What, many times I musing ask'd, is Man, If grief and care Keep far from him? he knows not what he can, What cannot bear. | He, till the fire hath proved him, doth remain The main part dross: To lack the loving discipline of pain Were endless loss. | Yet when my LORD did ask me on what side I were content The grief, whereby I must be purified, To Me were sent, | As each imagined anguish did appear, Each withering bliss, Before my soul, I cried, 'Oh! spare me here; Oh no, not this!'-- | Like one that having need of, deep within, The surgeon's knife, Would hardly bear that it should graze the skin, Though for his life:-- | Till He at last, Who best doth understand Both what we need, And what can bear, did take my case in hand, Nor crying heed. | |