Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
The High Way to Mount CaluarieLIII. Samuel Rowlands
R
Which place when thou hast found,
There shalt thou see a pillar stand,
To which thy Lord was bound.
To anie Christian eye;
The bloudie whips doe point it out
From all that stand thereby.
Of purple, and a reed,
Which Pilat’s seruants vs’d t’ abuse,
In sinne’s deriding deed:
God saue thee!” with a breath,
And by the same cride presently,
“Let Christ be done to death.”
His doctrine made a iest,
Their mockeries were a martirdome;
No wrongs but him opprest.
Would haue indur’d like shame,
But would with greefs of such contempt
Haue dide t’ indure the same?
Vpon the left-hand side,
There is a curious portlie dore,
Right beautifull and wide.
Forbid thy foot goe thether;
For out thereat did Iudas goe,
Despaire and he together.
Where is a narrow gate,
Forth which St Peter went to weepe
His poore distrest estate.
Goe out at Sorrowe’s dore;
Weepe bitterly as he did weepe,
That wept to sinne no more.
Though couetous thoughts infence:
There bribery haunts, despair was hatcht;
False Iudas came from thence.
Where Pilat’s pallace stands;
There where he first did false condemne,
Then wash his guiltie hands:
And yet condemn’d to die,
Fearing an earthly Cæsar more
Then God that rules on hie.
The way is vnderstood;
No porch, no dore, nor hal to passe,
Vnsprinckled with Christ’s blood.
Misguiding steppes betweene;
For euery drop sweet Iesus shed
Is freshly to be seene.
There lies imbru’d in gore;
The garland that thy Sauiour’s head
For thy offences wore.
Thinke what his loue hath binne,
Whose head was loaden with those briers
T’ vnlade thee of thy sinne:
Whose holie skinne was rent;
Whose tortures and extreamest paines
Thy paines in hell preuent.
Did turne, when they past cure
Refused helpe; whom he would heale,
Denying health t’ indure:
The soule’s phisition goes,
When they forsook his sauing health,
And vow’d themselues his foes.
From that forsaken towne;
Vpon whose wals lies not a stone,
But ruine must throw downe.
For to redeeme thy losse,
And carries all our sinnes with him
To cansel on his crosse.
Doe guard thy God about,
Who bleeding beares his dying tree
Amidst the Iewish rout.
And sigh from sorrowing mind,
To see the death’s-man goe before,
The murdering troupes behind:
The theeues vpon the side,
The exclamations, shouts, and cries,
The shame he doth abide.
Thyselfe with sorrowes weed;
Get very neere to Christ, and see
What teares the women shed:
They were of such a force—
Teares that did purchase daughters’ names
Of father’s kind remorse.
For me drop not a teare;
Bewaile your offspring and yourselues,
Greefe’s cause vnseene is neare.
And with those women mourne,
But not for Christ; weepe for thyselfe,
And Christ will grace returne.
He yeelded no replie;
Although the iudge importun’d much,
Yet silence did denie.
No answere Christ would make;
Yet to those women did he speake,
For teares’ and weeping’ sake.
Teares that obtained loue—
Where words too weak could not persuade,
How teares had power to moue.
More then he could indure,
And how for helpe to beare the same
A hireling they procure.
Beare it of loue’s desire;
Doe not as Cyranæus did,
That took it vp for hire.
If willing vnderta’ne;
But if compulsion set aworke,
The labour’s done in vaine.
That Christ did die for thee,
Giues life to none but such as ioy
Crosse-bearing friends to be.
If thou desire to goe,
Then take thy crosse, and follow Christ;
Thou canst not misse it so.
His glorious wounds to see,
Say, but as faithfull as the theefe,
O Lord, remember me.
A gift, all gifts excelling,
Once sold by sinne, once bought by Christ,
For saints’ eternall dwelling.
Was sinne’s polluted shade:
By Christ the dunghill Golgotha
A Paradise was made.