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| CHAPTER XXIII. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
1566.
[If guilty why to be set free?]
I will therefore chastise Him, and release, &c.
—xxiii. 16.
If guilty why to be set free?
Or why chastised, if innocent?
The heart hath no stability,
By two contending passions rent:
The abject slave of worldly fear
Who basely courts the smiles of men,
Condemning whom he fain would clear,
The judge condemns himself in vain.
| CHAPTER XXIII. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||