A HYMN
I SING the Name which None can say | |
| But toucht with An interiour Ray: | |
| The Name of our New Peace; our Good: | |
| Our Blisse: and Supernaturall Blood: | |
| The Name of All our Lives and Loves. | 5 |
| Hearken, And Help, ye holy Doves! | |
| The high-born Brood of Day; you bright | |
| Candidates of blissefull Light, | |
| The Heirs Elect of Love; whose Names belong | |
| Unto The everlasting life of Song; | 10 |
| All ye wise Soules, who in the wealthy Brest | |
| Of This unbounded Name build your warm Nest. | |
| Awake, My glory. Soul, (if such thou be, | |
| And That fair Word at all referr to Thee) | |
| Awake and sing | 15 |
| And be All Wing; | |
| Bring hither thy whole Self; and let me see | |
| What of thy Parent Heaven yet speakes in thee, | |
| O thou art Poore | |
| Of noble Powres, I see, | 20 |
| And full of nothing else but empty Me, | |
| Narrow, and low, and infinitely lesse | |
| Then this Great mornings mighty Busynes. | |
| One little World or two | |
| (Alas) will never doe. | 25 |
| We must have store. | |
| Goe, Soul, out of thy Self, and seek for More. | |
| Goe and request | |
| Great Nature for the Key of her huge Chest | |
| Of Heavns, the self involving Sett of Sphears | 30 |
| (Which dull mortality more Feeles then heares) | |
| Then rouse the nest | |
| Of nimble, Art, and traverse round | |
| The Aiery Shop of soul-appeasing Sound: | |
| And beat a summons in the Same | 35 |
| All-soveraign Name | |
| To warn each severall kind | |
| And shape of sweetnes, Be they such | |
| As sigh with supple wind | |
| Or answer Artfull Touch, | 40 |
| That they convene and come away | |
| To wait at the love-crowned Doores of | |
| This Illustrious Day. | |
| Shall we dare This, my Soul? wel doet and bring | |
| No Other note fort, but the Name we sing. | 45 |
| Wake Lute and Harp | |
| And every sweet-lippt Thing | |
| That talkes with tunefull string; | |
| Start into life, And leap with me | |
| Into a hasty Fitt-tund Harmony. | 50 |
| Nor must you think it much | |
| Tobey my bolder touch; | |
| I have Authority in Loves name to take you | |
| And to the worke of Love this morning wake you; | |
| Wake; In the Name | 55 |
| Of Him who never sleeps, All Things that Are, | |
| Or, whats the same, | |
| Are Musicall; | |
| Answer my Call | |
| And come along; | 60 |
| Help me to meditate mine Immortall Song. | |
| Come, ye soft ministers of sweet sad mirth, | |
| Bring All your houshold stuffe of Heavn on earth; | |
| O you, my Souls most certain Wings, | |
| Complaining Pipes, and prattling Strings, | 65 |
| Bring All the store | |
| Of Sweets you have; And murmur that you have no more. | |
| Come, né to part, | |
| Nature and Art! | |
| Come; and come strong, | 70 |
| To the conspiracy of our Spatious song. | |
| Bring All the Powres of Praise | |
| Your Provinces of well-united Worlds can raise; | |
| Bring All your Lutes and Harps of Heaven and Earth; | |
| What ére cooperates to The common mirthe | 75 |
| Vessells of vocall Ioyes, | |
| Or You, more noble Architects of Intellectuall Noise, | |
| Cymballs of Heavn, or Humane sphears, | |
| Solliciters of Soules or Eares; | |
| And when youare come, with All | 80 |
| That you can bring or we can call; | |
| O may you fix | |
| For ever here, and mix | |
| Your selves into the long | |
| And everlasting series of a deathlesse Song; | 85 |
| Mix All your many Worlds, Above, | |
| And loose them into One of Love. | |
| Chear thee my Heart! | |
| For Thou too hast thy Part | |
| And Place in the Great Throng | 90 |
| Of This unbounded All-imbracing Song. | |
| Powres of my Soul, be Proud! | |
| And speake lowd | |
| To All the dear-bought Nations This Redeeming Name, | |
| And in the wealth of one Rich Word proclaim | 95 |
| New Similes to Nature. | |
| May it be no wrong | |
| Blest Heavns, to you, and your Superiour song, | |
| That we, dark Sons of Dust and Sorrow, | |
| A while Dare borrow | 100 |
| The Name of Your Dilights and our Desires, | |
| And fitt it to so farr inferior Lyres. | |
| Our Murmurs have their Musick too, | |
| Ye mighty Orbes, as well as you, | |
| Nor yeilds the noblest Nest | 105 |
| Of warbling Seraphim to the eares of Love, | |
| A choicer Lesson then the joyfull Brest | |
| Of a poor panting Turtle-Dove. | |
| And we, low Wormes have leave to doe | |
| The Same bright Busynes (ye Third Heavens) with you. | 110 |
| Gentle Spirits, doe not complain. | |
| We will have care | |
| To keep it fair, | |
| And send it back to you again. | |
| Come, lovely Name! Appeare from forth the Bright | 115 |
| Regions of peacefull Light, | |
| Look from thine own Illustrious Home, | |
| Fair King of Names, and come. | |
| Leave All thy native Glories in their Georgeous Nest, | |
| And give thy Self a while The gracious Guest | 120 |
| Of humble Soules, that seek to find | |
| The hidden Sweets | |
| Which mans heart meets | |
| When Thou art Master of the Mind. | |
| Come, lovely Name; life of our hope! | 125 |
| Lo we hold our Hearts wide ope! | |
| Unlock thy Cabinet of Day | |
| Dearest Sweet, and come away. | |
| Lo how the thirsty Lands | |
| Gasp for thy Golden Showres! with longstretcht Hands. | 130 |
| Lo how the laboring Earth | |
| That hopes to be | |
| All Heaven by Thee, | |
| Leapes at thy Birth. | |
| The attending World, to wait thy Rise, | 135 |
| First turnd to eyes; | |
| And then, not knowing what to doe; | |
| Turnd Them to Teares, and spent Them too. | |
| Come Royall Name, and pay the expence | |
| Of all this Pretious Patience. | 140 |
| O come away | |
| And kill the Death of This Delay. | |
| O see, so many Worlds of barren yeares | |
| Melted and measurd out is Seas of Teares. | |
| O see, The Weary liddes of wakefull Hope | 145 |
| (Loves Eastern windowes) All wide ope | |
| With Curtains drawn, | |
| To catch The Day-break of Thy Dawn. | |
| O dawn, at last, long lookt for Day! | |
| Take thine own wings, and come away. | 150 |
| Lo, where Aloft it comes! It comes, Among | |
| The Conduct of Adoring Spirits, that throng | |
| Like diligent Bees, And swarm about it. | |
| O they are wise; | |
| And know what Sweetes are suckt from out it. | 155 |
| It is the Hive, | |
| By which they thrive, | |
| Where All their Hoard of Hony lyes. | |
| Lo where it comes, upon The snowy Doves | |
| Soft Back; And brings a Bosom big with Loves. | 160 |
| Welcome to our dark world, Thou | |
| Womb of Day! | |
| Unfold thy fair Conceptions; And display | |
| The Birth of our Bright Ioyes. | |
| O thou compacted | 165 |
| Body of Blessings: spirit of Soules extracted! | |
| O dissipate thy spicy Powres | |
| (Clowd of condensed sweets) and break upon us | |
| In balmy showrs; | |
| O fill our senses, And take from us | 170 |
| All force of so Prophane a Fallacy | |
| To think ought sweet but that which smells of Thee. | |
| Fair, flowry Name; In none but Thee | |
| And Thy Nectareall Fragrancy, | |
| Hourly there meetes | 175 |
| An universall Synod of All sweets; | |
| By whom it is defined Thus | |
| That no Perfume | |
| For ever shall presume | |
| To passe for Odoriferous, | 180 |
| But such alone whose sacred Pedigree | |
| Can prove it Self some kin (sweet name) to Thee. | |
| Sweet Name, in Thy each Syllable | |
| A Thousand Blest Arabias dwell; | |
| A Thousand Hills of Frankincense; | 185 |
| Mountains of myrrh, and Beds of species, | |
| And ten Thousand Paradises, | |
| The soul that tasts thee takes from thence. | |
| How many unknown Worlds there are | |
| Of Comforts, which Thou hast in keeping! | 190 |
| How many Thousand Mercyes there | |
| In Pittys soft lap ly a sleeping! | |
| Happy he who has the art | |
| To awake them, | |
| And to take them | 195 |
| Home, and lodge them in his Heart. | |
| O that it were as it was wont to be! | |
| When thy old Freinds of Fire, All full of Thee, | |
| Fought against Frowns with smiles; gave Glorious chase | |
| To Persecutions; And against the Face | 200 |
| Of Death and feircest Dangers, durst with Brave | |
| And sober pace march on to meet A Grave. | |
| On their Bold Brests about the world they bore thee | |
| And to the Teeth of Hell stood up to teach thee, | |
| In Center of their inmost Soules they wore thee, | 205 |
| Where Rackes and Torments strivd, in vain, to reach thee. | |
| Little, alas, thought They | |
| Who tore the Fair Brests of thy Freinds, | |
| Their Fury but made way | |
| For Thee; And servd them in Thy glorious ends. | 210 |
| What did Their weapons but with wider pores | |
| Inlarge thy flaming-brested Lovers | |
| More freely to transpire | |
| That impatient Fire | |
| The Heart that hides Thee hardly covers. | 215 |
| What did their Weapons but sett wide the Doores | |
| For Thee: Fair, purple Doores, of loves devising; | |
| The Ruby windowes which inricht the East | |
| Of Thy so oft repeated Rising. | |
| Each wound of Theirs was Thy new Morning; | 220 |
| And reinthrond thee in thy Rosy Nest, | |
| With blush of thine own Blood thy day adorning, | |
| It was the witt of love óreflowd the Bounds | |
| Of Wrath, and made thee way through All Those wounds. | |
| Wellcome dear, All-Adored Name! | 225 |
| For sure there is no Knee | |
| That knowes not Thee. | |
| Or if there be such sonns of shame, | |
| Alas what will they doe | |
| When stubborn Rocks shall bow | 230 |
| And Hills hang down their Heavn-saluting Heads | |
| To seek for humble Beds | |
| Of Dust, where in the Bashfull shades of night | |
| Next to their own low Nothing they may ly, | |
| And couch before the dazeling light of thy dread majesty. | 235 |
| They that by Loves mild Dictate now | |
| Will not adore thee, | |
| Shall Then with Just Confusion, bow | |
| And break before thee. | |