Silex scintillans, or, Sacred poems and priuate eiaculations by Henry Vaughan ...

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Title
Silex scintillans, or, Sacred poems and priuate eiaculations by Henry Vaughan ...
Author
Vaughan, Henry, 1622-1695.
Publication
London :: Printed by T.W. for H. Blunden ...,
1650.
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"Silex scintillans, or, Sacred poems and priuate eiaculations by Henry Vaughan ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A64747.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 2, 2024.

Pages

Page 23

The Lampe.

'TIs dead night round about: Horrour doth creepe And move on with the shades; stars nod, and sleepe, And through the dark aire spin a firie thread Such as doth gild the lazie glow-worms bed. Yet, burn'st thou here, a full day; while I spend My rest in Cares, and to the dark world lend These flames, as thou dost thine to me; I watch That houre, which must thy life, and mine dispatch; But still thou doest out-goe me, I can see Met in thy flames, all acts of piety; Thy light, is Charity; Thy heat, is Zeale; And thy aspiring, active fires reveale Devotion still on wing; Then, thou dost weepe Still as thou burn'st, and the warme droppings creepe To measure out thy length, as if thou'dst know What stock, and how much time were left thee now; Nor dost thou spend one teare in vain, for still As thou dissolv'st to them, and they distill, They're stor'd up in the socket, where they lye, When all is spent, thy last, and sure supply, And such is true repentance, ev'ry breath Wee spend in sighes, is treasure after death; Only, one point escapes thee; That thy Oile Is still out with thy flame, and so both faile; But when soe're I'm out, both shalbe in, And where thou mad'st an end, there I'le begin.
Mark Cap. 13. ver. 35.

Watch you therefore, for you know not when the master of the house commeth, at Even, or at mid-night, or at the Cock-crowing, or in the morning.

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