III

All things to Circulations owe

Themselves; by which alone

They do exist; they cannot shew

A sigh, a word, a groan,

A colour or a glimpse of light,

The sparkle of a precious stone,

A virtue, or a smell, a lovely sight,

A fruit, a beam, an influence, a tear,

But they another's livery must wear,

And borrow matter first,

Before they can communicate.

Whatever's empty is accurst:

And this doth shew that we must some estate

Possess, or never can communicate.

IV

A sponge drinks in the water, which

Is afterwards exprest.

A liberal hand must first be rich:

Who blesseth must be blest.

The thirsty earth drinks in the rain,

The trees suck moisture at their roots,

Before the one can lavish herbs again,

Before the other can afford us fruits.

No tenant can raise corn or pay his rent,

Nor can even have a lord,

That has no land. No spring can vent,

No vessel any wine afford

Wherein no liquor's put. No empty purse,

Can pounds or talents of itself disburse.

V

Flame that ejects its golden beams

Sups up the grosser air;

To seas that pour out their streams

In springs, those streams repair;

Receiv'd ideas make even dreams.

No fancy painteth foul or fair

But by the ministry of inward light,

That in the spirits cherisheth its sight.

The moon returneth light, and some men say

The very sun no ray

Nor influence could have, did it

No foreign aids, no food admit.

The earth no exhalations would afford,

Were not its spirits by the sun restored.

VI

All things do first receive, that give:

Only 'tis God above,

That from and in Himself doth live;

Whose all-sufficient love

Without original can flow

And all the joys and glories shew

Which mortal man can take delight to know.

He is the primitive eternal spring

The endless ocean of each glorious thing.

The soul a vessel is,

A spacious bosom, to contain

All the fair treasures of His bliss,

Which run like rivers from, into the main,

And all it doth receive returns again.

[AMENDMENT]