A Book for Boys and Girls
Or,
Temporal Things
Spritualized.
by John Bunyan,
Licensed and entered according to order.
London: Printed for, and sold by, R. Tookey, at his
Printing House in St. Christopher’s Court, in
Threadneedle Street, behind the Royal Exchange,
1701.
Advertisement by the Editor.
Some degree of mystery hangs over these
Divine Emblems for children, and many years’
diligent researches have not enabled me completely to solve
it. That they were written by Bunyan, there cannot be the
slightest doubt.
‘Manner and matter, too, are all his
own.’[1]
But no book, under the title of Divine
Emblems, is mentioned in any catalogue or
advertisements of Bunyan’s works, published during
his life; nor in those more complete lists printed by his
personal friends, immediately after his death. In all these
lists, as well as in many advertisement, both before, and
shortly after Mr. Bunyan’s death, a little book for
children is constantly introduced, which, judging from the
title, must have been similar to, if not the same as, these
Emblems; but the Editor has not been able to discover a
copy of the first edition, although every inquiry has been
made for it, both in the United Kingdom and America. It was
advertised in 1688, as Country Rhymes for Children, upon
seventy-four things.[2] It is also
advertised, in the same year, as A Book for Boys and
Girls, or Country Rhymes for Children, price
6d.[3] In 1692, it is included in Charles
Doe’s catalogue table of all Mr. Bunyan’s
books, appended to The Struggler for their
preservation, No. 36; Meditations on seventy-four
things, published in 1685, and not reprinted during the
author’s life. In Charles Doe’s second
catalogue of all Mr. Bunyan’s books, appended to the
first edition of the Heavenly Footman, March 1698,
it is No. 37. A Book for Boys and Girls, or
Country Rhymes for Children, in verse, on seventy-four
things. This catalogue describes every work, word for word,
as it is in the several title pages. In 1707 it had reached
a third edition, and was ‘ornamented with
cuts’;[4] and the title is altered to A
Book for Boys and Girls, or Temporal Things
Spiritualized, with cuts. In 1720, it was advertised,
‘price, bound, 6d.’[5] In
Keach’s Glorious Lover, it is advertised by
Marshall, in 12mo. price 1s. In 1724, it assumed its
present title, and from that time was repeatedly advertised
as Divine Emblems, or Temporal Things
Spiritualized, fitted for the use of boys and girls,
adorned with cuts.
By indefatigable exertions, my excellent
friend and brother collector of old English bibles, James
Dix, Esq., Bristol, has just discovered and presented to me
the second edition of this very rare little volume, in fine
preservation, from which it appears, that in 1701, the
title page was altered from Country Rhymes and
Meditations, to A Book for Boys and Girls, or
Temporal Things Spiritualized. It has no cuts, but,
with that exception, it contains exactly the same subjects
as the subsequent editions published under the more popular
title of Divine Emblems.
The only difficulty that remains is to
discover seventy-four meditations in the forty-nine
Emblems. This may be readily done, if the subjects
of meditation are drawn out. Thus, the first emblem
contains meditations on two things, the Barren
Fig-tree, and God’s Vineyard. So the
second has a meditation on the Lark and the Fowler,
and another on the comparison between the Fowler and
Satan. Upon this plan, the volume contains exactly
seventy-four meditations.
Under the title of Divine Emblems, it
has passed through a multitude of editions, and many
thousand copies have been circulated. It was patronized in
those early efforts of the Religious Tract Society, which
have been so abundantly blessed in introducing wholesome
food to the young, instead of the absurd romances which
formerly poisoned the infant and youthful mind.
Among these numerous editions, two deserve
special notice. The first of these was published in 1757,
‘on a curious paper, and good letter, with new
cuts.’ It has a singular preface, signed J. D.,
addressed ‘to the great Boys, in folio, and the
little ones in coats.’ The first eight pages are
occupied with a dissertation on the origin of
language, perhaps arising from a line in the dialogue
between a sinner and spider, ‘My name entailed is to
my creation.’ In this preface, he learnedly attempts
to prove that language was the gift of God by revelation,
and not a gradual acquirement of man as his wants
multiplied. The other remarkable edition was published
about 1790.[6] It is, both the text and cuts,
printed from copperplate engravings, very handsomely
executed. This is an honour conferred upon very few
authors;[7] nor was it ever conferred upon one
more worthy the highest veneration of man than is the
immortal allegorist.
The number of editions which have been
printed of these little engaging poems, is a proof of the
high estimation in which they have been held for nearly one
hundred and seventy years; and the great rarity of the
early copies shows the eager interest with which they have
been read by children until utterly destroyed.
The cuts were at first exceedingly coarse
and rude, but were much improved in the more modern copies.
Those to Mason’s edition are handsome. The engraver
has dressed all his actors in the costume of the time of
George the Third; the women with hooped petticoats and high
head dresses; clergymen with five or six tier wigs; men
with cocked hats and queues; and female servants with mob
caps. That to Emblem Fifteen, upon the sacraments, is
peculiarly droll; the artist, forgetting that the author
was a Baptist, represents a baby brought to the font to be
christened! and two persons kneeling before the body of our
Lord!
GEO. OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
The title page will show, if there thou
look,
Who are the proper subjects of this
book.
They’re boys and girls of all sorts
and degrees,
From those of age to children on the
knees.
Thus comprehensive am I in my
notions,
They tempt me to it by their childish
motions.
We now have boys with beards, and girls that
be
Big[8]as old women, wanting
gravity.
Then do not blame me, ‘cause I thus
describe them.
Flatter I may not, lest thereby I bribe
them
To have a better judgment of
themselves,
Than wise men have of babies on their
shelves.[9]
Their antic tricks, fantastic modes, and
way,
Show they, like very boys and girls, do
play
With all the frantic fopperies of this
age,
And that in open view, as on a
stage;
Our bearded men do act like beardless
boys;
Our women please themselves with childish
toys.
Our ministers, long time, by word and
pen,
Dealt with them, counting them not boys, but
men.
Thunderbolts they shot at them and their
toys,
But hit them not, ‘cause they were
girls and boys.
The better charg’d, the wider still
they shot,
Or else so high, these dwarfs they touched
not.
Instead of men, they found them girls and
boys,
Addict to nothing as to childish
toys.
Wherefore, good reader, that I save them
may,
I now with them the very
dotterel[10] play;
And since at gravity they make a
tush,
My very beard I cast behind a
bush;
And like a fool stand fing’ring of
their toys,
And all to show them they are girls and
boys.
Nor do I blush, although I think some
may
Call me a baby, ‘cause I with them
play.
I do’t to show them how each
fingle-fangle
On which they doting are, their souls
entangle,
As with a web, a trap, a gin, or
snare;
And will destroy them, have they not a
care.
Paul seemed to play the fool, that he might
gain
Those that were fools indeed, if not in
grain;[11]
And did it by their things, that they might
know
Their emptiness, and might be brought
unto
What would them save from sin and
vanity,
A noble act, and full of honesty.
Yet he nor I would like them be in
vice,
While by their playthings I would them
entice,
To mount their thoughts from what are
childish toys,
To heaven, for that’s prepared for
girls and boys.
Nor do I so confine myself to
these,
As to shun graver things; I seek to
please
Those more compos’d with better things
than toys;
Though thus I would be catching girls and
boys.
Wherefore, if men have now a mind to
look,
Perhaps their graver fancies may be
took
With what is here, though but in homely
rhymes:
But he who pleases all must rise
betimes.
Some, I persuade me, will be finding
fault,
Concluding, here I trip, and there I
halt:
No doubt some could those grovelling notions
raise
By fine-spun terms, that challenge might the
bays.
But should all men be forc’d to lay
aside
Their brains that cannot regulate the
tide
By this or that man’s fancy, we should
have
The wise unto the fool become a
slave.
What though my text seems mean, my morals
be
Grave, as if fetch’d from a sublimer
tree.
And if some better handle[12] can
a fly,
Than some a text, why should we then
deny
Their making proof, or good
experiment,
Of smallest things, great mischiefs to
prevent?
Wise Solomon did fools to
piss-ants[13] send,
To learn true wisdom, and their lies to
mend.
Yea, God by swallows, cuckoos, and the
ass,[14]
Shows they are fools who let that season
pass,
Which he put in their hand, that to
obtain
Which is both present and eternal
gain.
I think the wiser sort my rhymes may
slight,
But what care I, the foolish will
delight
To read them, and the foolish God has
chose,
And doth by foolish things their minds
compose,
And settle upon that which is
divine;
Great things, by little ones, are made to
shine.
I could, were I so pleas’d, use higher
strains:
And for applause on tenters[15]
stretch my brains.
But what needs that? the arrow, out of
sight,
Does not the sleeper, nor the watchman
fright;
To shoot too high doth but make children
gaze,
‘Tis that which hits the man doth him
amaze.
And for the inconsiderableness
Of things, by which I do my mind
express,
May I by them bring some good thing to
pass,
As Samson, with the jawbone of an
ass;
Or as brave Shamgar, with his ox’s
goad
(Both being things not manly, nor for war in
mode),
I have my end, though I myself
expose
To scorn; God will have glory in the
close.
J.B.
A BOOK FOR BOYS AND GIRLS,
&c.
DIVINE EMBLEMS, OR TEMPORAL THINGS
SPIRITUALIZED, &c.
I.
UPON THE BARREN FIG-TREE IN GOD’S
VINEYARD
What, barren here! in this so good a
soil?
The sight of this doth make God’s
heart recoil
From giving thee his blessing; barren
tree,
Bear fruit, or else thine end will cursed
be!
Art thou not planted by the
water-side?
Know’st not thy Lord by fruit is
glorified?
The sentence is, Cut down the barren
tree:
Bear fruit, or else thine end will cursed
be.
Hast thou been digg’d about and dunged
too,
Will neither patience nor yet dressing
do?
The executioner is come, O tree,
Bear fruit, or else thine end will cursed
be!
He that about thy roots takes pains to
dig,
Would, if on thee were found but one good
fig,
Preserve thee from the axe: but, barren
tree,
Bear fruit, or else thy end will cursed
be!
The utmost end of patience is at
hand,
‘Tis much if thou much longer here
doth stand.
O cumber-ground, thou art a barren
tree.
Bear fruit, or else thine end will cursed
be!
Thy standing nor they name will help at
all;
When fruitful trees are spared, thou must
fall.
The axe is laid unto thy roots, O
tree!
Bear fruit, or else thine end will cursed
be.
II.
UPON THE LARK AND THE
FOWLER.
Thou simple bird, what makes thou here to
play?
Look, there’s the fowler,
pr’ythee come away.
Do’st not behold the net? Look there,
‘tis spread,
Venture a little further, thou art
dead.
Is there not room enough in all the
field
For thee to play in, but thou needs must
yield
To the deceitful glitt’ring of a
glass,
Plac’d betwixt nets, to bring thy
death to pass?
Bird, if thou art so much for dazzling
light,
Look, there’s the sun above thee; dart
upright;
Thy nature is to soar up to the
sky,
Why wilt thou come down to the nets and
die?
Take no heed to the fowler’s tempting
call;
This whistle, he enchanteth birds
withal.
Or if thou see’st a live bird in his
net,
Believe she’s there, ‘cause
hence she cannot get.
Look how he tempteth thee with is
decoy,
That he may rob thee of thy life, thy
joy.
Come, pr’ythee bird, I pr’ythee
come away,
Why should this net thee take, when
‘scape thou may?
Hadst thou not wings, or were thy feathers
pull’d,
Or wast thou blind, or fast asleep
wer’t lull’d,
The case would somewhat alter, but for
thee,
Thy eyes are ope, and thou hast wings to
flee.
Remember that thy song is in thy
rise,
Not in thy fall; earth’s not thy
paradise.
Keep up aloft, then, let thy circuits
be
Above, where birds from fowler’s nets
are free.
Comparison.
This fowler is an emblem of the
devil,
His nets and whistle, figures of all
evil.
His glass an emblem is of sinful
pleasure,
And his decoy of who counts sin a
treasure.
This simple lark’s a shadow of a
saint,
Under allurings, ready now to
faint.
This admonisher a true teacher
is,
Whose works to show the soul the snare and
bliss,
And how it may this fowler’s net
escape,
And not commit upon itself this
rape.
III.
UPON THE VINE-TREE.
What is the vine, more than another
tree?
Nay most, than it, more tall, more comely
be.
What workman thence will take a beam or
pin,
To make ought which may be delighted
in?
Its excellency in its fruit doth
lie:
A fruitless vine, it is not worth a
fly.
Comparison.
What are professors more than other
men?
Nothing at all. Nay, there’s not one
in ten,
Either for wealth, or wit, that may
compare,
In many things, with some that carnal
are.
Good are they, if they mortify their
sin,
But without that, they are not worth a
pin.
IV.
MEDITATIONS UPON AN EGG.
1.
The egg’s no chick by falling from the
hen;
Nor man a Christian, till he’s born
again.
The egg’s at first contained in the
shell;
Men, afore grace, in sins and darkness
dwell.
The egg, when laid, by warmth is made a
chicken,
And Christ, by grace, those dead in sin doth
quicken.
The egg, when first a chick, the
shell’s its prison;
So’s flesh to the soul, who yet with
Christ is risen.
The shell doth crack, the chick doth chirp
and peep,
The flesh decays, as men do pray and
weep.
The shell doth break, the chick’s at
liberty,
The flesh falls off, the soul mounts up on
high
But both do not enjoy the self-same
plight;
The soul is safe, the chick now fears the
kite.
2.
But chicks from rotten eggs do not
proceed,
Nor is a hypocrite a saint
indeed.
The rotten egg, though underneath the
hen,
If crack’d, stinks, and is loathsome
unto men.
Nor doth her warmth make what is rotten
sound;
What’s rotten, rotten will at last be
found.
The hypocrite, sin has him in
possession,
He is a rotten egg under
profession.
3.
Some eggs bring cockatrices; and some
men
Seem hatch’d and brooded in the
viper’s den.
Some eggs bring wild-fowls; and some men
there be
As wild as are the wildest fowls that
flee.
Some eggs bring spiders, and some men
appear
More venom’d than the worst of spiders
are.[16]
Some eggs bring piss-ants, and some seem to
me
As much for trifles as the piss-ants
be.
Thus divers eggs do produce divers
shapes,
As like some men as monkeys are like
apes.
But this is but an egg, were it a
chick,
Here had been legs, and wings, and bones to
pick.
V.
OF FOWLS FLYING IN THE
AIR.
Methinks I see a sight most
excellent,
All sorts of birds fly in the
firmament:
Some great, some small, all of a divers
kind,
Mine eye affecting, pleasant to my
mind.
Look how they tumble in the wholesome
air,
Above the world of worldlings, and their
care.
And as they divers are in bulk and
hue,
So are they in their way of flying
too.
So many birds, so many various
things
Tumbling i’ the element upon their
wings.
Comparison.
These birds are emblems of those men that
shall
Ere long possess the heavens, their all in
all.
They are each of a diverse shape and
kind,
To teach we of all nations there shall
find.
They are some great, some little, as we
see,
To show some great, some small, in glory
be.[17]
Their flying diversely, as we
behold,
Do show saints’ joys will there be
manifold;
Some glide, some mount, some flutter, and
some do,
In a mix’d way of flying, glory
too.
And all to show each saint, to his
content,
Shall roll and tumble in that
firmament.
VI.
UPON THE LORD’S
PRAYER.
Our Father which in heaven art,
Thy name be always hallowed;
Thy kingdom come, thy will be
done;
Thy heavenly path be followed
By us on earth as ‘tis with
thee,
We humbly pray;
And let our bread us given be,
From day to day.
Forgive our debts as we forgive
Those that to us indebted are:
Into temptation lead us
not,[18]
But save us from the wicked
snare.
The kingdom’s thine, the power
too,
We thee adore;
The glory also shall be thine
For evermore.
VII.
MEDITATIONS UPON PEEP OF
DAY.
I oft, though it be peep of day, don’t
know
Whether ‘tis night, whether ‘tis
day or no.
I fancy that I see a little
light,
But cannot yet distinguish day from
night;
I hope, I doubt, but steady yet I be
not,
I am not at a point, the sun I see
not.
Thus ‘tis with such who grace but
now[19] possest,
They know not yet if they be cursed or
blest.
VIII.
UPON THE FLINT IN THE
WATER.
This flint, time out of mind, has there
abode,
Where crystal streams make their continual
road.
Yet it abides a flint as much as
‘twere
Before it touched the water, or came
there
Its hard obdurateness is not
abated,
‘Tis not at all by water
penetrated.
Though water hath a soft’ning virtue
in’t,
This stone it can’t dissolve, for
‘tis a flint.
Yea, though it in the water doth
remain,
It doth its fiery nature still
retain.
If you oppose it with its
opposite,
At you, yea, in your face, its fire
‘twill spit.
Comparison.
This flint an emblem is of those that
lie,
Like stones, under the Word, until they
die.
Its crystal streams have not their nature
changed,
They are not, from their lusts, by grace
estranged.
IX.
UPON THE FISH IN THE
WATER.
1.
The water is the fish’s
element;
Take her from thence, none can her death
prevent;
And some have said, who have transgressors
been,
As good not be, as to be kept from
sin.
2.
The water is the fish’s
element:
Leave her but there, and she is well
content.
So’s he, who in the path of life doth
plod,
Take all, says he, let me but have my
God.
3.
The water is the fish’s
element,
Her sportings there to her are
excellent;
So is God’s service unto holy
men,
They are not in their element till
then.
X.
UPON THE SWALLOW.
This pretty bird, O! how she flies and
sings,[20]
But could she do so if she had not
wings?
Her wings bespeak my faith, her songs my
peace;
When I believe and sing my doubtings
cease.
XI.
UPON THE BEE.
The bee goes out, and honey home doth
bring,
And some who seek that honey find a
sting.
Now would’st thou have the honey, and
be free
From stinging, in the first place kill the
bee.
Comparison.
This bee an emblem truly is of
sin,
Whose sweet, unto a many, death hath
been.
Now would’st have sweet from sin and
yet not die,
Do thou it, in the first place,
mortify.
XII.
UPON A LOWERING MORNING.
Well, with the day I see the clouds
appear,
And mix the light with darkness
everywhere;
This threatening is, to travellers that
go
Long journeys, slabby rain they’ll
have, or snow.
Else, while I gaze, the sun doth with his
beams
Belace the clouds, as ‘twere with
bloody streams;
This done, they suddenly do watery
grow,
And weep, and pour their tears out where
they go.
Comparison.
Thus ‘tis when gospel light doth usher
in
To us both sense of grace and sense of
sin;
Yea, when it makes sin red with
Christ’s blood,
Then we can weep till weeping does us
good.
XIII.
UPON OVER-MUCH NICENESS.
‘Tis much to see how over nice some
are
About the body and household
affair,
While what’s of worth they slightly
pass it by,
Not doing, or doing it slovenly.
Their house must be well furnished, be in
print,[21]
Meanwhile their soul lies
ley,[22] has no good in’t.
Its outside also they must
beautify,
When in it there’s scarce common
honesty.
Their bodies they must have tricked up and
trim,
Their inside full of filth up to the
brim.
Upon their clothes there must not be a
spot,
But is their lives more than one common
blot.
How nice, how coy are some about their
diet,
That can their crying souls with
hogs’-meat quiet.
All drest must to a hair be, else ‘tis
naught,
While of the living bread they have no
thought.
Thus for their outside they are clean and
nice,
While their poor inside stinks with sin and
vice.
XIV.
MEDITATIONS UPON A CANDLE.
Man’s like a candle in a
candlestick,
Made up of tallow and a little
wick;
And as the candle when it is not
lighted,
So is he who is in his sins
benighted.
Nor can a man his soul with grace
inspire,
More than can candles set themselves on
fire.
Candles receive their light from what they
are not;
Men grace from Him for whom at first they
care not.
We manage candles when they take the
fire;
God men, when he with grace doth them
inspire.
And biggest candles give the better
light,
As grace on biggest sinners shines most
bright.
The candle shines to make another
see,
A saint unto his neighbour light should
be.
The blinking candle we do much
despise,
Saints dim of light are high in no
man’s eyes.
Again, though it may seem to some a
riddle,
We use to light our candles at the
middle.[23]
True light doth at the candle’s end
appear,
And grace the heart first reaches by the
ear.
But ‘tis the wick the fire doth kindle
on,
As ‘tis the heart that grace first
works upon.
Thus both do fasten upon what’s the
main,
And so their life and vigour do
maintain.
The tallow makes the wick yield to the
fire,
And sinful flesh doth make the soul
desire
That grace may kindle on it, in it
burn;
So evil makes the soul from evil
turn.[24]
But candles in the wind are apt to
flare,
And Christians, in a tempest, to
despair.
The flame also with smoke attended
is,
And in our holy lives there’s much
amiss.
Sometimes a thief will candle-light
annoy,
And lusts do seek our graces to
destroy.
What brackish is will make a candle
sputter;
‘Twixt sin and grace there’s
oft’ a heavy clutter.
Sometimes the light burns dim, ‘cause
of the snuff,
Sometimes it is blown quite out with a
puff;
But watchfulness preventeth both these
evils,
Keeps candles light, and grace in spite of
devils.
Nor let not snuffs nor puffs make us to
doubt,
Our candles may be lighted, though puffed
out.
The candle in the night doth all
excel,
Nor sun, nor moon, nor stars, then shine so
well.
So is the Christian in our
hemisphere,
Whose light shows others how their course to
steer.
When candles are put out, all’s in
confusion;
Where Christians are not, devils make
intrusion.
Then happy are they who such candles
have,
All others dwell in darkness and the
grave.
But candles that do blink within the
socket,
And saints, whose eyes are always in their
pocket,
Are much alike; such candles make us
fumble,
And at such saints good men and bad do
stumble.[25]
Good candles don’t offend, except sore
eyes,
Nor hurt, unless it be the silly
flies.
Thus none like burning candles in the
night,
Nor ought[26] to holy living for
delight.
But let us draw towards the candle’s
end:
The fire, you see, doth wick and tallow
spend,
As grace man’s life until his glass is
run,
And so the candle and the man is
done.
The man now lays him down upon his
bed,
The wick yields up its fire, and so is
dead.
The candle now extinct is, but the
man
By grace mounts up to glory, there to
stand.
XV.
UPON THE SACRAMENTS.
Two sacraments I do believe there
be,
Baptism and the Supper of the
Lord;
Both mysteries divine, which do to
me,
By God’s appointment, benefit
afford.
But shall they be my God, or shall I
have
Of them so foul and impious a
thought,
To think that from the curse they can me
save?
Bread, wine, nor water, me no ransom
bought.[27]
XVI.
UPON THE SUN’S REFLECTION UPON THE
CLOUDS IN A FAIR MORNING.
Look yonder, ah! methinks mine eyes do
see
Clouds edged with silver, as fine garments
be;
They look as if they saw that golden
face
That makes black clouds most beautiful with
grace.
Unto the saints’ sweet incense, or
their prayer,
These smoky curdled clouds I do
compare.
For as these clouds seem edged, or laced
with gold,
Their prayers return with blessings
manifold.
XVII.
UPON APPAREL.
God gave us clothes to hide our
nakedness,
And we by them do it expose to
view.
Our pride and unclean minds to an
excess,
By our apparel, we to others
show.[28]
XVIII.
THE SINNER AND THE SPIDER.
Sinner.
What black, what ugly crawling thing art
thou?
Spider.
I am a
spider——————-
Sinner.
A spider, ay, also a filthy
creature.
Spider.
Not filthy as thyself in name or
feature.
My name entailed is to my
creation,
My features from the God of thy
salvation.
Sinner.
I am a man, and in God’s image
made,
I have a soul shall neither die nor
fade,
God has possessed me[29] with
human reason,
Speak not against me lest thou speakest
treason.
For if I am the image of my
Maker,
Of slanders laid on me He is
partaker.
Spider.
I know thou art a creature far above
me,
Therefore I shun, I fear, and also love
thee.
But though thy God hath made thee such a
creature,
Thou hast against him often played the
traitor.
Thy sin has fetched thee down: leave off to
boast;
Nature thou hast defiled, God’s image
lost.
Yea, thou thyself a very beast hast
made,
And art become like grass, which soon doth
fade.
Thy soul, thy reason, yea, thy spotless
state,
Sin has subjected to th’ most dreadful
fate.
But I retain my primitive
condition,
I’ve all but what I lost by thy
ambition.
Sinner.
Thou venomed thing, I know not what to call
thee,
The dregs of nature surely did befall
thee,
Thou wast made of the dross and scum of
all,
Man hates thee; doth, in scorn, thee spider
call.
Spider.
My venom’s good for something,
‘cause God made it,
Thy sin hath spoiled thy nature, doth
degrade it.
Of human virtues, therefore, though I fear
thee,
I will not, though I might, despise and jeer
thee.
Thou say’st I am the very dregs of
nature,
Thy sin’s the spawn of devils,
‘tis no creature.
Thou say’st man hates me ‘cause
I am a spider,
Poor man, thou at thy God art a
derider;
My venom tendeth to my
preservation,
Thy pleasing follies work out thy
damnation.
Poor man, I keep the rules of my
creation,
Thy sin has cast thee headlong from thy
station.
I hurt nobody willingly, but thou
Art a self-murderer; thou know’st not
how
To do what good is; no, thou lovest
evil;
Thou fliest God’s law, adherest to the
devil.[30]
Sinner.
Ill-shaped creature, there’s
antipathy
‘Twixt man and spiders, ‘tis in
vain to lie;
I hate thee, stand off, if thou dost come
nigh me,
I’ll crush thee with my foot; I do
defy thee.
Spider.
They are ill-shaped, who warped are by
sin,
Antipathy in thee hath long time
been
To God; no marvel, then, if me, his
creature,
Thou dost defy, pretending name and
feature.
But why stand off? My presence shall not
throng thee,
‘Tis not my venom, but thy sin doth
wrong thee.
Come, I will teach thee wisdom, do but hear
me,
I was made for thy profit, do not fear
me.
But if thy God thou wilt not hearken
to,
What can the swallow, ant, or spider
do?
Yet I will speak, I can but be
rejected,
Sometimes great things by small means are
effected.
Hark, then, though man is noble by
creation,
He’s lapsed now to such
degeneration,
Is so besotted and so careless
grown,
As not to grieve though he has
overthrown
Himself, and brought to bondage
everything
Created, from the spider to the
king.
This we poor sensitives do feel and
see;
For subject to the curse you made us
be.
Tread not upon me, neither from me
go;
‘Tis man which has brought all the
world to woe,
The law of my creation bids me teach
thee;
I will not for thy pride to God impeach
thee.
I spin, I weave, and all to let thee
see,
Thy best performances but cobwebs
be.
Thy glory now is brought to such an
ebb,
It doth not much excel the spider’s
web;
My webs becoming snares and traps for
flies,
Do set the wiles of hell before thine
eyes;
Their tangling nature is to let thee
see,
Thy sins too of a tangling nature
be.
My den, or hole, for that ‘tis
bottomless,
Doth of damnation show the
lastingness.
My lying quiet until the fly is
catch’d,
Shows secretly hell hath thy ruin
hatch’d.
In that I on her seize, when she is
taken,
I show who gathers whom God hath
forsaken.
The fly lies buzzing in my web to
tell
Thee how the sinners roar and howl in
hell.
Now, since I show thee all these
mysteries,
How canst thou hate me, or me
scandalize?
Sinner.
Well, well; I no more will be a
derider,
I did not look for such things from a
spider.
Spider.
Come, hold thy peace; what I have yet to
say,
If heeded, help thee may another
day.
Since I an ugly ven’mous creature
be,
There is some semblance ‘twixt vile
man and me.
My wild and heedless runnings are like
those
Whose ways to ruin do their souls
expose.
Daylight is not my time, I work in th’
night,
To show they are like me who hate the
light.
The maid sweeps one web down, I make
another,
To show how heedless ones convictions
smother;
My web is no defence at all to
me,
Nor will false hopes at judgment be to
thee.
Sinner.
O spider, I have heard thee, and do
wonder
A spider should thus lighten and thus
thunder.
Spider.
Do but hold still, and I will let thee
see
Yet in my ways more mysteries there
be.
Shall not I do thee good, if I thee
tell,
I show to thee a four-fold way to
hell;
For, since I set my web in sundry
places,
I show men go to hell in divers
traces.
One I set in the window, that I
might
Show some go down to hell with gospel
light.
One I set in a corner, as you
see,
To show how some in secret snared
be.
Gross webs great store I set in darksome
places,
To show how many sin with brazen
faces;
Another web I set aloft on high,
To show there’s some professing men
must die.
Thus in my ways God wisdom doth
conceal,
And by my ways that wisdom doth
reveal.
I hide myself when I for flies do
wait,
So doth the devil when he lays his
bait;
If I do fear the losing of my
prey,
I stir me, and more snares upon her
lay:
This way and that her wings and legs I
tie,
That, sure as she is catch’d, so she
must die.
But if I see she’s like to get
away,
Then with my venom I her journey
stay.
All which my ways the devil
imitates
To catch men, ‘cause he their
salvation hates.
Sinner.
O spider, thou delight’st me with thy
skill!
I pr’ythee spit this venom at me
still.
Spider.
I am a spider, yet I can possess
The palace of a king, where
happiness
So much abounds. Nor when I do go
thither,
Do they ask what, or whence I come, or
whither
I make my hasty travels; no, not
they;
They let me pass, and I go on my
way.
I seize the palace,[31] do with
hands take hold
Of doors, of locks, or bolts; yea, I am
bold,
When in, to clamber up unto the
throne,
And to possess it, as if ‘twere mine
own.
Nor is there any law forbidding
me
Here to abide, or in this palace
be.
Yea, if I please, I do the highest
stories
Ascend, there sit, and so behold the
glories
Myself is compassed with, as if I
were
One of the chiefest courtiers that be
there.
Here lords and ladies do come round about
me,
With grave demeanour, nor do any flout
me
For this, my brave adventure, no, not
they;
They come, they go, but leave me there to
stay.
Now, my reproacher, I do by all
this
Show how thou may’st possess thyself
of bliss:
Thou art worse than a spider, but take
hold
On Christ the door, thou shalt not be
controll’d.
By him do thou the heavenly palace
enter;
None chide thee will for this thy brave
adventure;
Approach thou then unto the very
throne,
There speak thy mind, fear not, the
day’s thine own;
Nor saint, nor angel, will thee stop or
stay,
But rather tumble blocks out of the
way.
My venom stops not me; let not thy
vice
Stop thee; possess thyself of
paradise.
Go on, I say, although thou be a
sinner,
Learn to be bold in faith, of me a
spinner.
This is the way the glories to
possess,
And to enjoy what no man can
express.
Sometimes I find the palace door
uplock’d,
And so my entrance thither has
upblock’d.
But am I daunted? No, I here and
there
Do feel and search; so if I
anywhere,
At any chink or crevice, find my
way,
I crowd, I press for passage, make no
stay.
And so through difficulty I
attain
The palace; yea, the throne where princes
reign.
I crowd sometimes, as if I’d burst in
sunder;
And art thou crushed with striving, do not
wonder.
Some scarce get in, and yet indeed they
enter;
Knock, for they nothing have, that nothing
venture.
Nor will the King himself throw dirt on
thee,
As thou hast cast reproaches upon
me.
He will not hate thee, O thou foul
backslider!
As thou didst me, because I am a
spider.
Now, to conclude since I such doctrine
bring,
Slight me no more, call me not ugly
thing.
God wisdom hath unto the piss-ant
given,
And spiders may teach men the way to
heaven.
Sinner.
Well, my good spider, I my errors
see,
I was a fool for railing upon
thee.
Thy nature, venom, and thy fearful
hue,
Both show that sinners are, and what they
do.
Thy way and works do also darkly
tell,
How some men go to heaven, and some to
hell.
Thou art my monitor, I am a fool;
They learn may, that to spiders go to
school.
XIX.
MEDITATIONS UPON THE DAY BEFORE THE
SUN-RISING.
But all this while, where’s he whose
golden rays
Drives night away and beautifies our
days?
Where’s he whose goodly face doth warm
and heal,
And show us what the darksome nights
conceal?
Where’s he that thaws our ice, drives
cold away?
Let’s have him, or we care not for the
day.
Thus ‘tis with who partakers are of
grace,
There’s nought to them like their
Redeemer’s face.
XX.
OF THE MOLE IN THE GROUND.
The mole’s a creature very smooth and
slick,
She digs i’ th’ dirt, but
‘twill not on her stick;
So’s he who counts this world his
greatest gains,
Yet nothing gets but’s labour for his
pains.
Earth’s the mole’s element, she
can’t abide
To be above ground, dirt heaps are her
pride;
And he is like her who the worldling
plays,
He imitates her in her work and
ways.
Poor silly mole, that thou should’st
love to be
Where thou nor sun, nor moon, nor stars can
see.
But O! how silly’s he who doth not
care
So he gets earth, to have of heaven a
share!
XXI.
OF THE CUCKOO.
Thou booby, say’st thou nothing but
Cuckoo?
The robin and the wren can thee
outdo.
They to us play through their little
throats,
Taking not one, but sundry pretty taking
notes.
But thou hast fellows, some like thee can
do
Little but suck our eggs, and sing
Cuckoo.
Thy notes do not first welcome in our
spring,
Nor dost thou its first tokens to us
bring.
Birds less than thee by far, like prophets,
do
Tell us, ‘tis coming, though not by
Cuckoo.
Nor dost thou summer have away with
thee,
Though thou a yawling bawling Cuckoo
be.
When thou dost cease among us to
appear,
Then doth our harvest bravely crown our
year.
But thou hast fellows, some like thee can
do
Little but suck our eggs, and sing
Cuckoo.
Since Cuckoos forward not our early
spring,
Nor help with notes to bring our harvest
in;
And since, while here, she only makes a
noise,
So pleasing unto none as girls and
boys,
The Formalist we may compare her
to,
For he doth suck our eggs, and sing
Cuckoo.
XXII.
OF THE BOY AND BUTTERFLY.
Behold how eager this our little
boy
Is for this Butterfly, as if all
joy,
All profits, honours, yea, and lasting
pleasures,
Were wrapt up in her, or the richest
treasures,
Found in her, would be bundled up
together,
When all her all is lighter than a
feather.
He halloos, runs, and cries out, Here, boys,
here,
Nor doth he brambles or the nettles
fear.
He stumbles at the mole-hills, up he
gets,
And runs again, as one bereft of
wits;
And all this labour and this large
outcry,
Is only for a silly butterfly.
Comparison.
This little boy an emblem is of
those
Whose hearts are wholly at the world’s
dispose,
The butterfly doth represent to
me,
The world’s best things at best but
fading be.
All are but painted nothings and false
joys,
Like this poor butterfly to these our
boys.
His running through nettles, thorns, and
briars,
To gratify his boyish fond
desires;
His tumbling over mole-hills to
attain
His end, namely, his butterfly to
gain;
Doth plainly show what hazards some men
run.
To get what will be lost as soon as
won.
Men seem in choice, than children far more
wise,
Because they run not after
butterflies;
When yet, alas! for what are empty
toys,
They follow children, like to beardless
boys.[32]
XXIII.
OF THE FLY AT THE CANDLE.
What ails this fly thus desperately to
enter
A combat with the candle? Will she
venture
To clash at light? Away, thou silly
fly;
Thus doing thou wilt burn thy wings and
die.
But ‘tis a folly her advice to
give,
She’ll kill the candle, or she will
not live.
Slap, says she, at it; then she makes
retreat,
So wheels about, and doth her blows
repeat.
Nor doth the candle let her quite
escape,
But gives some little check unto the
ape:
Throws up her heels it doth, so down she
falls,
Where she lies sprawling, and for succour
calls.
When she recovers, up she gets
again,
And at the candle comes with might and
main,
But now behold, the candle takes the
fly,
And holds her, till she doth by burning
die.
Comparison.
This candle is an emblem of that
light
Our gospel gives in this our darksome
night.
The fly a lively picture is of
those
That hate and do this gospel light
oppose.
At last the gospel doth become their
snare,
Doth them with burning hands in pieces
tear.[33]
XXIV.
ON THE RISING OF THE SUN.
Look, look, brave Sol doth peep up from
beneath,
Shows us his golden face, doth on us
breathe;
He also doth compass us round with
glories,
Whilst he ascends up to his highest
stories.
Where he his banner over us
displays,
And gives us light to see our works and
ways.
Nor are we now, as at the peep of
light,
To question, is it day, or is it
night?
The night is gone, the shadows fled
away,
And we now most sure are that it is
day.
Our eyes behold it, and our hearts believe
it;
Nor can the wit of man in this deceive
it.
And thus it is when Jesus shows his
face,
And doth assure us of his love and
grace.
XXV.
UPON THE PROMISING FRUITFULNESS OF A
TREE.
A comely sight indeed it is to
see
A world of blossoms on an
apple-tree:
Yet far more comely would this tree
appear,
If all its dainty blooms young apples
were.
But how much more might one upon it
see,
If all would hang there till they ripe
should be.
But most of all in beauty ‘twould
abound,
If then none worm-eaten should there be
found.
But we, alas! do commonly behold
Blooms fall apace, if mornings be but
cold.
They too, which hang till they young apples
are,
By blasting winds and vermin take
despair,
Store that do hang, while almost ripe, we
see
By blust’ring winds are shaken from
the tree,
So that of many, only some there
be,
That grow till they come to
maturity.
Comparison.
This tree a perfect emblem is of
those
Which God doth plant, which in his garden
grows,
Its blasted blooms are motions unto
good,
Which chill affections do nip in the
bud.
Those little apples which yet blasted
are,
Show some good purposes, no good fruits
bear.
Those spoiled by vermin are to let us
see,
How good attempts by bad thoughts
ruin’d be.
Those which the wind blows down, while they
are green,
Show good works have by trials spoiled
been.
Those that abide, while ripe upon the
tree,
Show, in a good man, some ripe fruit will
be.
Behold then how abortive some fruits
are,
Which at the first most promising
appear.
The frost, the wind, the worm, with time
doth show,
There flows, from much appearance, works but
few.
XXVI.
UPON THE THIEF.
The thief, when he doth steal, thinks he
doth gain;
Yet then the greatest loss he doth
sustain.
Come, thief, tell me thy gains, but do not
falter.
When summ’d, what comes it to more
than the halter?
Perhaps, thou’lt say, The halter I
defy;
So thou may’st say, yet by the halter
die.
Thou’lt say, Then there’s an
end; no, pr’ythee, hold,
He was no friend of thine that thee so
told.
Hear thou the Word of God, that will thee
tell,
Without repentance thieves must go to
hell.
But should it be as thy false prophet
says,
Yet nought but loss doth come by thievish
ways.
All honest men will flee thy
company,
Thou liv’st a rogue, and so a rogue
will die.
Innocent boldness thou hast none at
all,
Thy inward thoughts do thee a villain
call.
Sometimes when thou liest warmly on thy
bed,
Thou art like one unto the gallows
led.
Fear, as a constable, breaks in upon
thee,
Thou art as if the town was up to stone
thee.
If hogs do grunt, or silly rats do
rustle,
Thou art in consternation, think’st a
bustle
By men about the door, is made to take
thee,
And all because good conscience doth forsake
thee.
Thy case is most deplorably so
bad,
Thou shunn’st to think on’t,
lest thou should’st be mad.
Thou art beset with mischiefs every
way,
The gallows groaneth for thee every
day.
Wherefore, I pr’ythee, thief, thy
theft forbear,
Consult thy safety, pr’ythee, have a
care.
If once thy head be got within the
noose,
‘Twill be too late a longer life to
choose.
As to the penitent thou readest
of,
What’s that to them who at repentance
scoff.
Nor is that grace at thy command or
power,
That thou should’st put it off till
the last hour.
I pr’ythee, thief, think on’t,
and turn betime;
Few go to life who do the gallows
climb.
XXVII.
OF THE CHILD WITH THE BIRD AT THE
BUSH.
My little bird, how canst thou
sit
And sing amidst so many thorns?
Let me a hold upon thee get,
My love with honour thee adorns.
Thou art at present little worth,
Five farthings none will give for
thee,
But pr’ythee, little bird, come
forth,
Thou of more value art to me.
‘Tis true it is sunshine
to-day,
To-morrow birds will have a
storm;
My pretty one come thou away,
My bosom then shall keep thee
warm.
Thou subject are to cold
o’nights,
When darkness is thy covering;
At days thy danger’s great by
kites,
How can’st thou then sit there and
sing?
Thy food is scarce and scanty
too,
‘Tis worms and trash which thou dost
eat;
Thy present state I pity do,
Come, I’ll provide thee better
meat.
I’ll feed thee with white bread and
milk,
And sugar plums, if them thou
crave.
I’ll cover thee with finest
silk,
That from the cold I may thee
save.
My father’s palace shall be
thine,
Yea, in it thou shalt sit and
sing;
My little bird, if thou’lt be
mine,
The whole year round shall be thy
spring.
I’ll teach thee all the notes at
court,
Unthought-of music thou shalt
play;
And all that thither do resort,
Shall praise thee for it every
day.
I’ll keep thee safe from cat and
cur,
No manner o’ harm shall come to
thee;
Yea, I will be thy succourer,
My bosom shall thy cabin be.
But lo, behold, the bird is gone;
These charmings would not make her
yield;
The child’s left at the bush
alone,
The bird flies yonder o’er the
field.
Comparison.
This child of Christ an emblem
is,
The bird to sinners I compare,
The thorns are like those sins of
his
Which do surround him everywhere.
Her songs, her food, and sunshine
day,
Are emblems of those foolish
toys,
Which to destruction lead the
way,
The fruit of worldly, empty joys.
The arguments this child doth
choose
To draw to him a bird thus wild,
Shows Christ familiar speech doth
use
To make’s to him be
reconciled.
The bird in that she takes her
wing,
To speed her from him after all,
Shows us vain man loves any thing
Much better than the heavenly
call.
XXVIII.
OF MOSES AND HIS WIFE.
This Moses was a fair and comely
man,
His wife a swarthy Ethiopian;
Nor did his milk-white bosom change her
sin.
She came out thence as black as she went
in.
Now Moses was a type of Moses’
law,
His wife likewise of one that never
saw
Another way unto eternal life;
There’s mystery, then, in Moses and
his wife.
The law is very holy, just, and
good,
And to it is espoused all flesh and
blood;
But this its goodness it cannot
bestow
On any that are wedded thereunto.
Therefore as Moses’ wife came swarthy
in,
And went out from him without change of
skin,
So he that doth the law for life
adore,
Shall yet by it be left a
black-a-more.
XXIX.
OF THE ROSE-BUSH.
This homely bush doth to mine eyes
expose
A very fair, yea, comely ruddy
rose.
This rose doth also bow its head to
me,
Saying, Come, pluck me, I thy rose will
be;
Yet offer I to gather rose or
bud,
Ten to one but the bush will have my
blood.
This looks like a trapan,[34] or
a decoy,
To offer, and yet snap, who would
enjoy;
Yea, the more eager on’t, the more in
danger,
Be he the master of it, or a
stranger.
Bush, why dost bear a rose if none must have
it.
Who dost expose it, yet claw those that
crave it?
Art become freakish? dost the wanton
play,
Or doth thy testy humour tend its
way?
Comparison.
This rose God’s Son is, with his ruddy
looks.
But what’s the bush, whose pricks,
like tenter-hooks,
Do scratch and claw the finest lady’s
hands,
Or rend her clothes, if she too near it
stands?
This bush an emblem is of Adam’s
race,
Of which Christ came, when he his
Father’s grace
Commended to us in his crimson
blood,
While he in sinners’ stead and nature
stood.
Thus Adam’s race did bear this dainty
rose,
And doth the same to Adam’s race
expose;
But those of Adam’s race which at it
catch,
Adam’s race will them prick, and claw,
and scratch.
XXX.
OF THE GOING DOWN OF THE
SUN.
What, hast thou run thy race, art going
down?
Thou seemest angry, why dost on us
frown?
Yea, wrap thy head with clouds and hide thy
face,
As threatening to withdraw from us thy
grace?
O leave us not! When once thou hid’st
thy head,
Our horizon with darkness will be
spread.
Tell who hath thee offended, turn
again.
Alas! too late, intreaties are in
vain.
Comparison.
Our gospel has had here a summer’s
day,
But in its sunshine we, like fools, did
play;
Or else fall out, and with each other
wrangle,
And did, instead of work, not much but
jangle.
And if our sun seems angry, hides his
face,
Shall it go down, shall night possess this
place?
Let not the voice of night birds us
afflict,
And of our misspent summer us
convict.[35]
XXXI.
UPON THE FROG.
The frog by nature is both damp and
cold,
Her mouth is large, her belly much will
hold;
She sits somewhat ascending, loves to
be
Croaking in gardens, though
unpleasantly.
Comparison.
The hypocrite is like unto this
frog,
As like as is the puppy to the
dog.
He is of nature cold, his mouth is
wide
To prate, and at true goodness to
deride.
He mounts his head as if he was
above
The world, when yet ‘tis that which
has his love.
And though he seeks in churches for to
croak,
He neither loveth Jesus nor his
yoke.
XXXII.
UPON THE WHIPPING OF A
TOP.
‘Tis with the whip the boy sets up the
top,
The whip makes it run round upon its
toe;
The whip makes it hither and thither
hop:
‘Tis with the whip the top is made to
go.
Comparison.
Our legalist is like unto this
top,
Without a whip he doth not duty
do;
Let Moses whip him, he will skip and
hop;
Forbear to whip, he’ll neither stand
nor go.
XXXIII.
UPON THE PISMIRE.
Must we unto the pismire go to
school,
To learn of her in summer to
provide
For winter next ensuing. Man’s a
fool,
Or silly ants would not be made his
guide.
But, sluggard, is it not a shame for
thee
To be outdone by pismires? Pr’ythee
hear:
Their works, too, will thy condemnation
be
When at the judgment-seat thou shalt
appear.
But since thy God doth bid thee to her
go,
Obey, her ways consider, and be
wise;
The piss-ant tell thee will what thou must
do,
And set the way to life before thine
eyes.
XXXIV.
UPON THE BEGGAR.
He wants, he asks, he pleads his
poverty,
They within doors do him an alms
deny.
He doth repeat and aggravate his
grief,
But they repulse him, give him no
relief.
He begs, they say, Begone; he will not
hear,
But coughs, sighs, and makes signs he still
is there;
They disregard him, he repeats his
groans;
They still say nay, and he himself
bemoans.
They grow more rugged, they call him
vagrant;
He cries the shriller, trumpets out his
want.
At last, when they perceive he’ll take
no nay,
An alms they give him without more
delay.
Comparison.
This beggar doth resemble them that
pray
To God for mercy, and will take no
nay,
But wait, and count that all his hard
gainsays
Are nothing else but fatherly
delays;
Then imitate him, praying souls, and
cry:
There’s nothing like to
importunity.
XXXV.
UPON THE HORSE AND HIS
RIDER.
There’s one rides very sagely on the
road,
Showing that he affects the gravest
mode.
Another rides tantivy, or full
trot,
To show much gravity he matters
not.
Lo, here comes one amain, he rides full
speed,
Hedge, ditch, nor miry bog, he doth not
heed.
One claws it up-hill without stop or
check,
Another down as if he’d break his
neck.
Now every horse has his especial
guider;
Then by his going you may know the
rider.
Comparison.
Now let us turn our horse into a
man,
His rider to a spirit, if we can.
Then let us, by the methods of the
guider,
Tell every horse how he should know his
rider.
Some go, as men, direct in a right
way,
Nor are they suffered to go
astray;
As with a bridle they are
governed,
And kept from paths which lead unto the
dead.
Now this good man has his especial
guider,
Then by his going let him know his
rider.
Some go as if they did not greatly
care,
Whether of heaven or hell they should be
heir.
The rein, it seems, is laid upon their
neck,
They seem to go their way without a
check.
Now this man too has his especial
guider,
And by his going he may know his
rider.
Some again run as if resolved to
die,
Body and soul, to all eternity.
Good counsel they by no means can
abide;
They’ll have their course whatever
them betide.
Now these poor men have their especial
guider,
Were they not fools they soon might know
their rider.
There’s one makes head against all
godliness,
Those too, that do profess it, he’ll
distress;
He’ll taunt and flout if goodness doth
appear,
And at its countenancers mock and
jeer.
Now this man, too, has his especial
guider,
And by his going he might know his
rider.
XXXVI.
UPON THE SIGHT OF A POUND OF CANDLES
FALLING TO THE GROUND.
But be the candles down, and scattered
too,
Some lying here, some there? What shall we
do?
Hold, light the candle there that stands on
high,
It you may find the other candles
by.
Light that, I say, and so take up the
pound
You did let fall and scatter on the
ground.
Comparison.
The fallen candles do us intimate
The bulk of God’s elect in their
laps’d state;
Their lying scattered in the dark may
be
To show, by man’s lapsed state, his
misery.
The candle that was taken down and
lighted,
Thereby to find them fallen and
benighted,
Is Jesus Christ; God, by his light, doth
gather
Who he will save, and be unto a
Father.
XXXVII.
UPON A PENNY LOAF.
Thy price one penny is in time of
plenty,
In famine doubled, ‘tis from one to
twenty.
Yea, no man knows what price on thee to
set
When there is but one penny loaf to
get.
Comparison.
This loaf’s an emblem of the Word of
God,
A thing of low esteem before the
rod
Of famine smites the soul with fear of
death,
But then it is our all, our life, our
breath.[36]
XXXVIII.
THE BOY AND WATCHMAKER.
This watch my father did on me
bestow,
A golden one it is, but ‘twill not
go,
Unless it be at an uncertainty:
But as good none as one to tell a
lie.
When ‘tis high day my hand will stand
at nine;
I think there’s no man’s watch
so bad as mine.
Sometimes ‘tis sullen, ‘twill
not go at all,
And yet ‘twas never broke nor had a
fall.
Watchmaker.
Your watch, though it be good, through want
of skill
May fail to do according to your
will.
Suppose the balance, wheels, and springs be
good,
And all things else, unless you
understood
To manage it, as watches ought to
be,
Your watch will still be at
uncertainty.
Come, tell me, do you keep it from the
dust,
Yea, wind it also duly up you
must?
Take heed, too, that you do not strain the
spring;
You must be circumspect in every
thing,
Or else your watch, were it as good
again,
Would not with time and tide you
entertain.
Comparison.
This boy an emblem is of a
convert,
His watch of the work of grace within his
heart,
The watchmaker is Jesus Christ our
Lord,
His counsel, the directions of his
Word;
Then convert, if thy heart be out of
frame,
Of this watchmaker learn to mend the
same.
Do not lay ope’ thy heart to worldly
dust,
Nor let thy graces over-grow with
rust,
Be oft’ renewed in the’ spirit
of thy mind,
Or else uncertain thou thy watch wilt
find.
XXXIX.
UPON A LOOKING-GLASS.
In this see thou thy beauty, hast thou
any,
Or thy defects, should they be few or
many.
Thou may’st, too, here thy spots and
freckles see,
Hast thou but eyes, and what their numbers
be.
But art thou blind? There is no
looking-glass
Can show thee thy defects, thy spots, or
face.
Comparison.
Unto this glass we may compare the
Word,
For that to man advantage doth
afford
(Has he a mind to know himself and
state),
To see what will be his eternal
fate.
But without eyes, alas! how can he
see?
Many that seem to look here, blind men
be.
This is the reason they so often
read
Their judgment there, and do it nothing
dread.
XL.
OF THE LOVE OF CHRIST.
The love of Christ, poor I! may touch
upon;
But ‘tis unsearchable. O! there is
none
Its large dimensions can
comprehend
Should they dilate thereon world without
end.
When we had sinned, in his zeal he
sware,
That he upon his back our sins would
bear.
And since unto sin is entailed
death,
He vowed for our sins he’d lose his
breath.
He did not only say, vow, or
resolve,
But to astonishment did so
involve
Himself in man’s distress and
misery,
As for, and with him, both to live and
die.
To his eternal fame in sacred
story,
We find that he did lay aside his
glory,
Stepped from the throne of highest
dignity,
Became poor man, did in a manger
lie;
Yea, was beholden unto his for
bread,
Had, of his own, not where to lay his
head;
Though rich, he did for us become thus
poor,
That he might make us rich for
evermore.
Nor was this but the least of what he
did,
But the outside of what he
suffered?
God made his blessed son under the
law,
Under the curse, which, like the
lion’s paw,
Did rent and tear his soul for
mankind’s sin,
More than if we for it in hell had
been.
His cries, his tears, and bloody
agony,
The nature of his death doth
testify.
Nor did he of constraint himself thus
give,
For sin, to death, that man might with him
live.
He did do what he did most
willingly,
He sung, and gave God thanks, that he must
die.
But do kings use to die for captive
slaves?
Yet we were such when Jesus died to
save’s.
Yea, when he made himself a
sacrifice,
It was that he might save his
enemies.
And though he was provoked to
retract
His blest resolves for such so good an
act,
By the abusive carriages of those
That did both him, his love, and grace
oppose;
Yet he, as unconcerned with such
things,
Goes on, determines to make captives
kings;
Yea, many of his murderers he
takes
Into his favour, and them princes
makes.
XLI.
ON THE CACKLING OF A HEN.
The hen, so soon as she an egg doth
lay,
(Spreads the fame of her doing what she
may.)
About the yard she cackling now doth
go,
To tell what ‘twas she at her nest did
do.
Just thus it is with some professing
men,
If they do ought that good is, like our
hen
They can but cackle on’t where
e’er they go,
What their right hand doth their left hand
must know.
XLII.
UPON AN HOUR-GLASS.
This glass, when made, was, by the
workman’s skill,
The sum of sixty minutes to
fulfil.
Time, more nor less, by it will out be
spun,
But just an hour, and then the glass is
run.
Man’s life we will compare unto this
glass,
The number of his months he cannot
pass;
But when he has accomplished his
day,
He, like a vapour, vanisheth
away.
XLIII.
UPON A SNAIL.
She goes but softly, but she goeth
sure,
She stumbles not, as stronger creatures
do.
Her journey’s shorter, so she may
endure
Better than they which do much farther
go.
She makes no noise, but stilly seizeth
on
The flower or herb appointed for her
food,
The which she quietly doth feed
upon
While others range and glare, but find no
good.
And though she doth but very softly
go,
However, ‘tis not fast nor slow, but
sure;
And certainly they that do travel
so,
The prize they do aim at they do
procure.
Comparison.
Although they seem not much to stir, less
go,
For Christ that hunger, or from wrath that
flee,
Yet what they seek for quickly they come
to,
Though it doth seem the farthest off to
be.
One act of faith doth bring them to that
flower
They so long for, that they may eat and
live,
Which, to attain, is not in others
power,
Though for it a king’s ransom they
would give.
Then let none faint, nor be at all
dismayed
That life by Christ do seek, they shall not
fail
To have it; let them nothing be
afraid;
The herb and flower are eaten by the
snail.[37]
XLIV.
OF THE SPOUSE OF CHRIST.
Who’s this that cometh from the
wilderness,
Like smokey pillars thus perfum’d with
myrrh,
Leaning upon her dearest in
distress,
Led into’s bosom by the
Comforter?
She’s clothed with the sun, crowned
with twelve stars,
The spotted moon her footstool she hath
made.
The dragon her assaults, fills her with
jars,
Yet rests she under her Beloved’s
shade,
But whence was she? what is her
pedigree?
Was not her father a poor
Amorite?
What was her mother but as others
be,
A poor, a wretched, and a sinful
Hittite.
Yea, as for her, the day that she was
born,
As loathsome, out of doors they did her
cast;
Naked and filthy, stinking and
forlorn;
This was her pedigree from first to
last.
Nor was she pitied in this
estate,
All let her lie polluted in her
blood:
None her condition did
commiserate,
There was no heart that sought to do her
good.
Yet she unto these ornaments is
come,
Her breasts are fashioned, her hair is
grown;
She is made heiress of the best
kingdom;
All her indignities away are
blown.
Cast out she was, but now she home is
taken,
Naked (sometimes), but now, you see,
she’s cloth’d;
Now made the darling, though before
forsaken,
Barefoot, but now as princes’
daughters shod.
Instead of filth, she now has her
perfumes;
Instead of ignominy, her chains of
gold:
Instead of what the beauty most
consumes,
Her beauty’s perfect, lovely to
behold.
Those that attend and wait upon her
be
Princes of honour, clothed in white
array;
Upon her head’s a crown of gold, and
she
Eats wheat, honey, and oil, from day to
day.
For her beloved, he’s the
high’st of all,
The only Potentate, the King of
kings:
Angels and men do him Jehovah
call,
And from him life and glory always
springs.
He’s white and ruddy, and of all the
chief:
His head, his locks, his eyes, his hands,
and feet,
Do, for completeness, out-go all
belief;
His cheeks like flowers are, his mouth most
sweet.
As for his wealth, he is made heir of
all;
What is in heaven, what is on earth is
his:
And he this lady his joint-heir doth
call,
Of all that shall be, or at present
is.
Well, lady, well, God has been good to
thee;
Thou of an outcast, now art made a
queen.
Few, or none, may with thee compared
be,
A beggar made thus high is seldom
seen.
Take heed of pride, remember what thou
art
By nature, though thou hast in grace a
share,
Thou in thyself dost yet retain a
part
Of thine own filthiness; wherefore
beware.
XLV.
UPON A SKILFUL PLAYER OF AN
INSTRUMENT.
He that can play well on an
instrument,
Will take the ear, and captivate the
mind
With mirth or sadness; for that it is
bent
Thereto, as music in it place doth
find.
But if one hears that hath therein no
skill,
(As often music lights of such a
chance)
Of its brave notes they soon be weary
will:
And there are some can neither sing nor
dance.
Comparison.
Unto him that thus skilfully doth
play,
God doth compare a
gospel-minister,
That rightly preacheth, and doth godly
pray,
Applying truly what doth thence
infer.
This man, whether of wrath or grace he
preach,
So skilfully doth handle every
word;
And by his saying doth the heart so
reach,
That it doth joy or sigh before the
Lord.
But some there be, which, as the brute, doth
lie
Under the Word, without the least
advance
Godward; such do despise the
ministry;
They weep not at it, neither to it
dance.
XLVI.
OF MAN BY NATURE.
From God he’s a backslider,
Of ways he loves the wider;
With wickedness a sider,
More venom than a spider.
In sin he’s a considerer,
A make-bate and divider;
Blind reason is his guider,
The devil is his rider.
XLVII.
UPON THE DISOBEDIENT
CHILD.
Children become, while little, our
delights!
When they grow bigger, they begin to
fright’s.
Their sinful nature prompts them to
rebel,
And to delight in paths that lead to
hell.
Their parents’ love and care they
overlook,
As if relation had them quite
forsook.
They take the counsels of the
wanton’s, rather
Than the most grave instructions of a
father.
They reckon parents ought to do for
them,
Though they the fifth commandment do
contemn;
They snap and snarl if parents them
control,
Though but in things most hurtful to the
soul.
They reckon they are masters, and that
we
Who parents are, should to them subject
be!
If parents fain would have a hand in
choosing,
The children have a heart will in
refusing.
They’ll by wrong doings, under parents
gather,
And say it is no sin to rob a
father.
They’ll jostle parents out of place
and power,
They’ll make themselves the head, and
them devour.
How many children, by becoming
head,
Have brought their parents to a piece of
bread!
Thus they who, at the first, were parents
joy,
Turn that to bitterness, themselves
destroy.
But, wretched child, how canst thou thus
requite
Thy aged parents, for that great
delight
They took in thee, when thou, as helpless,
lay
In their indulgent bosoms day by
day?
Thy mother, long before she brought thee
forth,
Took care thou shouldst want neither food
nor cloth.
Thy father glad was at his very
heart,
Had he to thee a portion to
impart.
Comfort they promised themselves in
thee,
But thou, it seems, to them a grief wilt
be.
How oft, how willingly brake they their
sleep,
If thou, their bantling, didst but winch or
weep.
Their love to thee was such they could have
giv’n,
That thou mightst live, almost their part of
heav’n.
But now, behold how they rewarded
are!
For their indulgent love and tender
care;
All is forgot, this love he doth
despise.
They brought this bird up to pick out their
eyes.
XLVIII.
UPON A SHEET OF WHITE
PAPER.
This subject is unto the foulest
pen,
Or fairest handled by the sons of
men.
‘Twill also show what is upon it
writ,
Be it wisely, or nonsense for want of
wit,
Each blot and blur it also will
expose
To thy next readers, be they friends or
foes.
Comparison.
Some souls are like unto this blank or
sheet,
Though not in whiteness. The next man they
meet,
If wise or fool, debauched or
deluder,
Or what you will, the dangerous
intruder
May write thereon, to cause that man to
err
In doctrine or in life, with blot and
blur.
Nor will that soul conceal from who
observes,
But show how foul it is, wherein it
swerves.
A reading man may know who was the
writer,
And, by the hellish nonsense, the
inditer.
XLIX.
UPON FIRE.
Who falls into the fire shall burn with
heat;
While those remote scorn from it to
retreat.
Yea, while those in it, cry out, O! I
burn,
Some farther off those cries to laughter
turn.
Comparison.
While some tormented are in hell for
sin;
On earth some greatly do delight
therein.
Yea, while some make it echo with their
cry,
Others count it a fable and a
lie.[38]
FOOTNOTES:
[1]
Bunyan’s poem in the Holy War.
[2] On the
leaf following the title to One Thing is Needful,
&c., by John Bunyan, 1688. A rare little 32mo,
published by the author, in possession of the
Editor.
[3] At the
end of Grace Abounding, the sixth edition, and also
in The Work of Jesus Christ as an Advocate, by
Bunyan, 1688.
[4]Advertised in the eighth edition of Solomon’s
Temple Spiritualized.
[5]In
Youth Directed and Instructed—a curious little
book for children.
[6]Square
24mo., by Bennet, Gurney, and others, without
date.
[7] Sturt
engraved the Book of Common Prayer; some French
artists elegantly etched two of their devotional books; and
Pyne engraved the texts of Horace and Virgil with beautiful
vignettes.
[8]Altered
to ‘huge’ in the Emblems, 1724.
[9] A
familiar phrase, denoting persons who have been always
frivolous and childish, or those who have passed into
second childhood. ‘On the shelf’ is a common
saying of ladies when they are too old to get
married.—Ed.
[10]The
name of a bird that mimics gestures.—Ed.
[11]Indelible, as when raw material is dyed before it is
wove, every grain receives the
dye.—Ed.
[12]For
this use of the word ‘handle,’ see Jeremiah
2:8. ‘They that handle the
law.’—Ed.
[13]This
word, with pismire and emmet, has become obsolete.
‘Ant’ is the term now universally
used.—Ed.
[14]See
Psalm 84:3; Leviticus 11:16; Numbers 20.
[15] A
machine used in the manufacture of cloth, on which it is
stretched.—Ed.