I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
V. |
VI. |
VII. |
VIII. |
IX. |
X. |
XI. |
XII. |
XIII. |
3439. |
3440. |
3441. |
3442. |
3443. |
3444. |
3445. |
3446. |
3447. |
3448. |
3449. |
3450. |
3451. |
3452. |
3453. |
3454. |
3455. |
3456. |
3457. |
3458. |
3459. |
3460. |
3461. |
3462. |
3463. |
3464. |
3465. |
3466. |
3467. |
3468. |
3469. |
3470. |
3471. |
3472. |
3473. |
3474. |
3475. |
3476. |
3477. |
3478. |
3479. |
3480. |
3481. |
3482. |
3483. |
3484. |
3485. |
3486. |
3487. |
3488. |
3489. |
3490. |
3491. |
CHAPTER V. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
2443.
[God who His creatures' love requires]
Whiles it remained, was it not thine own?
—v. 4.
God who His creatures' love requires,
Our only happiness desires,
He claims the whole and not a part,
Not half our goods but all our heart.
My heart, O God, is all Thy due,
Is always naked to Thy view;
And if I love not Thee alone,
I make the' impostor's doom my own.
CHAPTER V. The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||