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Divine Poems

Written By Thomas Washbourne
 
 

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Upon a good yeer of Corn, and a quick harvest.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


101

Upon a good yeer of Corn, and a quick harvest.

Have we not had a fruitful yeer of grain,
Fair weather too to bring it in amaine?
And shall we not an offering to him pay,
Who gives us richly all things to enjoy?
Did not the heathens shew their thankfulnesse
To their Corn goddesse Ceres, and expresse
The same by sacrifices of the best?
And shal we faile our thanks to manifest
To our true God, who bears the Christian name?
O let not us fall short of them for shame!
But what wil he accept? What shal we bring?
A sheafe of wheat, or some such trivial thing?
That were but paying him in his own coyne.
A single penny out of his whole Mine;
We should present the best we can devise,
A reasonable living sacrifice,
Our souls and bodies purified from sin,
That, ô that's it which he delighteth in;
That is the Corn which Angels shal with joy
Reap, and into Gods heavenly Barne convey.