I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
V. |
VI. |
VII. |
VIII. |
IX. |
X. |
XI. |
XII. |
XIV. |
XV. |
XVI. |
XVII. |
XVIII. |
XIX. |
2238. |
2239. |
2240. |
2241. |
2242. |
2243. |
2244. |
2245. |
2246. |
2247. |
2248. |
2249. |
2250. |
2251. |
2252. |
2253. |
2254. |
2255. |
2256. |
2257. |
2258. |
2259. |
2260. |
2261. |
2262. |
2263. |
2264. |
2265. |
2266. |
2267. |
2268. |
2269. |
2270. |
2271. |
2272. |
2273. |
2274. |
2275. |
2276. |
2277. |
2278. |
2279. |
XX. |
XXI. |
XIII. |
CHAPTER VIII. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
1304.
[How vain our strife to heal]
A woman having an issue of blood, &c.
—viii. 43.
How vain our strife to heal
The plague incurable!
Still the plague remains unstay'd,
Still the issue is undried;
Reason's philosophic aid
Heightens, and inflames our pride.
The plague incurable!
Still the plague remains unstay'd,
Still the issue is undried;
Reason's philosophic aid
Heightens, and inflames our pride.
Endeavouring to restrain,
The law augments our pain:
Virtue's firm resolve we boast,
Boast our liberty of will;
All our confidence is lost,
Cannot stop the raging ill.
The law augments our pain:
Virtue's firm resolve we boast,
Boast our liberty of will;
All our confidence is lost,
Cannot stop the raging ill.
The' original disease
Our medicines but increase:
Happy when at last we know
Human insufficiency,
When we truly humbled go,
Jesus, for relief to Thee.
Our medicines but increase:
Happy when at last we know
Human insufficiency,
When we truly humbled go,
Jesus, for relief to Thee.
CHAPTER VIII. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||