University of Virginia Library

Search this document 

expand sectionI. 
expand sectionII. 


248

These Asclepiads of Mr. H. S. translated and enlarged.

Nè Verbum mihi sit mortua Litera,
Nec Christi Meritum Gratia vanida;
Sed Verbum fatuo sola Scientia,
Et Christus misero sola Redemptio.

Unletter'd Word, which never eare could heare;
Unwritten Word, which never eye could see,
Yet syllabled in flesh-spell'd character,
That so to senses thou might'st subject be;
Since thou in bread art stampt, in print art read,
Let not thy print-stampt Word to me be dead.
Thou all-contriving, all-deserving Spirit,
Made flesh to die, that so thou might'st be mine,
That thou in us, and we in thee might merit,
We thine, thou ours; thou humane, we divine;
Let not my dead lifes merit, my dead heart
Forfeit so deare a purchas'd deaths desert.
Thou Sunne of wisdome, knowledge infinite,
Made folly to the wise, night to prophane;
Be I thy Moon, oh let thy sacred light
Increase to th' full, and never, never wane:
Wise folly set in me, fond wisdome rise,
Made me renounce my wisdome, to be wise.
Thou Life eternall, purest blessednesse,
Made mortal, wretched, sinne it self for me;
Shew me my death, my sin, my wretchednesse,
That I may flourish, shine, and live in thee:
So I with praise shall sing thy life, deaths storie,
O thou my Merit, Life, my Wisdome, Glorie.