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II. |
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VI. |
VII. |
VIII. |
IX. |
X. |
XI. |
XII. |
XIV. |
XV. |
XVI. |
XVII. |
XVIII. |
XIX. |
XX. |
XXI. |
2307. |
2308. |
2309. |
2310. |
2311. |
2312. |
2313. |
2314. |
2315. |
2316. |
2317. |
2318. |
2319. |
2320. |
2321. |
2322. |
2323. |
2324. |
2325. |
2326. |
2327. |
2328. |
2329. |
2330. |
2331. |
2332. |
2333. |
2334. |
2335. |
2336. |
2337. |
2338. |
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2340. |
2341. |
2342. |
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2345. |
2346. |
2347. |
2348. |
2349. |
XIII. |
The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
542.
[The parent indolently mild]
His father had not displeased him at any time, &c.
—i. 6.
The parent indolently mild
May here his fatal dotage see:
Afraid to vex thy darling child,
Thy darling child shall trouble thee,
Make his indulgent father smart,
And break thy old, fond, foolish heart.
May here his fatal dotage see:
Afraid to vex thy darling child,
Thy darling child shall trouble thee,
Make his indulgent father smart,
And break thy old, fond, foolish heart.
173
“What pity 'tis, to cross his will,
His clamorous appetites deny,
Restrain the acts of childish ill,
And make the fretted infant cry,
Harshly his little faults reprove!
How can I grieve the son I love?”
His clamorous appetites deny,
Restrain the acts of childish ill,
And make the fretted infant cry,
Harshly his little faults reprove!
How can I grieve the son I love?”
Continue then thy son to please,
Leave him to nature's discipline,
Till ripe in full-grown wickedness
He claims the wages of his sin,
The wrath of heaven's impartial Lord,
The edge of the Avenger's sword.
Leave him to nature's discipline,
Till ripe in full-grown wickedness
He claims the wages of his sin,
The wrath of heaven's impartial Lord,
The edge of the Avenger's sword.
The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||