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Grace shining, and Nature fainting.
Sol. Song i. 3. ii. 5. & vi. 5.

TEL

1.

TELL me, fairest of thy Kind
Tell me Shepherd, all divine,
Where this fainting head reclin'd
May relieve such cares as mine:
Shepherd, lead me to thy grove;
If burning noon infect the sky
The sick'ning sheep to covert fly,
The sheep not half so faint as I,
Thus overcome with love.

II.

Say, thou dear Sov'reign of my breast,
Where dost thou lead thy flock to rest
Why should I appear like one
Wild and wand'ring all alone,
Unbeloved and unknown?
O my great Redeemer, say,
Shall I turn my feet astray!
Will JESUS bear to see me rove,]
To see me seek another love?

III.

Ne'er had I known his dearest name,
Ne'er had I felt his inward flame,

Had not his heart-strings first began the tender sound!
Nor can I bear the thought, that He

Shou'd leave the sky,

Shou'd bleed and die,

Should love a wretch so vile as me

Without returns of passion for his dying wound.

IV.

His eyes are glory mix'd with grace
In his delightful awful face,

Sits majesty and gentleness,
So tender is my bleeding heart,
That with a frown he kills;
His absence is perpetual smart
Nor is my soul refin'd enough
To bear the beaming of his love,
And feel his warmer smiles.

Where shall I rest this drooping head?
I love, I love the sun, and yet I want the shade.
V.

My sinking spirits feebly strive
T' endure the extasy;

Beneath these rays I cannot live,

And yet without them die.

Noue knows the pleasure and the pain

That all my inward pow'rs sustain

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But such as feel a Saviour's love, and love the God

VI.

Oh! why should beauty heavenly bright
Stoop to charm a mortal's sight,

And torture with the sweet excess of light?
Our hearts, alas! how frail their make!
With their own weight of joy they break,
Oh! why is love so strong, and nature's self so weak?
VII.

Turn, turn away thine eyes,

Ascend the azure hills, and shine

Amongst the happy tenants of the skies,
They can sustain a vision so divine.

O turn thy lovely glories from me,

The joys are too intense, the glories overcome me.

VIII.

Dear Lord, forgive my rash complaint,

And love me still

Against my froward will;

Unveil thy beauties, tho' I faint.

Send the great herald from the sky,
And at the trumpet's awful roar
This feeble state of things shall fly,
And pain and pleasure mix no more:
Then shall I gaze with strengthen'd sight
On glories infinitely bright,

My heart shall all be love, my Jesus all delight.

OF

Love to CHRIST present or absent.

I.

F all the joys we mortals know, JESUS, thy love exceeds the rest & Love, the best blessing here below,

And nearest image of the blest.

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Sweet are my thoughts, and soft my cares,
When the celestial flame I feel;
In all my hopes, and all my fears,
There's something kind and pleasing still.

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There's not a thought attempts to rove;
Each smile he wears upon his face
Fixes, and charms, and fires my love.

IV.

He speaks, and straight immortal joys
Run thro' my ears, and reach my heart;
My soul all melts at that dear voice,
And pleasure shoots thro' ev'ry part.

V.

If he withdraw a moment's space,
He leaves a sacred pledge behind;

Here in this breast this image stays,
The grief and comfort of my mind.

VI.

While of his absence I complain,
And long, and weep as lovers do,
There's a strange pleasure in the pain,
And tears have their own sweetness too.
VII.

When round his courts by day I rove,
Or ask the watchmen of the night
For some kind tidings of my love,
His very name creates delight.

VIII.

JESUS, my God; yet rather come:
Mine eyes would dwell upon thy face;
'Tis best to see my Lord at home.
And feel the presence of his grace.

Co

The absence of CHRIST.

OME, lead me to some lofty shade Where turtles moan their loves; Tall shadows were for lovers made; And grief becomes the groves.

II.

"Tis no mean beauty of the ground
That has enslav'd mine eyes;

I faint beneath a nobler wound,
Nor love below the skies.

III.

JESUS, the spring of all that's bright,
The everlasting Fair,

Heav'n's ornament, and heaven's delight

Is my eternal care.

IV.

But ah! how far above this grave
Does the bright Charmer dwell?
Absence, thou keenest wound to love,
That sharpest pain I feel.

V.

Pensive I climb the sacred hills,
And near him vent my woes;
Yet his sweet face he still conceals,
Yet still my passion grows.

VI.

I murmur to the hollow vale,
I tell the rocks iny flame,
And bless the echo in her cell
That best repeats her name.

VII.

My passion breaths perpetual sighs,
Till pitying winds shall hear,
And gently bear them up the skies,
And gently wound his ear.

J

Desiring his Descent to Earth,

I.

ESUS, I love. Come, dearest Name,
Come and possess this heart of mine
I love, though 'tis a fainter flame,
And infinitely less than thine.

II.

O! if my Lord would leave the skies,
Drest in the rays of mildest grace,

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