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But in this life no soul the truth can know
So perfectly, as it hath pow'r to do:
If then perfection be not found below,

An higher place must make her mount thereto.

Again, How can she but immortal be,

When with the motions of both will and wit, She still aspireth to eternity,

And never rests, till she attains to it?

Water in conduit-pipes can rise no higher

Than the well-head from whence it first doth

spring:

Then since to eternal God she doth aspire,
She cannot be but an eternal thing.

All moving things to other things do move,
Of the same kind, which shows their nature such :
So earth falls down, and fire doth mount above,
Till both their proper elements do touch.

And as the moisture, which the thirsty earth
Sucks from the sea, to fill her empty veins,
From out her womb at last doth take a birth,

And runs a nymph along the grassy plains;

Long doth she stay, as loath to leave the land, From whose soft side she first did issue make: She tastes all places, turns to ev'ry hand,

Her flow'ry banks unwilling to forsake;

Yet nature so her streams doth lead and carry,
As that her course doth make no final stay,
Till she herself unto the ocean marry,
Within whose wat'ry bosom first she lay :

Ev'n so the soul, which in this earthly mould

The Spirit of God doth secretly infuse, Because at first she doth the earth behold,

And only this material world she views,—

At first her mother-earth she holdeth dear,

And doth embrace the world and worldly things; She flies close by the ground, and hovers here, And mounts not up with her celestial wings:

Yet under heaven she cannot light on aught,
That with her heav'nly nature doth agree;
She cannot rest, she cannot fix her thought,
She cannot in this world contented be.

For who did ever yet, in honour, wealth,
Or pleasure of the sense, contentment find?
Who ever ceas'd to wish, when he had health?
Or having wisdom, was not vex'd in mind?

Then as a bee, which among weeds doth fall, Which seem sweet flow'rs, with lustre fresh and gay;

She lights on that, and this, and tasteth all,

But pleas'd with none, doth rise and soar away;

So, when the soul finds here no true content,

And, like Noah's dove, can no sure footing take, She doth return from whence she first was sent, And flies to him that first her wings did make.

Wit, seeing truth, from cause to cause ascends,
And never rests, till it the first attain;
Will, seeking good, finds many middle ends,

But never stays, till it the last do gain.

Now God the truth, and first of causes is;
God is the last good end, which lasteth still;
Being Alpha and Omega nam'd for this;
Alpha to wit, Omega to the will:

Sith then her heav'nly kind she doth display,
In that to God she doth directly move;
And on no mortal thing can make her stay,
She cannot be from hence, but from above.

And yet this first true cause, and last good end,
She cannot here so well and truly see;
For this perfection she must yet attend,
Till to her Maker she espoused be.

As a king's daughter, being in person sought
Of divers princes, who do neighbour near,
On none of them can fix a constant thought,
Though she to all do lend a gentle ear;

Yet can she love a foreign emperor,

Whom of great worth and pow'r she hears to be, If she be woo'd but by ambassador,

Or but his letters, or his picture, see;

For well she knows, that when she shall be brought Into the kingdom where her spouse doth reign; Her eyes shall see what she conceiv'd in thought, Himself, his state, his glory, and his train :

So while the virgin soul on earth doth stay,

She woo'd and tempted is ten thousand ways By these great pow'rs, which on the earth bear

sway,

The wisdom of the world, wealth, pleasure, praise

With these sometime she doth her time beguile,
These do by fits her fantasy possess;
But she distates them all within a while,
And in the sweetest finds a tediousness;

But if upon the world's almighty King

She once doth fix her humble loving thought, Who by his picture drawn in ev'ry thing,

And sacred messages, her love hath sought;

Of him she thinks she cannot think too much;
This honey tasted, still is ever sweet;
The pleasure of her ravish'd thought is such,
As almost here she with her bliss doth meet:

But when in heav'n she shall his essence see,

This is her sov'reign good, and perfect bliss; Her longings, wishings, hopes, all finish'd be, Her joys are full, her motions rest in this :

There is she crown'd with garlands of content;
There doth she manna eat, and nectar drink;
That presence doth such high delights present,
As never tongue could speak, nor heart could
think.

For this, the better souls do oft despise

The body's death, and do it oft desire;.
For when on ground the burden'd balance lies,
The empty part is lifted up the higher :

But if the body's death the soul should kill,
Then death must needs against her nature be;
And were it so, all souls would fly it still,
For nature hates and shuns her contrary;

For all things else, which nature makes to be, Their being to preserve, are chiefly taught; And though some things desire a change to see, Yet never thing did long to turn to nought.

If then by death the soul were quenched quite,
She could not thus against her nature run;
Since ev'ry senseless thing, by nature's light,
Doth preservation seek, destruction shun;

Nor could the world's best spirits so much err,
If death took all, that they should all agree,
Before this life their honour to prefer;

For what is praise to things that nothing be?

Again, if by the body's prop she stand;
If on the body's life, her life depend,

As Meleager's on the fatal brand,

The body's good she only would intend:

We should not find her half so brave and bold,
To lead it to the wars, and to the seas,
To make it suffer watchings, hunger, cold,
When it might feed with plenty, rest with

ease.

Doubtless, all souls have a surviving thought,
Therefore of death we think with quiet mind;
But if we think of being turn'd to nought,
A trembling horror in our souls we find.

And as the better spirit, when she doth bear
A scorn of death, doth show she cannot die;
So when the wicked soul death's face doth fear,
Even then she proves her own eternity.

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