I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
V. |
VI. |
VII. |
VIII. |
IX. |
458. |
459. |
460. |
461. |
462. |
463. |
464. |
465. |
466. |
467. |
468. |
469. |
470. |
471. |
472. |
473. |
474. |
475. |
476. |
477. |
478. |
479. |
480. |
481. |
482. |
483. |
484. |
485. |
486. |
487. |
488. |
489. |
490. |
491. |
492. |
493. |
494. |
495. |
496. |
497. |
498. |
499. |
500. |
501. |
502. |
503. |
504. |
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506. |
507. |
508. |
X. |
XI. |
XII. |
XIII. |
The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
CXI.
[Weary, why should I farther go]
Weary, why should I farther go,
Or seek a resting-place below
With vain anxiety?
Without the presence of my Lord,
This earth can no repose afford,
Or glimpse of joy for me.
Or seek a resting-place below
With vain anxiety?
Without the presence of my Lord,
This earth can no repose afford,
Or glimpse of joy for me.
Weeping where'er mine eye I turn,
Fresh cause to weep, lament, and mourn
Mine eye with horror sees;
Nothing but sin and pain appears
In all the dreary vale of tears,
The frightful wilderness.
Fresh cause to weep, lament, and mourn
Mine eye with horror sees;
Nothing but sin and pain appears
In all the dreary vale of tears,
The frightful wilderness.
My paradise is lost and gone,
Distress'd, disconsolate, alone,
A banish'd man I rove,
I faint beneath my nature's load,
An alien from the life of God,
A stranger to His love.
Distress'd, disconsolate, alone,
A banish'd man I rove,
I faint beneath my nature's load,
An alien from the life of God,
A stranger to His love.
What then is change of place to me?
The end of sin and misery,
In every place is nigh;
No spot of earth but yields a grave:
Where'er He wills, if Jesus save,
I lay me down and die.
The end of sin and misery,
In every place is nigh;
135
Where'er He wills, if Jesus save,
I lay me down and die.
The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||