I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
V. |
VI. |
VII. |
VIII. |
IX. |
209. |
210. |
211. |
212. |
213. |
214. |
215. |
216. |
217. |
218. |
219. |
220. |
221. |
222. |
223. |
224. |
225. |
226. |
227. |
228. |
229. |
230. |
231. |
232. |
233. |
234. |
235. |
236. |
237. |
238. |
239. |
240. |
241. |
242. |
243. |
244. |
245. |
246. |
247. |
248. |
249. |
250. |
251. |
252. |
253. |
254. |
255. |
256. |
257. |
258. |
259. |
260. |
261. |
262. |
263. |
264. |
265. |
266. |
267. |
268. |
269. |
270. |
271. |
272. |
273. |
274. |
275. |
276. |
277. |
278. |
X. |
XI. |
XII. |
XIII. |
CHAPTER XXIV. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
1590.
[Mine eyes are holden too]
Their eyes were holden that they should not, &c.
—xxiv. 16.
Mine eyes are holden too:
Till open'd Lord, by Thee,
(Whom once imperfectly I knew,)
I neither know nor see:
Or if reveal'd Thou art,
Thou vanishest away;
But when Thou purifiest my heart,
Thou wilt for ever stay.
CHAPTER XXIV. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||