Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Heauenly MansionsXXII. John Davies
S
We wormes most mutable in spight of change
May euer stand in him that euer stood,
By faith, and hope, and love; and neuer range
But when through him we go to places strange.
And though by nature mutable we be,
Yet may his grace from vs that state estrange,
And match vs to immutability
In the bride-chamber of feliecity.
Then why should sorrowing synners feare to dye?
Since earth’s familiars are to heauen strange,
Then heauen we cannot haue while here we lye.
And he that’s free from all vncertainty
Hath in his euer neuer-failing word
Giu’n vs by deede, with his bloud seald, an hie
And heauenly mantion, which he doth afford
To all whose wills do with his will accord.
He was and is from all eternity:
If he be such a husband, shall his wife,
Or any member of her, fear to dye
In him with whom is immortality?
Hee’s life itselfe; then of himself he moues,
And all his members moues immediately
To rest in him: the rest from him he ’moues:
So all moues by him which he hates or loues.