Sometimes, when others justle and provoke us, We stir that dust ourselves, that serves to choke us; And raise those tempests of contention, which
Blow us beside the way into the ditch.
Our minds should be our guides; but they are blind : Our wills outrun our wits, or lag behind. Our furious passions, like unbridled jades, Hurry us headlong to the infernal shades.
If God be not our guide, our guard, our friend, Eternal death will be our journey's end.
MEN often find, when Nature's at a stand, And hath in vain tried all her utmost strength, That Art, her Ape, can reach her out a hand, To piece her powers with to a full length.
And may not Grace have means enough in store Wherewith to do as much as that, and more?
She may she hath engines of every kind, To work, what Art and Nature, when they view, Stupendous miracles of wonder find, And yet must needs acknowledge to be true; So far transcending all their power and might, That they amazed stand even at the sight.
Take but three instances; Faith, Hope, and Love. Souls help'd by the perspective glass of Faith Are able to perceive what is above
The reach of Reason: yea, the Scripture saith, Even him that is invisible behold,
And future things, as if they'd been of old.
Faith looks into the secret Cabinet Of God's eternal Counsels, and doth see Such mysteries of glory there, as set Believing hearts on longing, till they be Transform'd to the same image, and appear So altered, as if themselves were there.
Faith can raise earth to heaven, or draw down Heaven to earth, make both extremes to meet, Felicity and misery, can crown
Reproach with honour, season sour with sweet. Nothing's impossible to Faith: a man
May do all things that he believes he can.
Hope founded upon Faith can raise the heart Above itself in expectation
Of what the soul desireth for its part: Then, when its time of transmigration Is delay'd longest, yet as patiently To wait, as if 'twere answer'd by and by.
When grief unwieldy grows, Hope can abate The bulk to what proportion it will: So that a large circumference of late A little centre shall not reach to fill.
Nor that, which giant-like before did strout, 1 Be able with a pigmy's pace to hold out.
Hope can disperse the thickest clouds of night, That fear hath overspread the soul withal; And make the darkest shadows shine as bright As the Sunbeams spread on a silver wall.
Sin-shaken souls Hope anchor-like holds steady, When storm and tempests make them more than giddy.
Love led by Faith, and fed with Hope, is able To travel through the world's wide wilderness; And burdens seeming most intolerable Both to take up, and bear with cheerfulness. To do, or suffer, what appears in sight Extremely heavy, Love will make most light.
Yea, what by men is done, or suffered, Either for God, or else for one another, Though in itself it be much blemished With many imperfections, which smother,
And drown, the worth, and weight of it; yet, fall What will, or can, Love makes amends for all.
Love doth unite, and knit, both make, and keep Things one together, which were otherwise, Or would be both diverse, and distant. Deep, High, long, and broad, or whatsoever size Eternity is of, or happiness,
Love comprehends it all, be 't more or less.
Give me this threefold cord of graces then, Faith, Hope, and Love, let them possess mine heart, And gladly I'll resign to other men
All I can claim by Nature or by Art.
To mount a soul, and make it still stand stable, These are alone Engines incomparable.
OR, OUTLANDISH PROVERBS, SENTENCES, ETC.
SELECTED BY MR GEORGE HERBERT, LATE
ORATOR OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF CAMBRIDGE.
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