III

In all His works, in all His ways,

We must His glory see and praise;

And since our pleasure is the end,

We must His goodness, and His love attend.

If we despise His glorious works,

Such sin and mischief in it lurks

That they are all made vain;

And this is even endless pain

To Him that sees it: Whose diviner grief

Is hereupon (ah me!) without relief.

IV

We please His goodness that receive:

Refusers Him of all bereave.

As bridegrooms know full well that build

A palace for their bride. It will not yield

Any delight to him at all

If she for whom he made the hall

Refuse to dwell in it,

Or plainly scorn the benefit.

Her act that's woo'd yields more delight and pleasure

If she receives, than all the pile of treasure.

V

But we have hands, and lips, and eyes,

And hearts and souls can sacrifice;

And souls themselves are made in vain

If we our evil stubbornness retain.

Affections, praises, are the things

For which He gave us all those springs;

They are the very fruits

Of all those trees and roots,

The fruits and ends of all His great endeavours,

Which He abolisheth whoever severs.

VI

'Tis not alone a lively sense,

A clear and quick intelligence,

A free, profound, and full esteem;

Tho' these elixirs all and ends do seem:

But gratitude, thanksgiving, praise,

A heart returned for all those joys,

These are the things admired,

These are the things by Him desired:

These are the nectar and the quintessence,

The cream and flower that most affect His sense.

VII

The voluntary act whereby

These are repaid is in His eye

More precious than the very sky.

All gold and silver is but empty dross,

Rubies and sapphires are but loss,

The very sun, and stars and seas

Far less His spirit please:

One voluntary act of love

Far more delightful to His soul doth prove,

And is above all these as far as love.

[ANOTHER]