The English Works of George Herbert Newly Arranged And Annotated And Considered

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He so farre thy good did plot That his own self he forgot.
Did he die, or did he not ? 25 If he had not di'd for thee.
Thou hadst hv'd in miserie.
Two hves worse then ten deaths be.
And hath any space of breath 29 'Twixt his sinnes and Saviour's death ?
He that loseth gold, though drosse, Tells to all he meets his crosse. He that sinnes, hath he no losse ?
He that findes a silver vein Thinks on it, and thinks again. 35 Brings thy Saviour's death no gain ?
Who in heart not ever kneels Neither si
...nne nor Saviour feels.
142 SINNES ROUND Date: Not found in W. Metre: The same as that of The Church-Porch, except that this is a case of "link-verse, " i. E. The last line of each stanza is the first hne of the next, and the last line of the poem connects with the first. This structure, which at first seems merely ingen- ious, really expresses as no other could the self- perpetuating character of sin. Such beginnings touch their end. — Southwell in his St. Peter's Complaint, stanza cxiii (1595), has this stanza: " My eye reades mournfull lessons to my hart.


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