.
With one small sigh thou gav'st me th' other day
I blasted all the joyes about me,
And scouling on them as they pin'd away, 45
Now come again, said I, and flout me.
O show thy, &c.
Nothing but drought and dearth, but bush and
brake,
Which way so-e're I look, I see. 50
Some may dream merrily, but when they wake,
They dresse themselves and come to thee.
O show thy, &c.
328 HOME
55. "The harvest is the end of the world:" Matthew
xiii, 39. In the next line leave, i. e. cease thinking
about, is the emphatic word.
61. 2 Corinthians v, 8; Psalm Iv, 6.
70. They beg that the rest of me also may accompany
them.
76. The rhyme demands stay (1. 2), but I demand come.
A somewhat similar break at the end of DENIALL,
II, 297, and A TRUE HYMNE, III, 27. Nine of the
thirteen stanzas of this poem have a rhyme in a.
XI. DEATH 329
We talk of harvests; there are no such things 55
But when we leave our corn and hay.
There is no fruitfull yeare but that which brings
The last and lov'd, though dreadfull day.
O show thy, &c.
Oh loose this frame, this knot of man untie!
That my free soul may use her wing,
Which now is pinion'd with mortalitie,
As an intangled, hamper'd thing.
O show thy, &c. 65
What have I left that I should stay and grone ?
The most of me to heav'n is fled.
My thoughts and joyes are all packt up and gone,
And for their old acquaintance plead. 70
O show thy, &c.
Come dearest Lord, passe not this holy season,
My flesh and bones and joynts do pray.
And ev'n my verse, when by the ryme and reason
The word is, Stay, sayes ever, Come! 76
O show thy self to me,
Or take me up to thee!
330 THE GLANCE
DATE:
Not found in W. A long period of life has passed,
I. 9.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The joy I felt when my Love first looked on me has
been my stay in every ill.
NOTES:
4. Probably the self-condemnation is excessive, but
that it is not without ground is seen in such poems
as VANITIE, II, 357, and FRAILTIE, II, 359.
5-8. The period here mentioned is described at greater
length in the first three stanzas of AFFLICTION, II,
339.
5. Sugred is used again in THE ROSE, II, 389, 1. 2, and
DULNESSE, III, 209, 1. 21.
7. Embalme= bring balm or balsam to. Cf. SUNDAY,
II, 175, 1. 5.
18. A mirth=t}iat of 1. 5 and 13.
20. Fvll-ey'd refers back to 1. 1. The word is used again
in VANITIE, III, 133, i. 7.
21. The line is so splendid that Vaughan has borrowed
it for his Misery:
" And with one glance, could he that gain —
To look him out of all his pain."
XI. DEATH 331
THE GLANCE
WHEN first thy sweet and gracious eye
Vouchsaf d ev'n in the midst of youth and night
To look upon me, who before did lie
Weltring in sinne,
I felt a sugred strange delight, 5
Passing all cordials made by any art,
Bedew, embalme, and overrunne my heart,
And take it in.
Since that time many a bitter storm
My soul hath felt, ev'n able to destroy, 10
Had the malicious and ill-meaning harm
His swing and sway.
But still thy sweet originall joy,
Sprung from thine eye, did work within my soul,
And surging griefs, when they grew bold, controll,
And got the day. 16
If thy first glance so powerfull be,
A mirth but open'd and seal'd up again,
What wonders shall we feel when we shall see
Thy full-ey'd love! 20
When thou shalt look us out of pain,
And one aspect of thine spend in delight
More then a thousand sunnes disburse in light,
In heav'n above.
THE DAWNING
INTRODUCTORY :
Vaughan has imitated this poem in his Easter Day.
DATE:
Not found in W. Probably written on the last Easter
of his life, 1. 2, 8, 10.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
On Easter Day the habit of sadness must be aban
doned.
NOTES :
9. Unless thou opposest, thou mayst rise with Christ
into newness of life.
11. Cf. EASTER, II, 153, 1. 3.
12. An opposite word-play to that of THE TEMPER, II,
313, 1. 7.
XI. DEATH
THE DAWNING
AWAKE sad heart, whom sorrow ever drowns!
Take up thine eyes, which feed on earth.
Unfold thy forehead gather'd into frowns.
Thy Saviour comes, and with him mirth,
Awake, awake! 5
And with a thankfull heart his comforts take.
But thou dost still lament, and pine, and crie,
And feel his death, but not his victorie.
Arise sad heart! If thou dost not withstand,
Christ's resurrection thine may be, 10
Do not by hanging down break from the hand
Which as it riseth, raiseth thee.
Arise, arise!
And with his buriall-linen drie thine eyes.
, Christ left his grave-clothes that we might, when
grief 15
Draws tears or bloud, not want an handkerchief.
334 VERTUE
INTRODUCTORY:
This poem has been rewritten by Bishop Home
and by John Wesley. The latter, omitting the
poetic audacities of Herbert, has made out of his
poem a popular hymn. — "Piscator. And now,
scholar, my direction for thy fishing is ended with
this shower, for it has done raining. And now look
about you and see how pleasently that meadow
looks; nay, and the earth smells so sweetly too.
Come, let me tell you what holy Herbert says of
such days and showers as these, and then we will
thank God that we enjoy them : " Walton's Angler,
Ch. V.
DATE:
Not found in W. Calm meditations on death.
METRE :
Used also in GRACE, II, 311.
SUBJECT:
The perpetuity of goodness; which is bright as the
day, sweet as the rose, lovely as the spring, but
excels them all in never fading.
NOTES :
1. Sweet is repeated in each stanza. SUNDAY, II, 175,
has a similar opening.
6. A color too bright will sometimes make the eyes
blink. There may be an allusion to the same fact
in FAITH, II, 235, 1. 38, and in FRAILTIE, II, 359,
1. 16.
XI. DEATH 335
VERTUE
SWEET day, so cool, so calm, so bright,
The bridall of the earth and skie;
The dew shall weep thy fall to night,
For thou must die.
Sweet rose, whose hue angrie and brave
Bids the rash gazer wipe his eye;
Thy root is ever in its grave,
And thou must die.
336 VERTUE
7. THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 47, 1. 266, and JOSEPH'S
COAT, III, 301, 1. 3, are the only other passages
where Herbert uses its.
11. Fe=days and roses. — Close is the technical name
for a cadence or conclusion of a musical phrase. So
Milton, On the Morning of Christ's Nativity, 1. 90:
" The air such pleasure loth to lose,
With thousand echoes still prolongs each heavenly close."
13. In the first three stanzas time is shown to be de
structive; then suddenly the whole purpose of the
poem appears in the last stanza, where time leaves
virtue firm.
14. Gives= yields, bends, gives way. The New English
Dictionary quotes a case of this usage from B.
Googe, 1586: "The olive will give and bend, and
so will the poplar, the willow."
15. CW=live coals, i. e. the final conflagration.
2 Peter iii, 10.
XI. DEATH 337
Sweet spring, full of sweet dayes and roses,
A box where sweets compacted lie; 10
My musick shows ye have your closes,
And all must die.
Onely a sweet and vertuous soul,
Like season'd timber, never gives;
But though the whole world turn to coal, 15
Then chiefly lives.
338 TIME
INTRODUCTORY:
With this poem compare DEATH, II, 263.
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Length of days, parting us from God, can never be
the Christian's desire.
NOTES :
4. It has become dulled by use.
10. Cf. PARADISE, HI, 39, 1. 11.
XI. DEATH 339
TIME
MEETING with Time, slack thing, said I,
Thy sithe is dull, whet it for shame.
No marvell, Sir, he did replie,
If it at length deserve some blame. 4
But where one man would have me grinde it,
Twentie for one too sharp do finde it.
Perhaps some such of old did passe,
Who above all things lov'd this life;
To whom thy sithe a hatchet was,
Which now is but a pruning-knife. 10
Christ's coming hath made man thy debter,
Since by thy cutting he grows better.
340 TIME
13. The same thought in DEATH, II, 265, 1. 13-17.
17, 18. This looks like a reminiscence of Sia/cropos 'Ap-
y€«£oVn?s: Odyssey, XXIV, 1-14.
19. That= that which, the full subject being the follow
ing line.
20. Philippians i, 23.
22. We should write lengthens.
23. Wants= lacks, misses. The punishment of hell is
twofold, — banishment from God, and positive
suffering.
26. Herbert complains of the length of time, figuring it
as portentously long since it lies outside eternity.
See Revelation x, 6. But the mention of eternity
shows Herbert to be seeking something never-end
ing. The last part of his desire contradicts the first
(1. 2), and Time will parley no more. A similar
discord is developed in Milton's lines On Time,
written about the same date.
XI. DEATH 341
And in his blessing thou art blest.
For where thou onely wert before
An executioner at best, 15
Thou art a gard'ner now, and more —
An usher to convey our souls
Beyond the utmost starres and poles.
And this is that makes life so long,
While it detains us from our God. 20
Ev'n pleasures here increase the wrong,
And length of dayes lengthen the rod.
Who wants the place where God doth dwell,
Partakes already half of hell.
Of what strange length must that needs be
Which ev'n eternitie excludes! 26
Thus farre Time heard me patiently,
Then chafing said, This man deludes:
What do I hear before his doore ?
He doth not crave lesse time, but more. 30
342 A DIALOGUE-ANTHEME
DATE:
Not found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
The impotence of death.
NOTES :
1, 2. 1 Corinthians xv, 55.
3. Of history, fame, as in SELF-CONDEMNATION, III,
111, 1. 6. The same thought as in CONTENT, II, 355,
1. 25.
6. Hebrews ii, 15.
XI. DEATH 343
j A DIALOGUE-ANTHEME
Christian. Death
Chr. ALAS, poore Death, where is thy glorie ?
Where is thy famous force, thy ancient sting ?
Dea. Alas poore mortall, void of storie, 3
Go spell and reade how I have kiWd thy King.
Chr. Poore death! And who was hurt thereby ?
Thy curse being laid on him, makes thee accurst.
Dea. Let losers talk 1 Yet thou shall die ;
These arms shall crush thee. Chr. Spare not, do
thy worst.
I shall be one day better then before;
Thou so much worse that thou shalt be no
more. 10
XII
ADDITIONAL AND DOUBTFUL POEMS
PREFACE
BESIDES the poems composing THE TEMPLE,
Herbert wrote other verse. That there was a
considerable body of this, and that it was of a secu
lar sort, has often been asserted. But the assertion
rests on no evidence, and in my third Essay I have
shown that it is inherently improbable. There are,
however, a few additional poems which evidence of
varying degrees of worth connects with Herbert's
name, and these I gather into a final Group.
For some of them the evidence is very slight. As
is shown in the notes, it is improbable that Herbert
ever saw the lines to the Queen of Bohemia, or
those to Lord Danvers and Sir John Danvers.
Some of the Psalms here printed he may have
written; but if so, they were justly rejected as
unworthy to stand beside his beautiful rendering
of THE TWENTY-THIRD PSALM. THE PARADOX
has his name written upon it by an unknown
copyist, and Nahum Tate thought THE CONVERT
his. But none of these can be traced directly to
his hand.
The case is different with THE HOLY COMMU- *
NION, LOVE, TRINITIE-SUNDAY, EVEN-SONG, THE «
KNELL, and PERSEVERANCE. These appear in the «
Williams Manuscript, intermingled with its other
348 PREFACE TO
poems. That manuscript, containing nearly half of
the poems subsequently published in THE TEM
PLE* certainly originated in Herbert's study. Its
general handwriting is that of a copyist; but its
many corrections and its large body of Latin poems
are in Herbert's hand. We must therefore accept
these poems as his, or else suppose that, though
composed by some one else, he had them copied as
favorites into a book of his own verse. But their
inferiority of style is quite as grave an objection to
this supposition as to his own authorship. They
must then be classed among his refuse work. In
the years that intervened between the composition
of the Williams Manuscript and his death his taste
had ripened. Having already written other poems
on THE HOLY COMMUNION, LOVE, and TRINITIE-
SUNDAY, he rejected these, wrote later a substitute
for the EVEN-SONG, and struck out THE KNELL
and PERSEVERANCE altogether. While these poems
in themselves are youthful and of small aesthetic
value, they are of importance as showing that Her
bert did not preserve all his verse, but finally left
for the printer only such as his critical taste ap
proved.
Only one of the poems in this Group was so
approved, THE CHURCH MILITANT. It is one of
his four long and labored poems, and may have
been designed as a kind of counterpart to THE
CHURCH-PORCH. Ferrar printed it as an appendix
or third part of THE TEMPLE. The name, THE
ADDITIONAL POEMS f 349
TEMPLE, does not appear in the Williams Manu
script, which has no title-page. The running-title
at the head of the pages is THE CHURCH. This
is also the running-title of the central portion of the
book as finally printed. Perhaps, then, Herbert's
plan — or Ferrar's — was to call the total work
THE TEMPLE, and to let it consist of three parts :
the main structure, conceived as THE CHURCH
itself, with two adjuncts, — THE CHURCH-PORCH,
and THE CHURCH MILITANT. Yet the first two
divisions are related so much more closely to each
other than is either to the third that THE CHURCH
MILITANT may probably better be regarded as an
altogether detached piece. Between THE CHURCH-
PORCH and THE CHURCH the lines of SUPERLIMI-
NARE are inserted as a connecting link, while at
the close of THE CHURCH stands the word FINIS
and a GLORIA. There seems, therefore, to be an
intended detachment of THE CHURCH MILITANT
from the whole framework of THE TEMPLE. The
ENVOY after THE CHURCH MILITANT must mark
the close of this poem, and not of the entire book.
To preserve this detachment, I adopt the tradi
tional arrangement and place THE CHURCH MILI
TANT after the other authenticated poems. But it
might well stand before them. To make plain the
course of Herbert's development we should place it
just after the SONNETS TO HIS MOTHER. I, at least,
have no doubt that it is his earliest considerable
piece. Its style is more influenced by Donne than|
350 PREFACE TO
is that of any of his other poems except the two
SONNETS of 1610. There is an indication, too, of
youth in the fact that while no half-page of THE
CHURCH MILITANT shows sustained ease and mas
tery, one comes upon single lines of exceptional
depth and promise, e. g. :
Doing nought
Which doth not meet with an eternall thought.
The sunne, though forward be his flight,
Listens behinde him and allows some light
Till all depart.
How low is he,
If God and man be sever" d infinitely !
Setting affliction to encounter pleasure.
In vice the copie still exceeds
The pattern, but not so in vertuous deeds.
Bits of poetry like these, shining among lines
which are too often declamatory, forced, and ob
scure, declare the age and promise of their author.
Nor is objective evidence of an early date lacking.
In line 242 the Thames is said to be in danger
of pollution through mingling its stream with the
Seine. Herbert was too good a courtier to have
written so after 1624, when Prince Charles was be
trothed to Henrietta Maria, the French Princess.
The allusion, too, to America as the land of gold
(1. 250) would be more natural at the time when
the Virginia Trading Company was in full activity
ADDITIONAL POEMS 351
and hope than in the years after its dissolution in
1623.
But although THE CHURCH MILITANT is early, *
immature, and difficult in style, in its subject and •
method of treatment it is of marked originality; for
it is, so far as I can discover, the first sketch of gen- /
eral Church history in our language. Single periods
of that history had been already treated, as by
Bede in his account of the English Church. Lives
of the Saints had been written, and studies of
Christian Antiquity. Of controversial works, like
Bishop Jewel's Apology, there was no lack. But
hitherto no Englishman had attempted to survey
the progress of the Church as it came forth from
little Judaea and mightily overran all the lands of
the West. This dramatic theme Herbert seized,
treated it in bold outline, and made of his poem
a veritable landmark in English ecclesiastical his
tory. In this, as in religious poetry, he is the pioneer
of a large company. But he could not bring his ex
periments in this field so near perfection as he did
in that of the religious love-lyric. There he needed
only to explore his own soul, while for even a good
outline of Church history a solid body of scholar
ship was necessary; and this at that time was inac
cessible. Herbert's account is accordingly, like all J ,
early history, inaccurate, partisan, and often cred- *»
ulous. It is an astonishing evidence of the inde
pendence of his mind that it was written at all, and
in all probability written before he was thirty years
352 PREFACE TO
of age. That this priority of Herbert in Church his
tory has not been remarked shows how superficial
has been the attention bestowed on his widely
circulated little book.
Original, however, as Herbert is in the choice of
a historical subject, he is no less original in his *
treatment of it. Most historians of the Church con
ceive it as an ecclesiastical organization, whose con
struction and vicissitudes they explore, the devel
opment of whose power and ritual they trace, and
whose scheme of doctrine they vindicate. The ene
mies of the Church are accordingly unbelievers,
persecuting sovereigns, or nations which refuse to
accept its sway.
With the progress of the Church in this sense
Herbert is in no way concerned. What interests*
him is the coming of righteousness on earth. The
contests of the Church are not with those who
question priestly authority. He never alludes to
heretics, or creeds, or forms of worship; and when
he mentions splendid outward organizations and
the consolidation of ecclesiastical power, it is as a
sign of danger, if not of decay. He is, in short, true
to that conception of the Church continually an
nounced in his poems, notably in SIGN, the con
ception which gave a name to his volume, and which
I have abundantly discussed in my second and
third Essays. He means by the Church the loving,
temptable, aspiring, and ill-harmonized soul of *
man. It is no external institution. All its frame
ADDITIONAL POEMS 353
and fabrick is within. The Church history which
he would write is a description of the way in
which the new mode of affectionate holiness re
vealed by Jesus Christ has been intermittently
adopted and rejected by the nations of Europe.
His Church history is accordingly, like that of Jon
athan Edwards afterwards, a genuine History of
Redemption.
It would be an error to claim for Herbert entire
originality in this ethical idea of Church history.
The greatest of the Fathers had thought of it in
somewhat the same way. Augustine's City of God
is a spiritual society of the righteous united by
allegiance to a common divine Lord. It is true that,
while Herbert is a man of piety, Augustine is also
a statesman, with a range of vision, a complexity
of interests, an acquaintance with men, and a phi
losophic grasp denied to Herbert. But all the more
striking on this account becomes Herbert's inde
pendence. He knew and honored Augustine. He
bequeathed a set of his works to his Fuggleston
curate, Mr. Bostock. Undoubtedly his thoughts
about THE CHURCH MILITANT were initiated by
Augustine. But he did not allow himself to be
dominated. He took from the City of God only what
harmonized with his own individualistic genius,
and under the name of THE CHURCH MILITANT
pictured the world's growth in personal holiness.
The poem is divided into five parts, separated
from one another by a refrain exalting the wisdom
354 PREFACE TO
of God. Part I describes the migration of Religion
from its early home in the East to its settlement in
Egypt; Part II, the advance of Religion through
Greece to establish its empire in the West; Part
III, the parallel advance of Sin ; Part IV, the
conquest of Religion by Sin at Rome ; Part V, the
ineffective attempts through reformation to set
Religion free from Sin, and the probability of far
ther struggle in future as the two move together
through America westward.
In my fifth Essay is related the curious refusal
of the Vice-Chancellor to license Herbert's book on
account of lines 235 and 236 of THE CHURCH
MILITANT :
Religion stands on tip-toe in our land,
Readie to passe to the American strand.
This passage, as also line 247, might suggest that
Herbert was thinking of the Puritan migration, the
only colonization ever undertaken from England
with religious aims. Such thoughts are natural for
us in looking back, but not for him when looking
forward. Even if the dates allowed, we cannot sup
pose that he would have sympathized with com
panies of obscure and wilful sectaries. That was
not his disposition. The Pilgrims, however, did not
sail till 1620; the Puritans not till 1628. This lat
ter date was just about the time when the Williams
Manuscript was probably drawn up, and in it was
included THE CHURCH MILITANT. At the time
ADDITIONAL POEMS 355
when the poem was written the Puritan migration
was a small affair, and had attracted little atten
tion. It is the Virginia Colony to which Herbert
refers, that aristocratic colony with which his
friend Ferrar was connected. What he has in mind
is made clearer by a passage of THE COUNTRY
PARSON, XXXII, in which he is planning work
for younger sons : // the young Gallant think these
Courses dull and phlegmatick, where can he busie
himself better than in those new Plantations and dis
covery es which are not only a noble but also, as they
may be handled, a religious imployment ? He sim
ply means that on fresh soil religion has fresh
opportunities. No other reference to America in
THE TEMPLE speaks of it as religious ground; cf.
THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 25, 1. 100; THE PEARL,
II, 381, 1. 7; THE SONNE, III, 161, 1. 10.
From this Group of Additional Poems I have
withdrawn three as having special importance
elsewhere. The lines reported by Walton as in
scribed in the Bemerton Parsonage I have placed
at the beginning of Group VIII. The SONNETS of
1610 mark the rise of that RESOLVE which is set
forth with early ardor, assurance, and comprehen
siveness in the poems of Group II.
ADDITIONAL AND DOUBTFUL POEMS
358 THE CHURCH MILITANT
INTRODUCTORY :
This and THE SACRIFICE are Herbert's only nar
rative poems. But elements of narrative enter into
the first AFFLICTION, THE BAG, HUMILITIE, LOVE
UNKNOWN, THE PILGRIMAGE, PEACE, and THE
PULLEY.
DATE:
Found in W.
METRE :
Used also in OUR LIFE is HID, II, 283, and AN
ANAGRAM, III, 165.
SUBJECT :
A history of the Church from the earliest times to
Herbert's own day, maintaining — as did Bishop
Berkeley a hundred years later — that " Westward
the tide of empire takes its way."
NOTES :
1-4. Cf. PROVIDENCE, III, 83, 1. 41-44.
11. Psalm Ixxx, 8.
12. The more, i. e. because so early.
14. Trimme= refined, exquisite, cf. 1. 151.
15. Genesis ix, 20, and THE BUNCH OF GRAPES, III,
217, 1. 24.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 359
THE CHURCH MILITANT
ALMIGHTIE Lord, who from thy glorious throne
Seest and rulest all things ev'n as one,
The smallest ant or atome knows thy power,
Known also to each minute of an houre. 4
Much more do Common-weals acknowledge thee
And wrap their policies in thy decree,
Complying with thy counsels, doing nought
Which doth not meet with an eternall thought.
But above all, thy Church and Spouse doth prove
Not the decrees of power, but bands of love. 10
Early didst thou arise to plant this vine,
Which might the more indeare it to be thine.
Spices come from the East; so did thy Spouse,
Trimme as the light, sweet as the laden boughs
Of Noah's shadie vine, chaste as the dove, 15
Prepared and fitted to receive thy love.
The course was westward, that the sunne might
light
As well our understanding as our sight.
Where th' Ark did rest, there Abraham began
To bring the other Ark from Canaan. 20
360 THE CHURCH MILITANT
19. The progress of the Church traced here I suppose
to be as follows: Ur of Genesis xi, 31, is identified
with Ararat of Genesis viii, 4; and the covenant
with Noah, Genesis vi, 18, with that with Abraham,
Genesis xvii, 19. I should think the reading would
be to Canaan rather than from Canaan, as it is in
W. and Genesis xii, 5. But the reference may be to
Abraham's going into Egypt (Genesis xii, 10), out
of which Moses subsequently led the Israelites,
building that Ark of the Covenant (Exodus xxxvii, 1 ;
Deuteronomy xxxi, 26) which Solomon finally
placed in the Temple erected at Jerusalem.
24. When the old faith was shaken, the Jews hoped to
confirm it by suppressing the new.
26. Ephesians ii, 14; Matthew xxvii, 51.
37. They=iis people.
38. The rise of monasticism in the Thebaid of Egypt.
41. These leaders of Egyptian monasticism in the
fourth century Herbert reckons to be the real rulers
of the country.
44. The river, which in ancient times produced a plague
of frogs (Exodus viii, 3), now as a place of baptism
produces Israelites indeed.
47. Psalm cxxxix, 17, Prayer-Book version. Perhaps
also suggested by the refrain of Psalm cvii, 8 ? A
similar partition of a poem by refrains occurs in
LOVE UNKNOWN, III, 179.
XH. ADDITIONAL POEMS 361
Moses pursu'd this, but King Solomon
Finished and fixt the old religion.
When it grew loose, the Jews did hope in vain
By nailing Christ to fasten it again;
But to the Gentiles he bore crosse and all, 25
Rending with earthquakes the partition-wall.
Onely whereas the Ark in glorie shone,
Now with the crosse, as with a staffe, alone,
Religion, like a pilgrime, westward bent,
Knocking at all doores ever as she went. 30
Yet as the sunne, though forward be his flight,
Listens behinde him and allows some light
Till all depart; so went the Church her way,
Letting, while one foot stept, the other stay
Among the eastern nations for a time, 35
Till both removed to the western clime.
To Egypt first she came, where they did prove
Wonders of anger once, but now of love.
The ten Commandments there did flourish more
Then the ten bitter plagues had done before. 40
Holy Macarius and great Anthonie
Made Pharaoh Moses, changing th' historic.
Goshen was darknesse, Egypt full of lights,
Nilus for monsters brought forth Israelites. 44
Such power hath mightie Baptisme to produce
For things misshapen, things of highest use.
How deare to me, O God, thy counsels are I
Who may with thee compare ?
362 THE CHURCH MILITANT
51. Pos'd= brought to a stand, as in THE CHURCH-
PORCH, II, 41, 1. 223.
54. There is a play here on learning one's letters and
submitting to Christianity. They were sent back to
learn the alphabet, then called Chriss-Crosse from
the figure which stood at the beginning. Samuel
Speed (1677) has the same play in his poem On
Christ's Cross:
"Can we spell Chris-cross-row, and yet not read
That Christ for us was dead?"
57. Took horse, i. e. religion took its departure from
Greece.
59. Prefixed— foreordained.
64. Yeeld= grant, allow. So Milton: "I yield it just,
said Adam, and submit:" Par. Lost, XI, 526.
65. To work the salvation of man, who was once allured
to his ruin.
67. The great heart, i. e. of the Roman warrior, 1. 63.
71. The pastoral staff became the Papal sceptre.
72. The Gregorian Calendar and the substitution of
Christian holidays for pagan.
73. Alexander the Great hoped to establish a wide
Grecian empire. These hopes were cut off by the
quarrels of his successors, and were only finally
realized when Constantine founded Constanti
nople.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 363
Religion thence fled into Greece, where arts
Gave her the highest place in all men's hearts. 50
Learning was pos'd, Philosophic was set,
Sophisters taken in a fisher's net.
Plato and Aristotle were at a losse
And wheel'd about again to spell Christ-Crosse.
Prayers chas'd syllogismes into their den, 55
And Ergo was transform'd into Amen.
Though Greece took horse as soon as Egypt did,
And Rome as both, yet Egypt faster rid,
And spent her period and prefixed time 59
Before the other. Greece being past her prime,
Religion went to Rome, subduing those
Who, that they might subdue, made all their foes.
The Warrier his deere skarres no more resounds,
But seems to yeeld Christ hath the greater wounds,
Wounds willingly endur'd to work his blisse 65
Who by an ambush lost his Paradise.
The great heart stoops and taketh from the dust
A sad repentance, not the spoils of lust,
Quitting his spear, lest it should pierce again
Him in his members who for him was slain. 70
The Shepherd's hook grew to a scepter here,
Giving new names and numbers to the yeare.
But th' Empire dwelt in Greece, to comfort them
Who were cut short in Alexander's stemme.
364 THE CHURCH MILITANT
77. TV one and th other = Arts and Prowesse.
84. Harbingers; see THE FORERUNNERS, III, 317, 1. 1.
85. Arts might in our time and country glorify the
Church.
88. Religion waters the soil. In commenting on this
passage an earlier editor, "R. S.," writes: "It is re
markable that Herbert should think of Germany,
rather than Italy, in connection with religious art;
but if he knew the engravings of Albert Diirer, it
would cease to be surprising."
93. " The thought is here obscure and probably far
fetched. When Constantius Chlorus Caesar in
Britain died at York, his son Constantine was pro
claimed and eventually became Emperor, and on
his conversion gave, so to speak, a crown to the
Church. Thus his rise in Britain, and his giving a
crown to the Church, foreshadowed, says Herbert,
or was a type, that hereafter Britain should give the
Church a crown; meaning that at the Reformation
Henry VIII would put down the usurped authority
of the Church, and make it a national Church, and
the State's head its supreme head : " A. B. Grosart.
According to one tradition Helena, the mother of
Constantine, was of British stock.
95. Sheet of paper. Is the Nicene Creed here intended ?
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 365
In both of these Prowesse and Arts did tame 75
And tune men's hearts against the Gospel came;
Which using, and not fearing skill in th' one,
Or strength in th' other, did erect her throne.
Many a rent and struggling th' Empire knew,
(As dying things are wont) untill it flew 80
At length to Germanie, still westward bending,
And there the Churches festivall attending;
That as before Empire and Arts made way,
(For no lesse Harbingers would serve then they)
So they might still, and point us out the place
Where first the Church should raise her downcast
face. 86
Strength levels grounds, Art makes a garden there,
Then showres Religion and makes all to bear.
Spain in the Empire shar'd with Germanic,
But England in the higher victorie; 90
Giving the Church a crown to keep her state
And not go lesse then she had done of late.
Constantine9 s British line meant this of old,
And did this mysterie wrap up and fold
Within a sheet of paper, which was rent 95
From time's great Chronicle and hither sent.
Thus both the Church and Sunne together ran
Unto the farthest old meridian.
How deare to me, O God, thy counsels are /
Who may with thee compare ? 100
366 THE CHURCH MILITANT
103. In contrast with the western Babylon of 1. 182.
108. The onion was one of the most important foods
of Egypt (Numbers xi, 5). Herbert had evidently
heard that it was worshipped there. So had Donne,
Anatomy of the World, 428: "For as the wine and
corn and onions are Gods unto them." Probably
both derived their information from Juvenal, Satire
XV, 9-11. Compare also Pliny, Natural History,
XIX, 6.
110. Their onions, devoted to God, being lost to diet.
120. We also worship that which is a mere means of life.
Cf. AVARICE, III, 113.
126. Make good=make permanent, hold.
127. For = instead of.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 367
Much about one and the same time and place
Both where and when the Church began her race,
Sinne did set out of Eastern Babylon
And travell'd westward also. Journeying on
He chid the Church away where e're he came, 105
Breaking her peace and tainting her good name.
At first he got to Egypt and did sow
Gardens of gods, which ev'ry yeare did grow
Fresh and fine deities. They were at great cost
Who for a god clearely a sallet lost. 110
Ah, what a thing is man devoid of grace,
Adoring garlick with an humble face,
Begging his food of that which he may eat,
Starving the while he worshippeth his meat!
Who makes a root his god, how low is he, 115
If God and man be sever'd infinitely!
What wretchednesse can give him any room
Whose house is foul, while he adores his broom ?
None will beleeve this now, though money be
In us the same transplanted foolerie. 120
Thus Sinne in Egypt sneaked for a while;
His highest was an ox or crocodile
And such poore game. Thence he to Greece doth
passe ;
And being craftier much then Goodnesse was,
He left behinde him garrisons of sinnes 125
To make good that which ev'ry day he winnes.
Here Sinne took heart, and for a garden-bed
Rich shrines and oracles he purchased.
368 THE CHURCH MILITANT
132. " The oracular response being in verse, Herbert says
they hide their poison in the sweetness of verse: "
A. B. Grosart. Cf. THE CHURCH-PORCH, II, 15,
1.5.
134. Pw/Z=draw; so JORDAN, II, 89, 1. 12.
137. ffira=Sinne.
138. Besides the mischief wrought by Sinne in false ora
cles, he created distrust in oracles of every kind,
so that when near the Christian era the Sibyls pro
phesied the coming of the Messiah, they were only
half believed. The so-called Sibylline Oracles were
throughout the Middle Ages and for a long time
after thought to be authentic Greek prophecies
and consequently a testimony of heathenism to
Christianity. In 1512 Michelangelo painted the
Sibyls on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, side by
side with the prophets.
147. Disparking= expelling from the park, as in THE
FORERUNNERS, III, 317, 1. 3. Cf. Milton's Hymn
on the Morning of Christ's Nativity, xix.
149. Mohammed.
151. Trimme; cf. 1. 14.
152. For = on account of.
154. Prodigies = too much to believe.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 369
He grew a gallant and would needs foretell
As well what should befall as what befell. 130
Nay, he became a poet, and would serve
His pills of sublimate in that conserve.
The world came both with hands and purses full
To this great lotterie, and all would pull.
But all was glorious cheating, brave deceit, 135
Where some poore truths were shuffled for a bait
To credit him, and to discredit those
Who after him should braver truths disclose.
From Greece he went to Rome; and as before
He was a God, now he's an Emperour. 140
Nero and others lodg'd him bravely there,
Put him in trust to rule the Romane sphere.
Glorie was his chief instrument of old,
Pleasure succeeded straight when that grew cold.
WTiich soon was blown to such a mightie flame 145
That though our Saviour did destroy the game,
Disparking oracles and all their treasure,
Setting affliction to encounter pleasure,
Yet did a rogue with hope of carnall joy
Cheat the most subtill nations. Who so coy, 150
So trimme, as Greece and Egypt ? Yet their hearts
Are given over, for their curious arts,
To such Mahometan stupidities
As the old heathen would deem prodigies.
How deare to me, O God, thy counsels are / 155
Who may with thee compare ?
370 THE CHURCH MILITANT
159. The negative virtue of keeping clear of infidelity is
all that the Romish Church can show of its original
divine foundation. Matthew xvi, 18.
169. Handsome = seductive. Herbert distrusts the
purity of Romish priests.
171. By the pretended oracles.
174. Christ as prophet, priest, and king. The three
corresponding offices of Sinne are named in 1. 177-
179.
176. Inspiration was now confined to the Pope's utter
ances at Rome.
180. Dispensations and indulgences.
182. Revelation xvii, 5.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 371
Onely the West and Rome do keep them free
From this contagious infidelitie.
And this is all the Rock whereof they boast,
As Rome will one day finde unto her cost. 160
Sinne being not able to extirpate quite
The Churches here, bravely resolv'd one night
To be a Church-man too and wear a Mitre;
The old debauched ruffian would turn writer.
I saw him in his studie, where he sate 165
Busie in controversies sprung of late.
A gown and pen became him wondrous well.
His grave aspect had more of heav'n then hell:
Onely there was a handsome picture by,
To which he lent a corner of his eye. 170
As Sinne in Greece a Prophet was before,
And in old Rome a mightie Emperour,
So now being Priest he plainly did professe
To make a jest of Christ's three offices;
The rather since his scattered jugglings were 175*
United now in one, both time and sphere.
From Egypt he took pettie deities,
From Greece oracular infallibilities,
And from old Rome the libertie of pleasure
By free dispensings of the Churches treasure. 180
Then in memoriall of his ancient throne
He did surname his palace, Babylon.
372 THE CHURCH MILITANT
184. As men of every speech were once obliged to mi
grate in all directions from Babel, Genesis xi, 9, so
in reverse all nations flock to the new Babylon, 1.
194.
190. His victories = the victories of Sinne.
192. When they were carried captive to Babylon.
196. When in 1177 the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa
submitted himself to Pope Alexander III, popular
legend declares that the Pope set his foot on the
Emperor's neck.
197. The Pope never leaves Rome.
200. Monks in appearance, but in reality statesmen.*
204. He rode upon it as if it were the dullest of beasts.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 373
Yet that he might the better gain all nations,
And make that name good by their transmigra
tions
From all these places, but at divers times, 185
He took fine vizards to conceal his crimes.
From Egypt Anchorisme and retirednesse,
Learning from Greece, from old Rome statelinesse ;
And blending these he carri'd all men's eyes,
While Truth sat by counting his victories. 190
Whereby he grew apace and scorn'd to use
Such force as once did captivate the Jews,
But did bewitch and finely work each nation
Into a voluntarie transmigration.
All poste to Rome. Princes submit their necks
Either t' his publick foot or private tricks. 196
It did not fit his gravitie to stirre,
Nor his long journey, nor his gout and furre.
Therefore he sent out able ministers,
Statesmen within, without doores cloisterers, 200
Who without spear, or sword, or other drumme
Then what was in their tongue, did overcome;
And having conquer'd, did so strangely rule,
That the whole world did seem but the Pope's
mule.
As new and old Rome did one Empire twist, 205
So both together are one Antichrist,
Yet with two faces, as their Janus was,
Being in this their old crackt looking-glasse.
How deare to me, O God, thy counsels are !
Who may with thee compare ? 210
374 THE CHURCH MILITANT
214. Made the latter throne to defray.
216. I. e. the constant accompaniments.
223. The better = the more complete.
224. The Church in our time falls as far short of the ex
cellence of the early Church as modern sins exceed
ancient.
228. The late Reformation should make us weep, as the
second Temple did the Jews. Ezra iii, 12.
230. Isaiah Ix, 2.
233, 234. Widely as religion has extended itself since
Judaean days, so great will be its contraction here
after.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 375
Thus Sinne triumphs in Western Babylon,
Yet not as Sinne, but as Religion.
Of his two thrones he made the latter best,
And to defray his journey from the east.
Old and new Babylon are to hell and night 215
As is the moon and sunne to heav'n and light.
When th* one did set, the other did take place,
Confronting equally the law and grace.
They are hell's land-marks, Satan's double crest,
They are Sinne's nipples, feeding th' east and west.
But as in vice the copie still exceeds 221
The pattern, but not so in vertuous deeds;
So though Sinne made his latter seat the better,
The latter Church is to the first a debter.
The second Temple could not reach the first,
And the late reformation never durst 226
Compare with ancient times and purer yeares,
But in the Jews and us deserveth tears.
Nay, it shall ev'ry yeare decrease and fade,
Till such a darknesse do the world invade 230
At Christ's last coming as his first did finde.
Yet must there such proportions be assign'd
To these diminishings as is between
The spacious world and Jurie to be seen.
376 THE CHURCH MILITANT
235, 236. "When Mr. Ferrar sent this Book to Cam
bridge to be Licensed for the Press, the Vice-Chan
cellor would by no means allow the two so much
noted Verses,
Religion stands a Tip-toe in our Land,
Ready to pass to the American Strand,
to be printed; and Mr. Ferrar would by no means
allow the Book to be printed and want them. But
after some time and some arguments for and against
their being made publick, the Vice-Chancellor said:
I knew Mr. Herbert well, and know that he had
many heavenly Speculations, and was a Divine
Poet ; but I hope the World will not take him to be
an inspired Prophet, and therefore I License the
whole Book: " Walton's Life. In 1636 a piece by
Ferrar himself, a translation of Carbo on the In
struction of Children, was refused License by the
Cambridge authorities, as Oley mentions in his
Life of Herbert.
246. Like fashions from Italy, sins travel; so that what
was current in Italy this year may be expected to
appear in France and England the next.
255. Giving them thy grace in return for what we have
stolen from them.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 377
Religion stands on tip-toe in our land, 235
Readie to passe to the American strand.
When height of malice and prodigious lusts,
Impudent sinning, witchcrafts, and distrusts
(The marks of future bane) shall fill our cup
Unto the brimme and make our measure up;
When Sein shall swallow Tiber, and the Thames
By letting in them both pollutes her streams,
When Italie of us shall have her will, 24r3
And all her calender of sinnes fulfill ;
Whereby one may fortell what sinnes next yeare
Shall both in France and England domineer;
Then shall Religion to America flee.
They have their times of Gospel ev'n as we.
My God, thou dost prepare for them a way
By carrying first their gold from them away; 250
For gold and grace did never yet agree.
Religion alwaies sides with povertie.
We think we rob them, but we think amisse;
We are more poore, and they more rich by this.
Thou wilt revenge their quarrell, making grace
To pay our debts, and leave our ancient place
To go to them, while that which now their nation
But lends to us shall be our desolation.
378 THE CHURCH MILITANT
261. T 'hey — the Western nations.
263-266. Cf. 1. 75-88. All know the sort of Gospel
which imperial Spain has championed. If that
taught by the arts proves equally base, the Church
will be crushed.
267. When they have gone round the world and find in
the East once more the harbor from which they
originally set forth.
270. The light of day and the light of truth both advance
by going west. Cf. 1. 17, 97. This identification of
Christ's progress and that of the sun is worked over
in THE SONNE, III, 161.
274. Encircles the globe.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 379
Yet as the Church shall thither westward flie,
So Sinne shall trace and dog her instantly. 260
They have their period also and set times
Both for their vertuous actions and their crimes.
And where of old the Empire and the Arts
Usher'd the Gospel ever in men's hearts,
Spain hath done one ; when Arts perform the
other, 265
The Church shall come, and Sinne the Church
shall smother.
That when they haue accomplished the round,
And met in th' east their first and ancient sound,
Judgement may meet them both and search them
round. 269
Thus do both lights, as well in Church as Sunne,
Light one another and together runne.
Thus also Sinne and Darknesse follow still
The Church and Sunne with all their power and
skill.
But as the Sunne still goes both west and east,
So also did the Church by going west 275
Still eastward go; because it drew more neare
To time and place where judgement shall appeare.
How deare to me, O God, thy counsels are I
Who may with thee compare ?
380 L'ENVOY
INTRODUCTORY :
This is the Envoy of THE CHURCH MILITANT, not
of the whole collection of poems.
DATE:
Found in W., and early in style.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
A Prayer that the evils of the Church may cease.
NOTES :
1. Repeated from PRAISE, II, 397, 1. 1.
9. His food=its power of nourishment. In the pre
vious line /tis= Shine's.
14. 72= all the breath he possesses.
11-16. What is behind=wh&t is still lacking. Cf. A
TRUE HYMNE, III, 27, 1. 14, and Colossians i, 24.
The meaning is: After being conquered by the
cross, Sinne should reserve a store of breath for
sighs. But Sinne's own breath will be insufficient.
He will need to borrow from the wind in order
to obtain enough for endless sighing. As regards
the effect of sighs in exhausting breath, see AFFLIC
TION, III, 271, 1. 9.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 381
I/ENVOY
KINO of glorie, King of peace,
With the one make warre to cease;
With the other blesse thy sheep,
Thee to love, in thee to sleep.
Let not Sinne devoure thy fold, 5
Bragging that thy bloud is cold,
That thy death is also dead,
While his conquests dayly spread;
That thy flesh hath lost his food,
And thy Crosse is common wood. 10
Choke him, let him say no more,
But reserve his breath in store,
Till thy conquests and his fall
Make his sighs to use it all,
And then bargain with the winde 15
To discharge what is behinde.
Blessed be God alone,
Thrice blessed Three in One.
FINIS
382 THE HOLY COMMUNION
INTRODUCTORY :
Another poem with this title is given, II, 195.
DATE:
This and the following five poems are found in W.,
but not in B. They are scattered throughout the
manuscript, no two of them occurring together. In
no one of them is there a single erasure or correc
tion.
METRE:
Unique, but closely resembles THE BRITISH
CHURCH, III, 101.
SUBJECT :
The question whether Christ enters into the com
munion bread is unimportant, if only he enter into
the believer.
NOTES :
9. Dr. Gibson quotes from Hooker, Eccles. Pol. V,
LXVII, 12: "What these elements are in them
selves it skilleth not, it is enough that to me which
take them they are the body and blood of Christ."
13, 18. Whether thou enterest not into the bread but
only into me, or into both bread and me, is only a
question of a shorter or longer road.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 383
THE HOLY COMMUNION
O GRATIOUS Lord, how shall I know
Whether in these gifts thou bee so
As thou art everywhere?
Or rather so as thou alone
Tak'st all the Lodging, leaving none 5
For thy poore creature there.
First I am sure, whether Bread stay,
Or whether Bread doe fly away,
Concerneth Bread, not mee;
But that both thou and all thy traine 10
Bee there, to thy truth and my gaine,
Concerneth mee and Thee.
And if in comming to thy foes
Thou dost come first to them, that showes
The hast of thy good will. 15
Or if that thou two stations makest,
In Bread and mee, the way thou takest
Is more, but for mee still.
Then of this also I am sure,
That thou didst all those pains endure 20
To abolish Sinn, not Wheat.
Creatures are good and have their place.
Sinn onely, which did all deface,
Thou drivest from his seat.
384 THE HOLY COMMUNION
25. Impanation=God embodying himself in bread.
33. Eyesight.
38. "I. e. keeps that natural substance which is in the
grass and herbs, from which all flesh is immediately
or intermediately derived:" A. B. Grosart.
41. Meres = limits.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 385
I could beleeve an Impanation 25
At the rate of an Incarnation,
If thou hadst dyde for Bread.
But that which made my soule to dye,
My flesh and fleshly villany,
That allso made thee dead. 30
That Flesh is there mine eyes deny.
And what should flesh but flesh discry,
The noblest sence of five ?
If glorious bodies pass the sight, 34
Shall they be food and strength and might,
Even there where they deceive ?
Into my soule this cannot pass.
Flesh (though exalted) keeps his grass,
And cannot turn to soule.
Bodyes and Minds are different spheres, 40
Nor can they change their bounds and meres,
But keep a constant pole.
This gift of all gifts is the best,
Thy flesh the least that I request.
Thou took'st that pledge from mee. 45
Give mee not that I had before,
Or give mee that so I have more.
My God, give mee adl Thee.
386 LOVE
INTRODUCTORY :
Two other poems with this title are given, II, 83,
401.
DATE:
Found in W., and early in style.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
Similar to that of THE REPRISALL, II, 293; i. e.
however we try to find God needy and ourselves
givers, closer knowledge always proves the contrary.
NOTES :
8. Shrodely= shrewdly.
20. The matter = this matter, i. e. love. I shall then
have conquered thee altogether.
24. I should have done what these three have failed to
do.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 387
LOVE
THOU art too hard for me in Love.
There is no dealing wth thee in that Art.
That is thy Masterpeece, I see.
When I contrive and plott to prove
Something that may be conquest on my part, 5
Thou still, O Lord, outstrippest mee.
Sometimes, whenas I wash, I say,
And shrodely as I think, Lord wash my soule,
More spotted then my flesh can bee.
But then there comes into my way 10
Thy ancient baptism, which when I was foule
And knew it not, yet cleansed mee.
I took a time when thou didst sleep,
Great waves of trouble combating my brest;
I thought it brave to praise thee then. 15
Yet then I found that thou didst creep
Into my hart wth ioye, giving more rest
Then flesh did lend thee back agen.
Let mee but once the conquest have
Vpon the matter, 'twill thy conquest prove. 20
If Thou subdue mortalitie,
Thou dost no more then doth the grave.
Whereas if I orecome thee and thy Love,
Hell, Death, and Divel come short of mee.
TRINITIE-SUNDAY
INTRODUCTORY :
Another poem with this title is given, II, 161.
DATE:
Found in W., and early m style.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT:
Reality is everywhere threefold.
NOTES :
2. Two, i. e. body and soul. Cf. MAN'S MEDLEY, III,
125.
11-18. The first Theefe, Satan, though he had a kind of
belief in God (James ii, 19), did not acknowledge
the threefold order of God, saints, and angels, or
heaven, earth, and hell. He is consequently shut
out from God or heaven, and confined to the last
two. But whoaver rightly confesses God has all.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 389
TRINITIE-SUNDAY
HE that is one
Is none.
Two reacheth thee
In some degree.
Nature and Grace 5
With Glory may attaine thy Face.
Steele and a flint strike fire.
Witt and desire
Never to thee aspire
Except life catch and hold those fast. 10
That which beleefe
Did not confess in the first Theefe
His fall can tell
From Heaven through Earth to Hell.
Lett two of those alone 15
To them that fall,
Who God and Saints and Angels loose at last.
Hee that has one
Has all.
390 EVEN-SONG
DATE:
In W. this appears in place of the EVEN-SONG (III,
59) of B. This fact alone might well prove W. to
be an early draft of Herbert's verse.
METRE :
Unique, but differs only in rhyming system from
THE TEMPER, II, 315.
SUBJECT:
God the light of all his creatures.
NOTES :
15. Darker = more difficult to see.
17. This, i. e. that thou art not to be seen.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 391
EVEN-SONG
THE Day is spent, and hath his will on mee.
I and the Sunn have runn our races.
I went the slower, yet more paces;
For I decay, not hee.
Lord, make my Losses up, and sett mee free;
That I, who cannot now by day 6
Look on his daring brightnes, may
Shine then more bright then hee.
If thou deferr this light, then shadow mee;
Least that the Night, earth's gloomy shade,
Fouling her nest, my earth invade, 11
As if shades knew not thee.
But thou art light and darknes both togeather.
If that bee dark we cannot see,
The sunn is darker than a tree, 15
And thou more dark then either.
Yet thou art not so dark since I know this
But that my darknes may touch thine,
And hope, that may teach it to shine,
Since Light thy Darknes is. 20
O lett my soule, whose keyes I must deliver
Into the hands of senceles Dreams
Which know not thee, suck in thy beams
And wake with thee for ever.
392 THE KNELL
INTRODUCTORY:
The KNELL would seem to be used in the sense of
a call to church rather than to a funeral.
DATE:
Found in W.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
Prayer for deliverance from worldly allurement.
The poem may refer to Herbert's frequent subject,
vacillation between the church and the world.
NOTES :
2. The perplexed soule cannot be the dead.
3. Wishly= wistfully.
14. The reverse of AFFLICTION, IH, 269, 1. 10.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS
THE KNELL
THE Bell doth tolle.
Lord, help thy servant whose perplexed soule
Doth wishly look
On either hand,
And sometimes offers, sometimes makes a stand,
Struggling on th' hook. 6
Now is the season,
Now the great combat of our flesh and reason.
O help, my God!
See, they breake in, 10
Disbanded humours, sorrows, troops of Sinn,
Each with his rodd.
Lord make thy blood
Convert and colour all the other flood
And streams of grief, 15
That they may bee
Julips and Cordials when wee call on thee
For some relief.
394 PERSEVERANCE
DATE:
Found in W.
METRE:
Unique.
SUBJECT:
What warrant have I that my highest moods shall
be permanent ? Only thy steadfastness. Cf . THE
TEMPER, II, 315.
NOTES :
3. Move=miend to speak, as in THE METHOD, III,
197, 1. 6.
6. My iudgement=\he condemnation of me. 1 Corin
thians ix, 27.
8. Remains concealed with thee.
16. Psalm xxviii, 1.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 395
PERSEVERANCE
MY God the poore expressions of my Love,
Which warme these lines and serve them up to
thee
Are so as for the present I did move,
Or rather as thou movedst mee.
But what shall issue, — whether these my words 5
Shall help another but my Judgment bee,
As a burst fouling-peece doth save the birds
But kill the man, — is seal'd with thee.
For who can tell though thou hast dyde to winn
And wedd my soule in glorious paradise, 10
Whether my many crymes and use of sinn
May yet forbid the banns and bliss ?
Onely my soule hangs on thy promisses,
Wth face and hands clinging unto thy brest;
Clinging and crying, crying without cease, 15
Thou art my rock, thou art my rest.
396 THE CONVERT
TITLE:
"This piece is from Miscellanea Sacra, or Poems
on Divine and Moral Subjects, collected by N.
Tate, second edition, 1698, p. 51, where it is headed
The Convert, An Ode written by Mr. George Her
bert. It is to be regretted that Tate does not inform
us whence he derived this Ode. But as he was well
circumstanced to procure Mss. and as others of
eminent names first published by him have been
authenticated, there is every probability that he
had an autograph of this poem:" A. B. Grosart.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
My eyes, voice, and heart, which have hitherto been
given over to women, shall henceforth be dedicated
to God.
NOTES :
7. In VANITIE, II, 357, 1. 3, an experience is hinted
similar to that lamented here. Cf. also FRAILTIE,
II, 359, 1. 3, and HOME, III, 327, 1. 39.
18. The Temple. This word is suspicious. An imitator,
remembering the title of Herbert's book, would be
likely to use it; but it is rarely used by Herbert
himself. See note on SION, III, 264.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 397
THE CONVERT
IF ever tears did flow from eyes,
If ever voice was hoarse with cries,
If ever heart was sore with sighs, —
Let now my eyes, my voice, my heart,
Strive each to play their part. 5
My eyes, from whence these tears did spring,
Where treach'rous Syrens us'd to sing,
Shall flow no more, untill they bring
A deluge on my sensual flame,
And wash away my shame. 10
My voice, that oft with foolish lays,
With vows and rants and senseless praise,
Frail Beauty's charms to heav'n did raise,
Henceforth shall only pierce the skies
In penitential cryes. 15
My heart, that gave fond thoughts their food,
Till now averse to all that's good,
The Temple where an idol stood,
Henceforth in sacred flames shall burn,
And be that idol's urn. 20
398 ON AN ANCHOR SEAL
INTRODUCTORY :
"A little before his death Doctor Donne caused
many Seals to be made, and in them to be ingraven
the figure of Christ crucified on an Anchor (the
emblem of hope) and of which Doctor Donne
would often say, Crux mihi Anchora. These Seals
he gave or sent to most of those friends on which
he put a value; and at Mr. Herbert's death these
Verses were found wrapt up with that Seal which
was by the Doctor given to him:" Walton's Life.
DATE:
Donne died in 1631. L. 2 refers to him as already
dead.
METRE:
Used also in AN ANAGRAM, III, 165, and THE
CHURCH MILITANT,!!!, 359.
SUBJECT:
The Cross our stay.
NOTES:
2. Rev. J. J. Daniell in his Life of Herbert, 222, says
that this seal is now in the possession of Rev. W.
Ayerst, of Cambridge.
4. Hebrews vi, 19.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 399
ON AN ANCHOR-SEAL
WHEN my dear Friend could write no more,
He gave this Seal, and so gave ore.
When winds and waves rise highest, I am sure
This Anchor keeps my faith; that, me secure.
400 TO JOHN DONNE, D. D.
INTRODUCTORY :
Herbert thanked Donne for his seal in some Latin
verses, which he also translated into English.
DATE:
These lines may have been written before the
death of Donne in 1631. Yet not long before. Ac
cording to the preceding poem, and according to
Walton, too, Donne died soon after he sent the
seal.
NOTES :
14-17. Death sought to break up my friend's com
munications with me. This seal renders them
forever secure.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 401
TO JOHN DONNE, D. D.
ON HIS SEAL OF CHRIST AND AN ANCHOR
ALTHOUGH the Cross could not Christ here detain,
Though nail'd unto't, but He ascends again,
Nor yet thy eloquence here keep Him still,
But only while thou speakst, this Anchor will.
Nor canst thou be content unless thou to 5
This certain Anchor add a Seal; and so
The water and the earth both unto thee
Do owe the symbole of their certainty.
When Love, being weary, made an end
Of kind expressions to his friend, 10
He writ; when's hand could write no more,
He gave the Seal and so left o're.
How sweet a friend was he who, being griev'd
His letters were broke rudely up, believ'd 14
'T was more secure in great Love's commonweal,
Where nothing should be broke, to add a Seal!
Let the world reel. We and all ours stand sure.
This holy cable's of all storms secure.
402 A PARADOX
INTRODUCTORY:
From Rawlinson Manuscripts in the Bodleian
Library, Oxford, signed G. Herbert. First printed
by Pickering. Reprinted with corrections by Dr.
Grosart, who calls attention to the poem of the
same name and subject in the Synagogue of Chris
topher Harvey as evidence that Harvey supposed
this poem to be by Herbert. With it compare
Herbert's letter to his mother, I, 402.
METRE :
Unique.
SUBJECT :
That the sick are in better case than the whole.
NOTES :
6. The emphatic word is yourselves.
12. " Here used for one who is in the mean or middle
state between the two; neither in perfect health nor
under the full sway of sickness; one who was, in
fact, in the state in which Herbert then was — fail
ing:" A. B. Grosart.
14. " A curious ellipse of with. Can which be an error
for where ?" A. B. Grosart.
17. People sometimes weep for joy.
. ADDITIONAL POEMS 403
A PARADOX
THAT THE SICK ABE IN BETTER CASE THAN THE
WHOLE
You who admire yourselves because
You neither grone nor weepe,
And think it contrary to nature's laws
To want one ounce of sleepe,
Your strong beleife 5
Acquits yourselves and gives the sick all greife.
Your state to ours is contrary,
That makes you thinke us poore;
So Black-Moores thinke us foule, and wee
Are quit with them, and more. 10
Nothing can see
And judg of things but mediocrity.
The sick are in themselves a state
Which health hath naught to doe.
How know you that our tears p'ceed from woe,
And not from better fate ? 16
Since that Mirth hath
Her waters alsoe and desyred bath.
404 A PARADOX
20. On the expenditure of sighing, see note on AFFLIC
TION, III, 271, 1. 10.
31. With this stanza compare the fourth of THE SIZE,
III, 193.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 405
How know you that the sighs wee send
From want of breath p'ceede, 20
Not from excesse ? And therefore we do spend
That which we do not neede;
So trembling may
As well show inward warblings as decay.
Cease then to judge calamityes 25
By outward forme and shew;
But view yourselves and inward turn your eyes,
Then you shall fully know
That your estate
Is, of the two, the farre more desperate. 30
You allwayes feare to feele those smarts
Which we but sometimes prove;
Each little comfort much affects our hearts,
None but gross joyes you move.
Why then confesse 35
Your feares in number more, your joyes are lesse ?
Then for yourselves not us embrace
Plaints to bad fortune due,
For though you visitt us and plaint our case,
Wee doubt much whether you 40
Come to our bed
To comfort us, or to be comforted.
406 TRANSLATIONS OF PSALMS
INTRODUCTORY
The following Psalms were collected and edited by
Dr. Grosart and accompanied by this note :
" These Psalms are taken from the following now
extremely rare book :
PSALMS AND HYMNS
IN SOLEMN MUSICK
OF FOURE PARTS,
OR THE COMMON TUNES TO THE PsALMS IN METRE."
USED IN PARISH-CHURCHES.
Also six Hymns for one Voice to the Organ.
For God is King of all the earth;
sing ye praises with understanding.
PSALM XLVII, 7.
BY JOHN PLAYFORD.
[Picture of K. David playing, surrounded
by a square margin containing the music
of Gloria in excelsis, Deo Cantate, &c.]
LONDON: Printed by W. Godbid for J. Playford at his shop in
the Inner-Temple, 1671.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 407
PSALM II
WHY are the heathen swelPd with rage,
The people vain exploits devise ?
The kings and potentates of earth
Combin'd in one great faction rise ?
And taking councels 'gainst the Lord
And 'gainst His Christ, presume to say,
* Let us in sunder break their bonds,
And from us cast their cords away/
But He that sits in heaven shall laugh,
The Lord Himself shall them deride;
Then shall He speak to them in wrath,
And in sore anger vex their pride.
'But I am God, and seated King
On Sion, His most holy hill;
I will declare the Lord's decree,
Nor can I hide His sacred will.'
408 TRANSLATIONS OF PSALMS
The book is dedicated to William Sancroft, D. D.,
Dean of St. Paul's. In the Preface occur these ex
planations: 'To those which are Bishop King's
there is H. K.; those of Mr. [Miles] Smith [yet liv
ing], M. S.; those with G. H. are supposed to be
Mr. George Herbert's.'"
A Gloria and these five have the initials G. H.
attached. Dr. Grosart prints two more which he
thinks, on slender evidence, are by Herbert.
XH. ADDITIONAL POEMS 409
He said to Me, ' Thou art My Son,
This day have I begotten Thee;
Make Thy request, and I will grant,
The heathen shall Thy portion be.
Thou shalt possess earth's farthest bounds,
And there an awful sceptre sway;
Whose pow'r shall dash and break them all,
Like vessels made of brittle clay.'
Now therefore, O ye kings, be wise;
Be learned, ye that judge the earth;
Serve our great God in fear; rejoice,
And tremble in your highest mirth.
O kiss the Son, lest He be wroth,
And straight ye perish from the way:
When once His anger burns, thrice blest
Are all that make the Son their stay.
410 PSALM III
PSALM III
How are my foes increased, Lord!
many are they that rise
Against me, saying, for my soul
no help in God there is.
But Thou, O Lord, ar't still the shield
of my deliverance;
Thou art my glory, Lord, and He
that doth my head advance.
I cry'd unto the Lord, He heard
me from His holy hill;
I laid me down and slept, I wak't;
for God sustained me still.
Aided by Him, I will not fear
ten thousand enemies,
Nor all the people round about
that can against me rise.
Arise, O Lord, and rescue me;
save me, my God, from thrall;
'T is Thou upon the cheek-bone smit'st
mine adversaries all.
And Thou hast broke th' ungodly's teeth:
salvation unto Thee
Belongs, O Lord; Thy blessing shall
upon Thy people be.
XH. ADDITIONAL POEMS 411
PSALM IV
LORD, hear me when I call on Thee,
Lord of my righteousness;
O Thou that hast enlarged me
when I was in distress.
Have mercy on me, Lord, and hear
the prayer that I frame;
How long will ye, vain men, convert
my glory into shame ?
How long will ye seek after lies,
and vanity approve ?
But know the Lord Himself doth chuse
the righteous man to love.
The Lord will hearken unto me
when I his grace implore;
O learn to stand in awe of Him,
and sin not any more.
412 PSALM IV
Within your chamber try your hearts;
offer to God on high
The sacrifice of righteousness,
and on His grace rely.
Many there are that say, 'O who
will show us good ? ' But, Lord,
Thy countenance's cheering light
do Thou to us afford.
For that, O Lord, with perfect joy
shall more replenish me
Than worldlings joy'd with all their store
of corn and wine can be.
Therefore will I lie down in peace
and take my restful sleep;
For Thy protection, Lord, alone
shall me in safety keep.
XH. ADDITIONAL POEMS 413
PSALM VI
REBUKE me not in wrath, O Lord,
nor in Thine anger chasten me;
O pity me; for I, O Lord,
am nothing but infirmitie.
O heal me, for my bones are vex'd,
my soul is troubled very sore;
But, Lord, how long so much perplex'd
shall I in vain Thy grace implore ?
Return, O God, and rescue me,
my soul for Thy great mercy save;
For who in death remember Thee ?
or who shall praise Thee in the grave ?
With groaning I am wearied,
all night I make my couch to swim,
And water with salt tears my bed;
my sight with sorrow waxeth dim.
414 PSALM VI
My beauty wears and doth decay,
because of all mine enemies;
But now from me depart away,
all ye that work iniquities.
For God Himself hath heard my cry;
the Lord vouchsafes to weigh my tears;
Yea, He my prayer from on high
and humble supplication hears.
And now my foes the Lord will blame
that e'rst so sorely vexed me,
And put them all to utter shame,
and to confusion suddainly.
Glory, honour, power, and praise
to the most glorious Trinity;
As at the first beginning was,
is now, and to eternity.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 415
PSALM VII
SAVE me, my Lord, my God, because
I put my trust in Thee;
From all that persecute my life,
O Lord, deliver me.
Lest like a lion swollen with rage
he do devour my soul;
And piece-meal rent it, while there's none
his malice to controul.
If I have done this thing, O Lord,
if I so guilty be;
If I have ill rewarded him
that was at peace with me;
Yea, have not oft delivered him
that was my causeless foe,
Then let mine enemie prevail
unto mine overthrow.
416 PSALM VII
Let him pursue and take my soul;
yea, let him to the clay
Tread down my life, and in the dust
my slaughter' d honour lay.
Arise in wrath, O Lord, advance
against my foes' disdain;
Wake and confirm that judgment now
which Thou did'st foreordain.
So shall the people round about
resort to give Thee praise;
For their sakes, Lord, return on high,
and high Thy glory raise.
The Lord shall judge the people all;
O God, consider me
According to my righteousness
and mine integritie.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 417
The wicked's malice, Lord, confound,
but just me ever guide;
Thou art that righteous God by whom
the hearts and rains are try'd.
God is my shield, Who doth^ preserve
those that in heart are right;
He judgeth both the good and those
that do His justice slight.
Unless the wicked turn again,
the Lord will whet His sword;
His bow is bent, His quiver is
with shafts of vengeance stor'd.
The fatal instruments of death
in that prepared lie;
His arrows are ordain'd 'gainst him
that persecuteth me.
418 PSALM VH
Behold the wicked travelleth
with his iniquitie;
Exploits of mischief he conceives,
but shall bring forth a lye.
The wicked digged, and a pit
for others' mine wrought;
But in the pit which he hath made
shall he himself be caught.
To his own head his wickedness
shall be returned home;
And on his own accursed pate
his cruelty shall come.
But I, for all His righteousness,
the Lord will magnifie;
And ever praise the glorious Name
of Him that is on high.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 419
GLORIA TO PSALM XXIII
To Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,
one consubstantial Three,
All highest praise, all humblest thanks,
now and for ever be.
420 ON SIR JOHN DANVERS
INTRODUCTORY :
"By the same [George Herbert] Orator of [the] Uni
versity at Cambridge : pinned on the curtaine of the
picture of the old Sir John Danvers, who was both
a handsome and a good man. Sir John Danvers,
senior, married Elizabeth Nevill, fourth daughter
and co-heiress of John, Lord Latimer. She re-mar
ried Sir Edmund Carey. George Herbert of Bemer-
ton, having been in the first year of his age in 1594,
when Sir John Danvers, senior, died, could only
have known his character by report: " Aubrey and
Jackson's Wiltshire, p. 224. There is nothing in the
style of these lines to connect them with Herbert.
XH. ADDITIONAL POEMS 421
ON SIR JOHN DANVERS
PASSE not by;
Search, and you may
Find a treasure
Worth your stay.
What makes a Danvers
Would you find ?
In a fayre body
A fayre mind.
Sir John Danvers' earthly part
Here is copied out by art;
But his heavenly and divine
In his progenie doth shine.
Had he only brought them forth,
Know that much had been his worth.
Ther's no monument to a sonne:
Read him there, and I have done.
422 ON LORD DANVERS
INTRODUCTORY:
From the monument in the church of Dauntsey.
DATE:
Dr. Grosart writes : "There was but one Lord
Danvers, viz. : Henry Danvers, second son of Sir
John Danvers, Kt. by Lady Elizabeth, daughter of
John Nevil, Lord Latimer. He was born at Daunt-
sey, Wilts, 28th. of June, 1573; created Baron Dan
vers in 1603, and Earl of Danby, 7th. of February,
1625-6. He died 20th. of January 1643-4, and was
buried at Dauntsey. The death of Lord Danvers in
1643-4 makes it clear that the lines inscribed on his
monument, and to which contemporaneously was
added the name of G. Herbert, must have been
composed by him for some other and applied to
Lord Danvers, he having predeceased the Earl in
1632-3." A simpler explanation of these opposing
dates is that the lines were erroneously attributed to
Herbert, of whose style they show little trace.
NOTES :
5. Weares= wears away.
7. "The tears which are shed for him by mourners dis
solve thy frame:" A. B. Grosart.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 423
ON LORD DANVERS
SACRED marble, safely keepe
His dust, who under thee must sleepe
Untill the graves againe restore
Theire dead, and time shal be no more. 4
Meane while, if hee (which all thinges weares)
Doe mine thee, or if the tears
Are shed for him dissolve thy frame,
Thou art requited; for his fame,
His vertues, and his worth shal bee
Another monument for thee. 10
424 TO THE QUEENE OF BOHEMIA
INTRODUCTORY:
The Princess Elizabeth, eldest daughter of James I,
was born in Scotland, August 19, 1596. On Febru
ary 14, 1612-13, she married Frederic V, Duke of
Bavaria and Elector Palatine of the Rhine, who
in 1619 was elected King of Bohemia. Defeated
and driven from his domains by the Emperor Fer
dinand, he died at Mainz, in 1632. Elizabeth died
in London in 1661-2, and was buried in West
minster Abbey. She was the mother of Prince
Rupert. Poems in honor of her were written by
many poets of the day, among them Dr. Donne.
That by Sir H. Wotton is probably the best known.
Quarles was at one time in her service. In 1619
Sir Francis Nethersole resigned the Oratorship at
Cambridge in order to become her Secretary, and
Herbert was appointed Orator in his place.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 425
TO THE QUEENE OF BOHEMIA
BRIGHT soule, of whome if any countrey knowne
Worthy had bin, thou hadst not lost thine owne;
No Earth can bee thy Jointure, For the sunne
And starres alone unto the pitch doe runne
And pace of thy swift vertues; onely they 5
Are thy dominion. Those that rule in clay
Stick fast therein, but thy transcendent soule
Doth for two clods of earth ten spheres controule.
And though starres shott from heaven loose their
light, 9
Yet thy brave beames, excluded from their right,
Maintaine their Lustre still, and shining cleare
J\irn watrish Holland to a chrystalline sphere.
Mee thinkes, in that Dutch optick I doe see
Thy curious vertues much more visibly.
There is thy best Throne, for afflictions are 15
A foile to sett of[f] worth and make it rare.
Through that black tiffany thy vertues shine
Fairer and richer. Now wee know what's thine,
And what is fortune's. Thou hast singled out
Sorrowes and griefs, to fight with them about 20
At their owne weapons, without pomp or state
To second thee against their cunning hate.
426 TO THE QUEENE OF BOHEMIA
DATE:
Dr. Grosart has printed this, for the first time, from
the Harleian Manuscript 3910, pp. 121-2, where it
appears with the letters G. H. at its head. That it
was written by Herbert there is no other evidence.
It is not unlike Herbert's early style; but the allu
sions in the poem itself are suspicious. The Queen
is represented as living in Holland after the over
throw of her cause. In Holland she did live at in
tervals during the last ten years of her husband's
life ; but her residence there was more continuous
after his death. The compliment, too, of 1. 34, that
an undivided Majesty e is still to be seen in her face,
suggests that her husband is dead. If so, Herbert
could not have written the poem, as he and Frederic
died in the same year.
METRE:
The same as that of THE CHURCH MILITANT, III,
359.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 427
O what a poore thing 't is to be a Queene,
When scepters, state, Attendants are the screene
Betwixt us and the people! When-as glory 25
Lyes round about us to helpe out the story;
When all things pull and hale, that they may bring
A slow behaviour to the style of king;
When sense is made by Comments, but that face
Whose native beauty needs not dresse or lace 30
To serve it forth, and being stript of all
Is self-sufficient to bee the thrall
Of thousand harts, that face doth figure thee
And show thy undivided Majestye;
Which misery cannot untwist, but rather 35
Addes to the union, as lights doe gather
Splendour from darknes. So close sits the crowne
About thy temples that the furious frowne
Of opposition cannot place thee where 39
Thou shalt not be a Queene, and conquer there.
Yet hast thou more dominions: God doth give
Children for kingdomes to thee; they shall live
To conquer new ones, and shall share the frame
Of th' universe, like as the windes, and name
The world anew. The sunne shall never rise 45
But it shall spy some of their victories.
Their hands shall clipp the Eagle's winges and
chase
428 TO THE QUEENE OF BOHEMIA
NOTES :
17. Tiffany =gauze.
20. About, probably a bout.
47. The Imperial Eagles.
53. Do not fear to let your sons engage in war.
56. Thence= Bohemia.
62. Holland.
66. Meet theire tast=ftt for their taste.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 429
Those ravening Harpyes, which peck at thy face,
At once to Hell without a baiting while
At Purgatory, their inchanted He, 50
And Paris garden. Then let their perfume
And Spanish sents, wisely layd up, presume
To deale with brimstone, that untamed stench
Whose fier, like their malice, nought can quench.
But joyes are stor'd for thee; thou shalt returne
Laden with comforts thence, where now to morne
Is thy chief government, to manage woe,
To curbe some Rebell teares which faine would
flow,
Making a Head and spring against thy Reason.
This is thy empire yet, till better season 60
Call thee from out of that surrounded Land;
That habitable sea and brinish strand,
Thy teares not needing. For that hand Divine,
Which mingles water with thy Rhenish wine,
Will power full joyes to thee; but dregs to those
And meet theire tast who are thy bitter foes. 66
430 L'ENVOY
NOTES:
2. Psalm i, 3.
10. Maine=ihe ocean.
XII. ADDITIONAL POEMS 431
L'ENVOY
SHINE on, Majestick soule, abide
Like David's tree, planted beside
The Flemmish rivers; in the end
Thy fruite shall with their drops contend;
Great God will surely dry those teares, 5
Which now that moist land to thee beares.
Then shall thy Glory, fresh as flowers
In water kept, maugre the powers
Of Divell, Jesuitt, and Spaine,
From Holland sail into the Maine: 10
Thence wheeling on, it compass shall
This oure great Sublunary Ball,
And with that Ring thy fame shall wedd
Eternity into one Bedd.
TEXTUAL VARIATIONS OF THE
MANUSCRIPTS
TEXTUAL VARIATIONS
THE CALL (p. 9) :
4. I have adopted the reading of B. Ed. 1633 by
manifest error reads, And such a.
PROVIDENCE (p. 79) :
102. For furres B. reads furre.
CHURCH-RENTS AND SCHISMES (p. 105) :
In the title B. reads CHURCH-RENTS OR SCHISMS.
1. For chair B. reads place.
18. For faded B. reads vaded.
JUSTICE (p. 117):
10. For tort'ring B. reads torturing.
BUSINESSE (p. 139) :
29. For space B. reads spare.
THE PULLEY (p. 149) :
3. For him B. reads his.
THE FAMILIE (p. 185):
3. For pulling B. reads puling.
THE SIZE (p. 193) :
5. For springs B. reads strings.
JUSTICE (p. 253):
1. For thy B. reads my.
AFFLICTION (p. 273) :
12. For prick B. reads pink.
THE GLIMPSE (p. 289) :
5. For for B. reads to.
436 TEXTUAL VARIATIONS
HOME (p. 325) :
On p. 570 of the Rawlinson Manuscript 213, in the
Bodleian Library, stanzas i, xi, and xii of this
poem are given, the twelfth stanza alone having the
refrain.
THE DAWNING (p. 333) :
9. For dost B. reads doe.
VERTUE (p. 335) :
7. For its B. reads his.
THE CHURCH MILITANT (p. 359) :
11. For this line W. reads :
Thou didst rise early for to plant this vine.
16. For this line W. reads :
All emblems which thy Darling doth improve.
20. For from W. reads to.
32. For allows W. reads gives them.
33. For depart W. reads be gone.
49. For this line W. reads :
Thence into Greece she fled, where curious Arts.
52. For fisher's net W. reads fisher-nett.
59. For And spent W. reads Spending.
60-62. For these lines W. reads :
Before the other two were in their prime :
From Greece to Rome she went, subduing those
Who had subdued all the world for foes.
64. For hath W. reads had.
76. For tune W. reads cleanse.
78. For did erect her throne W. reads took possession.
TEXTUAL VARIATIONS 437
104. For Journeying W. reads Coasting.
123. For poore W. reads small.
133. For both W. reads in.
137. For the second to W. reads so.
148. For affliction W. reads afflictions.
151. For trimme W. reads spruse.
157. For Ow% t&e West W. reads Europe alone, but this
is then erased.
160. For this single line W. reads the following three:
Traditions are accounts without our host.
They who rely on them must reckon twice,
When written Truths shall censure man's devise.
168. For had more of W. reads was liker.
180. For free dispensings W. reads dispensations.
190. B. omits his.
193. For finely work each W. reads both kings and many a.
194. For into W. reads unto.
198. For and W. reads or.
201-204. For these lines W. reads:
Who brought his doctrines and his deeds from Rome :
But when they were unto the Sorbon come,
The waight was such they left the doctrines there,
Shipping the vices onely for our sphere.
229. For yeare W. reads day.
232. For proportions W. reads proportion.
248. For times W. reads time.
256. For the second our B. and W. read her.
258. For But lends W. reads Lendeth.
267. For the W. reads their.
438 TEXTUAL VARIATIONS
271-273. For these lines W. reads:
Like comick lovers ever one way runn,
Thus also sinne and darknes constantly
Follow the Church and sunn where ere they fly.
L'ENVOY (p. 381) :
2. For warre W. reads warrs.
4. B. omits in.
11. For say W. reads speak.
17, 18. W. omits these lines.
INDEX TO POEMS
TITLES ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED
Aaron, IH, 11.
Affliction, II, 247, 339, III,
269, 271, 273.
Agonie, III, 153.
To All Angels and Saints, II,
163.
The Altar, H, 121.
Anagram, III, 165.
On an Anchor-Seal, III, 399.
The Answer, II, 351.
Antiphon, II, 107, III, 63.
Artillerie, H, 361.
Assurance, HI, 225.
Avarice, HI, 113.
The Bag, III, 157.
The Banquet, III, 53.
H. Baptisme, II, 191, 193.
Bitter-Sweet, III, 251.
The British Church, HI, 101.
The Bunch of Grapes, HI, 215.
Businesse, in, 139.
The Call, IH, 9.
Charms and Knots, U, 211.
Christmas, II, 167.
Church-Floore, HI, 167.
Church-Lock and Key, U, 301 .
The Church Militant, III,
359.
Church-Monuments, II, 201.
Church-Musick, H, 199.
The Church-Porch, II, 15.
Church-Rents and Schismes,
m, 105.
Clasping of Hands, m, 37.
The Collar, III, 211.
H. Communion, H, 195, HI,
Complaining, ill, 267.
Confession, m, 259.
Conscience, III, 229.
Constancie, HI, 119.
Content, H, 353.
The Convert, III, 397.
The Crosse, III, 231.
Lord Danvers, III, 423.
Sir John Danvers, HI, 421.
The Dawning, IU, 333.
Death, II, 263.
Decay, III, 115.
Dedication, U, ix.
Deniall, II, 297.
Dialogue, II, 369.
A Dialogue- Antheme, HI, 343.
The Discharge, III, 187.
Discipline, III, 297.
Divinitie, III, 97.
To John Donne, D. D., Ill,
401.
Dooms-Day, II, 267.
Dotage, III, 137.
Dulnesse, III, 207.
Easter, II, 153.
Easter Wings, II, 335.
The Elixer, II, 99.
Employment, II, 103, 347.
L'Envoy, III, 381, 431.
Even-Song, IH, 59, 391.
Faith, U, 233.
The Familie, HI, 185.
The Flower, HI, 305.
The Foil, ffl, 123.
The Forerunners, III, 317.
Frailtie, U, 359.
442
INDEX
Giddinesse, III, 129.
The Glance, III, 331.
The Glimpse, III, 289.
Gloria to Psalm XXIII, III,
419.
Good Friday, II, 149.
Grace, II, 311.
Gratefulnesse, in, 41.
Grief, III, 32a
Grieve not the Holy Spirit, &c.,
Ill, 255.
Heaven, II, 273.
The Holdfast, III, 17.
Home, III, 325.
Hope, III, 203.
Humilitie, H, 239.
A True Hymne, III, 27.
Inscription, III, 75.
The Invitation, HI, 49.
Jesu, III, 303.
The Jews, III, 109.
Jordan, II, 87, 91.
Joseph's Coat, HI, 301.
Judgement, H, 271.
Justice, III, 117, 253.
The Knell, III, 393.
Lent, II, 171.
Life, III, 321.
Longing, III, 281.
Love, II, 83, 401, HI, 387.
Love-Joy, III, 163.
Love Unknown, HI, 179.
Man, II, 215.
Man's Medley, III, 125.
Marie Magdalene, HI, 151.
Mattens, II, 285.
The Method, HI, 197.
Miserie, II, 251.
Mortification, H, 259.
Nature, II, 303.
Obedience, H, 385.
The Odour, III, 23.
An Offering, II, 393.
Our Life is Hid, &c., H,
283.
Paradise, III, 39.
A Paradox, III, 403.
A Parodie, III, 293.
Peace, II, 377.
The Pearl, II, 381.
Perseverance, HI, 395.
The Pilgrimage, III, 237.
The Posie, III, 29.
Praise, II, 95, 397, IH, 45.
Prayer, II, 181, 183.
The Priesthood, II, 373.
Providence, III, 79.
The 23 Psalme, HI, 19.
Psalms, HI, 407, 410, 411,
413, 415.
The Pulley, HI, 149.
Queene of Bohemia, III, 425.
The Quidditie, II, 97.
The Quip, HI, 33.
Redemption, II, 237.
Repentance, II, 305.
The Reprisall, H, 293.
The Rose, II, 389.
The Sacrifice, II, 123.
Saints, vide Angels.
Schismes, vide Church-Rents.
H. Scriptures, II, 187.
The Search, III, 219.
Self -Condemnation, HI, 111.
Sepulchre, HI, 155.
Sighs and Grones, HI, 277.
Sinne, II, 229, 231.
The Sinner, II, 295.
Sinnes Round, HI, 143.
Sion, III, 265.
The Size, HI, 193.
The Sonne, HI, 161.
Sonnets to his Mother, H, 79.
INDEX
443
The Starre, II, 365.
The Storm, III, 263.
Submission, III, 205.
Sunday, II, 175.
Superliminare, II, 119.
The Temper, II, 313, 315.
The Thanksgiving, II, 287.
Time, III, 339.
Trinitie-Sunday, IE, 161, III,
Ungrateijulnesse, II, 243.
Unkindnesse, II, 309.
Vanitie, II, 357, III, 133.
Vertue, III, 335.
The Water-Course, III, 147.
Whitsunday, II, 157.
The Windows, III, 15.
The World, II, 225.
A Wreath, H, 319.
TITLES ARRANGED IN THE TRADI
TIONAL ORDER
The Dedication, II, ix.
The Church-Porch, II, 15.
Super liminare, II, 119.
The Altar, II, 121.
The Sacrifice, II, 123.
The Thanksgiving, II, 287.
The Reprisall, H, 293.
The Agonic, III, 153.
The Sinner, II, 295.
Good Friday, II, 149.
Redemption, II, 237.
Sepulchre, III, 155.
Easter, II, 153.
Easter Wings, II, 335.
H. Baptisme, II, 191.
Nature, II, 303.
Sinne, II, 229.
Affliction, II, 247.
Repentance, II, 305.
Faith, II, 233.
Prayer, II, 181.
H. Communion, II, 195.
Antiphon, II, 107.
Love, II, 83.
The Temper, II, 313.
The Temper, II, 315.
Jordan, II, 87.
Employment, II, 103.
H. Scriptures, II, 187.
Whitsunday, II, 157.
Grace, II, 311.
Praise, II, 95.
Affliction, II, 339.
Mattens, II, 285.
Sinne, II, 231.
Even-Song, III, 59.
Church-Monuments, II, 201.
Church-Musick, II, 199.
Church-Lock and Key, II, 301 .
The Church Floore, HI, 167.
The Windows, IH, 15.
Trinitie-Sunday, II, 161.
Content, II, 353.
The Quidditie, H, 97.
Humilitie, II, 239.
Frailtie, H, 359.
Constancie, III, 119.
Affliction, III, 269.
The Starre, II, 365.
Sunday, II, 175.
Avarice, III, 113.
Anagram, III, 165.
To All Angels and Saints, II,
163.
Employment, II, 347.
Deniall, II, 297.
Christmas, II, 167.
Ungratefulnesse, II, 243.
Sighs and Grones, III, 277.
The World, II, 225.
Our Life is Hid, &c., II, 283.
Vanitie, II, 357.
Lent, H, 171.
Vertue, III, 335.
The Pearl, II, 381.
Affliction, III, 271.
Man, II, 215.
Antiphon, III, 63.
Unkindnesse, II, 309.
Life, HI, 321.
Submission, III, 205.
Justice, HI, 253.
Charms and Knots, H, 211.
Affliction, HI, 273.
Mortification. II, 259.
Decay, III, 115.
446
INDEX
Miserie, II, 251.
Jordan, II, 91.
Prayer, II, 183.
Obedience, II, 385.
Conscience, III, 229.
Sion, III, 265.
Home, III, 325.
The British Church, III, 101.
The Quip, III, 33.
Vanitie, III, 133.
The Dawning, III, 333.
Jesu, III, 303.
Businesse, III, 139.
Dialogue, II, 369.
Dulnesse, III, 207.
Love-Joy, III, 163.
Providence, III, 79.
Hope, III, 203.
Sinnes Round, III, 143.
Time, III, 339.
Gratefulnesse, III, 41.
Peace, II, 377.
Confession, III, 259.
Giddinesse, III, 129.
The Bunch of Grapes, III,
215.
Love Unknown, III, 179.
Man's Medley, III, 125.
The Storm, III, 263.
Paradise, III, 39.
The Method, III, 197.
Divinitie, III, 97.
Grieve Not the Holy Spirit,
&c., Ill, 255.
The Familie, III, 185.
The Size, HI, 193.
Artillerie, II, 361.
Church-Rents and Schismes,
III, 105.
Justice, III, 117.
The Pilgrimage, III, 237.
The Holdfast, III, 17.
Complaining, III, 267.
The Discharge, III, 187.
Praise, H, 397.
An Offering, II, 393.
Longing, III, 281.
The Bag, IH, 157.
The Jews, IH, 109.
The Collar, IH, 211.
The Glimpse, IH, 289.
Assurance, III, 225.
The Call, III, 9.
Clasping of Hands, HI, 37.
Praise, III, 45.
Joseph's Coat, III, 301.
The Pulley, III, 149.
The Priesthood, II, 373.
The Search, III, 219.
Grief, III, 323.
The Crosse, III, 231.
The Flower, HI, 305.
Dotage, III, 137.
The Sonne, III, 161.
A True Hymne, III, 27.
The Answer, II, 351.
A Dialogue -Ajitheme, III,
343.
The Water-Course, III, 147.
Self -Condemnation, III, 111.
Bitter-Sweet, III, 251.
The Glance, IH, 331.
The 23 Psalme, IH, 19.
Marie Magdalene, III, 151.
Aaron, III, 11.
The Odour, III, 23.
The Foil, III, 123.
The Forerunners, III, 317.
The Rose, H, 389.
Discipline, IH, 297.
The Invitation, III, 49.
The Banquet, III, 53.
The Posie, III, 29.
A Parodie, III, 293.
The Elixer, II, 99.
A Wreath, II, 319.y
Death, II, 263.
Dooms-Day, II, 267.
Judgement, II, 271.
Heaven, H, 273.
Love, II, 401.
The Church Militant, III,
359.
L'Envoy, III, 381.
TITLES ARRANGED IN THE ORDER
OF THIS EDITION
Dedication, II, ix.
GROUP I: THE CHURCH-
PORCH.
The Church-Porch, H, 15.
GROUP II: THE RESOLVE.
Two Sonnets to his Mother,
n, 79.
Love, II, 83.
Jordan, II, 87.
Jordan, II, 91.
Praise, II, 95.
The Quidditie, H, 97.
The Elixer, II, 99.
Employment, II, 103.
Antiphon, H, 107.
GROUP III: THE CHURCH.
Superliminare, II, 119.
The Altar, H, 121.
The Sacrifice, II, 123.
Good Friday, II, 149.
Easter, H, 153.
Whitsunday, II, 157.
Trinitie-Sunday, II, 161.
To All Angels and Saints,
n, 163.
Christmas, H, 167.
Lent, n, 171.
Sunday, H, 175.
Prayer, II, 181.
Prayer, II, 183.
The H. Scriptures, H, 187.
H. Baptisme, II, 191.
H. Baptisme, II, 193.
H. Communion, II, 195.
Church-Musick, II, 199.
Church - Monuments, II,
201.
GROUP IV: MEDITATION.
Charms and Knots, II,
211.
Man, H, 215.
The World, H, 225.
Sinne, II, 229.
Sinne, II, 231.
Faith, II, 233.
Redemption, II, 237.
Humilitie, II, 239.
Ungratefulnesse, II, 243.
Affliction, II, 247.
Miserie, H, 251.
Mortification, H, 259.
Death, II, 263.
Dooms-Day, II, 267.
Judgement, H, 271.
Heaven, H, 273.
GROUP V: THE INNER LIFE.
Our Life is Hid, &c.. H,
283.
Mattens, H, 285.
The Thanksgiving, H, 287.
The Reprisall, H, 293.
The Sinner, II, 295.
Deniall, II, 297.
Church-Lock and Key, H,
301.
Nature, H, 303.
Repentance, II, 305.
Unkindnesse, II, 309.
Grace, II, 311.
The Temper, H, 313.
448
INDEX
The Temper, II, 315.
A Wreath, II, 319.
GROUP VI: THE CRISIS.
Easter Wings, H, 335.
Affliction, II, 339.
Employment, II, 347.
The Answer, II, 351.
Content, II, 353.
Vanitie, II, 357.
Frailtie, II, 359.
Artillerie, II, 361.
The Starre, II, 365.
Dialogue, II, 369.
The Priesthood, II, 373.
Peace, II, 377.
The Pearl, II, 381.
Obedience, II, 385.
The Rose, II, 389.
An Offering, II, 393.
Praise, II, 397.
Love, H, 401.
GROUP VII: THE HAPPY
PRIEST.
The Call, III, 9.
Aaron, III, 11.
The Windows, III, 15.
The Holdfast, III, 17.
The 23 Psalme, III, 19.
The Odour, III, 23.
A True Hymne. Ill, 27.
The Posie, III, 29.
The Quip, HI, 33.
Clasping of Hands, III, 37.
Paradise, III, 39.
Gratefulnesse, III. 41.
Praise, III, 45.
The Invitation, III, 49.
The Banquet, III, 53.
Even-Song, HI, 59.
Antiphon, III, 63.
GROUP VIII: BEMERTON
STUDY.
To My Successor, III, 75.
Providence, III, 79.
Divinitie, III, 97.
The British Church, III,
101.
Church-Rents and Schismes,
III, 105.
The Jews, III, 109.
Self-Condemnation.III, 1 1 1 .
Avarice, IH, 113.
Decay, III, 115.
Justice, III, 117.
Constancie, III, 119.
The Foil, III, 123.
Man's Medley, HI, 125.
Giddinesse, III, 129.
Vanitie, IH, 133.
Dotage, III, 137.
Businesse, III, 139.
Sinnes Round, III, 143.
The Water-Course, IH, 147.
The Pulley, III, 149.
Marie Magdalene, III, 151.
The Agonie, IH, 153.
Sepulchre, HI, 155.
The Bag, IH, 157.
The Sonne, IH, 161.
Love-Joy, HI, 163.
Anagram, IH, 165.
The Church -Floore, III,
167.
GROUP IX: RESTLESSNESS.
Love Unknown, III, 179.
The Familie, III, 185.
The Discharge, IH, 187.
The Size, III, 193.
The Method, III, 197.
Hope, IH, 203.
Submission, III, 205.
Dulnesse, IH, 207.
The Collar, III, 211.
The Bunch of Grapes, HI,
215.
The Search, III, 219.
Assurance, III, 225.
Conscience, HI, 229.
The Crosse, HI, 231.
The Pilgrimage, III, 237.
INDEX
449
GROUP X: SUFFERING.
Bitter-Sweet, HI, 251.
Justice, III, 253.
Grieve Not the Holy Spirit,
&c., Ill, 255.
Confession, III, 259.
The Storm, III, 263.
Sion, III, 265.
Complaining, III, 267.
Affliction, III, 269.
Affliction, III, 271.
Affliction, III, 273.
Sighs and Grones, III, 277.
Longing, III, 281.
The Glimpse, III, 289.
A Parodie, III, 293.
Discipline, III, 297.
Joseph's Coat, III, 301.
Jesu, III, 303.
The Flower, III, 305.
GROUP XI: DEATH.
The Forerunners, III, 317.
Life, III, 321.
Grief, in, 323.
Home, IH, 325.
The Glance, III, 331.
The Dawning, III, 333.
Vertue, IH, 335.
Time, IH, 339.
A Dialogue-Antheme, IH,
343.
GROUP XII: ADDITIONAL AND
DOUBTFUL POEMS.
The Church-Militant, III,
359.
L'Envoy, III, 381.
H. Communion, III, 383.
Love, III, 387.
Trinitie-Sunday, IH, 389.
Even-Song, HI, 391.
The Knell, III, 393.
Perseverance, III, 395.
The Convert, HI, 397.
On an Anchor-Seal, III,
399.
To John Donne, D. D., IH,
401.
A Paradox III, 403.
Psalm II, III, 407.
Psalm III, III, 410.
Psalm IV, HI, 411.
Psalm VI, III, 413.
Psalm VH, HI, 415.
Gloria to Psalm XXIII, HI,
419.
On Sir John Danvers, HI,
421.
On Lord Danvers, IU,
423.
To the Queene of Bohemia,
III, 425.
L'Envoy, IH, 431.
INDEX OF FIRST LINES
A broken Altar, Lord, thy servant reares, II, 121.
Ah my deare angrie Lord, III, 251.
Alas, poore Death, where is thy glorie ? Ill, 343.
All after pleasures as I rid one day, II, 167.
Almightie Judge, how shall poore wretches brook, II, 271.
Almightie Lord, who from thy glorious throne, III, 359.
Although the Cross could not Christ here detain, III, 401.
And art thou grieved, sweet and sacred Dove, III, 255.
As he that sees a dark and shadie grove, II, 191.
As I one eVning sat before my cell, II, 361.
As men, for fear the starres should sleep and nod, III, 97.
As on a window late I cast my eye, III, 163.
Awake sad heart, whom sorrow ever drowns! Ill, 333.
Away despair ! My gracious Lord doth heare, III, 157.
A wreathed garland of deserved praise, II, 319.
Blest be the God of love, HI, 59.
Blest Order, which in power dost so excell, II, 373.
Brave rose, (alas !) where art thou ? In the chair, III, 105.
Bright soule, of whome if any countrey knowne, III, 425.
Bright spark, shot from a brighter place, II, 365.
Broken in pieces all asunder, III, 273.
Busie enquiring heart, what wouldst thou know ? Ill, 187.
But that Thou art my wisdome, Lord, III, 205.
Canst be idle ? Canst thou play, III, 139.
Come away, II, 267.
Come, bring thy gift. If blessings were as slow, II, 393.
Come Lord, my head doth burn, my heart is sick, HE, 325.
Come, my Way, my Truth, my Life, III, 9.
Come ye hither all whose taste, III, 49.
Content thee, greedie heart, III, 193.
Deare Friend, sit down, the tale is long and sad, III, 179.
Death, thou wast once an uncouth hideous thing, II, 263.
Do not beguile my heart, III, 267.
False glozing pleasures, casks of happinesse, HI, 137.
Full of rebellion, I would die, II, 303.
Having been tenant long to a rich Lord, II, 237.
452 INDEX
Heark, how the birds do sing, III, 125.
He that is one, III, 389.
He that is weary, let him sit, H, 103.
Holinesse on the head, III, 11.
How are my foes increased, Lord! Ill, 410.
How fresh, O Lord, how sweet and clean, III, 305.
How should I praise thee, Lord ! How should my rymes, II,
315.
How soon doth man decay ! II, 259.
How sweetly doth My Master sound ! My Master, HI, 23.
How well her name an army doth present, HI, 165.
I blesse thee, Lord, because I grow, IH, 39.
I cannot ope mine eyes, II, 285.
I cannot skill of these thy wayes, III, 253.
If as a flowre doth spread and die, II, 347.
If as the windes and waters here below, IH, 263.
If ever tears did flow from eyes, III, 397.
If thou chance for to find, HI, 75.
If we could see below, III, 123.
I gave to Hope a watch of mine; but he, HI, 203.
I have consider' d it, and finde, II, 293.
I joy, deare Mother, when I view, III, 101.
I know it is my sinne which locks thine eares, II, 301.
I know the wayes of learning, both the head, II, 381.
I made a posie while the day ran by, IH, 321.
Immortall Heat, O let thy greater flame, II, 85.
Immortall Love, authour of this great frame, H, 83.
I saw the Vertues sitting hand in hand, II, 239.
I struck the board, and cry'd, No more, III, 211.
It cannot be. Where is that mightie joy, II, 313.
I threatned to observe the strict decree, III, 17.
I travell'd on, seeing the hill where lay, III, 237.
Jesu is in my heart, his sacred name, HI, 303.
Joy, I did lock thee up, but some bad man, HI, 215.
Kill me not ev'ry day, HI, 269.
King of Glorie, King of Peace, II, 397.
King of glorie, King of peace, III, 381.
Let all the world in ev'ry corner sing, III, 63.
Let forrain nations of their language boast, IH, 161.
Let wits contest, III, 29.
Listen, sweet Dove, unto my song, H, 157.
Lord, hear me when I call on Thee, III, 411.
Lord, how can man preach thy eternall word ? Ill, 15.
INDEX 453
Lord, how couldst thou so much appease, II. 233.
Lord, how I am all ague when I seek, II, 295.
Lord, I confesse my sinne is great, II, 305.
Lord, in my silence how do I despise, II, 359.
Lord, I will mean and speak thy praise, III, 45.
Lord, let the Angels praise thy name, II, 251.
Lord, make me coy and tender to offend, II, 309.
Lord, my first fruits present themselves to thee, II, ix.
Lord, thou art mine, and I am thine, III, 37.
Lord, who createdst man in wealth and store, II, 335.
Lord, who hast form'd me out of mud, II, 161.
Lord, with what bountie and rare clemencie, II, 243.
Lord, with what care hast thou begirt us round! II, 231.
Lord, with what glorie wast thou serv'd of old, III, 265.
Love bade me welcome; yet my soul drew back, II, 401.
Love built a stately house; where Fortune came, II, 225.
Mark you the floore ? That square and speckled stone. III,
167.
Meeting with Time, slack thing, said I, III, 339.
Money, thou bane of blisse and sourse of wo, III, 113.
My comforts drop and melt away like snow, II, 351.
My God, a verse is not a crown, II, 97.
My God, if writings may, II, 385.
My God, I heard this day, II, 215.
My God, I read this day, II, 247.
My God the poore expressions of my Love, III, 395.
My God, where is that antient heat towards thee, II, 79.
My heart did heave, and there came forth, O God! Ill, 271.
My joy, my life, my crown! Ill, 27.
My stock lies dead, and no increase, II, 311.
My words and thoughts do both expresse this notion, II, 283.
Not in rich furniture or fine array, II, 195.
O blessed bodie! Whither art thou thrown? HI, 155.
O day most calm, most bright, II, 175.
O do not use me, III, 277.
O dreadfull Justice, what a fright and terrour, III, 117.
Of what an easie quick accesse, II, 183.
O gratious Lord, how shall I know, HI, 383.
Oh all ye who passe by, whose eyes and minde, II, 123.
Oh Book! Infinite sweetnesse! Let my heart, II, 187.
Oh glorious spirits, who after all your bands, II, 163.
Oh King of grief ! A title strange, yet true, II, 287.
Oh that I knew how all thy lights combine, II, 189.
Oh, what a thing is man ! How farre from power, HI, 129.
454 INDEX
O my chief good, II, 149.
O sacred Providence, who from end to end, III, 79.
O spitefull bitter thought! Ill, 225.
O that I could a sinne once see! II, 229.
O what a cunning guest, III, 259.
O who will give me tears ? Come all ye springs, III, 323.
O who will show me those delights on high, II, 273.
Passe not by, III, 421.
Peace mutt'ring thoughts, and do not grudge to keep, II, 353.
Peace pratler, do not lowre ! Ill, 229.
Philosophers have measur'd mountains, III, 153.
Poore heart, lament, III, 197.
Poore nation, whose sweet sap and juice, III, 109.
Poore silly soul, whose hope and head lies low, II, 357.
Praised be the God of love, II, 107.
Prayer the Churches banquet, Angel's age, II, 181.
Presse me not to take more pleasure, II, 389.
Rebuke me not in wrath, O Lord, III, 413.
Rise, heart, thy Lord is risen. Sing his praise, II, 153.
Sacred marble, safely keepe, III, 423.
Save me, my Lord, my God, because, III, 415.
Shine on, Majestick soule, abide, III, 431.
Since, Lord, to thee, II, 193.
Sorrie I am, my God, some I am, III, 143.
Soul's joy, when thou art gone, III, 293.
Sure, Lord, there is enough in thee to dry, II, 81.
Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright, III, 335.
Sweetest of sweets, I thank you! When displeasure, II, 199.
Sweetest Saviour, if my soul, II, 369.
Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell ? I humbly crave, II, 377.
Sweet were the dayes when thou didst lodge with Lot, III, 115.
Teach me, my God and King, II, 99.
The Bell doth tolle, HI, 393.
The Day is spent, and hath his will on mee, III, 391.
The fleet Astronomer can bore, III, 133.
The God of love my shepherd is, III, 19.
The harbingers are come. See, see their mark! Ill, 317.
The merrie world did on a day, HI, 33.
Thou art too hard for me in Love, III, 387.
Thou that hast giv'n so much to me, III, 41.
Thou who condemnest Jewish hate, III, 111.
Thou who dost dwell and linger here below, III, 147.
Thou, whom the former precepts have, II, 119.
INDEX 455
Thou whose sweet youth and early hopes inhance, II, 15.
Throw away thy rod, III, 297.
To Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, III, 419
To write a verse or two is all the praise, II, 95.
Welcome, deare feast of Lent ! Who loves not thee, II, 171.
Welcome sweet and sacred cheer, III, 53.
What doth this noise of thoughts within my heart, III, 185.
What is this strange and uncouth thing! Ill, 231.
When blessed Marie wip'd her Saviour's feet, III, 151.
When first my lines of heav'nly joyes made mention, II, 91.
When first thou didst entice to thee my heart, II, 339.
When first thy sweet and gracious eye, III, 331.
When God at first made man, III, 149.
When my dear Friend could write no more, III, 399.
When my devotions could not pierce, II, 297.
While that my soul repairs to her devotion, II, 201.
Whither away delight ? Ill, 289.
Whither, O, whither art thou fled, III, 219.
Who is the honest man, III, 119.
Who reade a chapter when they rise, II, 211.
Who says that fictions onely and false hair, II, 87.
Why are the heathen swell'd with rage, III, 407.
Why do I languish thus, drooping and dull, III, 207.
With sick and famisht eyes, III, 281.
Wounded I sing, tormented I indite, III, 301.
You who admire yourselves because, III, 403.
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