How fresh, O LORD, how sweet and clean Are Thy returns! e'en as the flowers in Spring To which, besides their own demesne, The late-past frosts tributes of pleasure bring; Grief melts away Like snow in May, As if there were no such cold thing. | Who would have thought my shrivell'd heart Could have recover'd greenness? It was gone Quite underground; as flowers depart To see their mother-root, when they have blown, Where they together All the hard weather, Dead to the world, keep house unknown. | These are Thy wonders, LORD of power, Killing and quickening, bringing down to Hell And up to Heaven in an hour; Making a chiming of a passing bell. We say amiss, This or that is; Thy Word is all, if we could spell. | O that I once past changing were, Fast in Thy Paradise, where no flower can wither! Many a Spring I shoot up fair, Offering at Heaven, growing and groaning thither; Nor doth my flower Want a Spring-shower, My sins and I joining together. | But while I grow in a straight line, Still upwards bent, as if Heaven were mine own, Thy anger comes, and I decline: What frost to that? what pole is not the zone Where all things burn, When Thou dost turn, And the least frown of Thine is shown? 47 | And now in age I bud again, After so many deaths I live and write; I once more smell the dew and rain, And relish versing: O my only Light, It cannot be That I am he On whom Thy tempests fell all night. | These are Thy wonders, LORD of love, To make us see we are but flowers that glide; Which when we once can find and prove, Thou hast a garden for us where to bide.-- Who would be more, Swelling through store, Forfeit their Paradise by their pride. | |