| Henry Charles Beeching, ed. (18591919). Lyra Sacra: A Book of Religious Verse. 1903. | | | | The Elixir | | By George Herbert (15931633) |
| | | TEACH me, my God and King, | |
| In all things Thee to see, | |
| And what I do in anything, | |
| To do it as for Thee: | |
| |
| Not rudely, as a beast, | 5 |
| To run into an action; | |
| But still to make Thee prepossest, | |
| And give it his 1 perfection. | |
| |
| A man that looks on glass, | |
| On it may stay his eye; | 10 |
| Or if he pleaseth, through it pass, | |
| And then the heavn espy. | |
| |
| All may of Thee partake: | |
| Nothing can be so mean, | |
| Which with his tincture, for Thy sake, 2 | 15 |
| Will not grow bright and clean. | |
| |
| A servant with this clause | |
| Makes drudgery divine: | |
| Who sweeps a room, as for Thy laws, | |
| Makes that and th action fine. | 20 |
| |
| This is the famous stone | |
| That turneth all to gold; | |
| For that which God doth touch and own | |
| Cannot for less be told. | |
| | | Note 1. Its. [back] | | Note 2. Line 15.For Thy sake is the tincture which makes every action bright, the clause that makes drudgery divine. [back] | | |
|
|
|