Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
A Repentant PoemXCI. Anonymous
T
And shape thy course another way;
’Tis better lose thy labour past,
Then follow on to sure decay:
What though thou long haue straid awry?
In hope of grace for mercy cry.
And keepe thee grou’ling on the ground;
Though blacke dispaire with angry frowne
Thy wit and judgment quite confound;
Though time and wit haue beene mispent,
Yet grace is left, if thou repent.
Nay, melt to floods of flowing teares;
Send out such shrikes as heauen may fill,
And pierce thine angry Judge’s eares:
And let thy soule, that harbours sin,
Bleed streames of bloud to drowne it in.
To cheereful lookes itselfe apply;
Then shall thy soule be fild with grace,
And feare of death constraind to fly:
Euen so, my God! oh, when? how long?
I would, but sinne is too, too strong.
I fly from sinne,—sinne followes me:
My will doth reach at glorie’s crowne;
Weake is my strength, it will not be:
See how my fainting soule doth pant!
O let thy strength supply my want.