The Pearl | Page 7

Sophie Jewett
hence they went,?The gentle Lord receives, in fine;?They obeyed His will, they bore His sign,?Why should He not their claim allow??Yea, and reward them, I opine,?For the grace of God is great enow."
"'T is known enow that all mankind?At first were formed for perfect bliss;?Our forefather that boon resigned,?All for an apple's sake, I wis;?We fell condemned, for folly blind,?To suffer sore in hell's abyss;?But One a remedy did find?Lest we our hope of heaven should miss.?He suffered on the cross for this,?Red blood ran from His crown��d brow;?He saved us by that pain of His,?For the grace of God is great enow."
"Enow there flowed from out that well,?Blood and water from His broad wound:?The blood bought us from bale of hell,?And from second death deliverance found.?The water is baptism, truth to tell,?That followed-the spear so sharply ground,?And washes away the guilt most fell?Of those that Adam in death had drowned.?Now is there nothing in earth's great round,?To bar from the bliss wherewith God did endow?Mankind,--restored to us safe and sound,?For the grace of God is great enow."
XII
"Grace enow a man may get?By penitence, though he sin again;?But with long sorrow and regret,?He must bear punishment and pain;?But righteous reason will not let?The innocent be hurt in vain;?God never gave His judgment yet,?That they should suffer who show no stain.?The sinful soul of mercy fain?Finds pardon if he will repent,?But he who sinless doth remain?Is surely saved, being innocent."
"Two men are saved of God's good grace,?Who severally have done His will:?The righteous man shall see His face,?The innocent dwells with Him still.?In the Psalter thou may'st find a case:?'Lord, who shall climb to Thy high hill,?Or rest within Thy Holy Place?'?The psalmist doth the sense fulfill:?'Who with his hands did never ill,?His heart to evil never lent,?There to ascend he shall have skill;'?So surely saved is the innocent."
"That the righteous is saved I hold certain;?Before God's palace he shall stand?Who never took man's life in vain,?Who never to flatter his fellow planned.?Of the righteous, the Wise Man writeth plain?How kindly our King doth him command;?In ways full strait he doth restrain,?Yet shows him the kingdom great and grand,?As who saith: 'Behold! yon lovely land!?Thou may'st win it, if so thy will be bent.'?But with never peril on either hand,?Surely saved is the innocent."
"Of the righteous saved, hear one man say--?David, who in the Psalter cried:?'O Lord, call never Thy servant to pay,?For no man living is justified.'?So thou, if thou shalt come one day?To the court that each cause must decide,?For mercy with justice thou may'st pray?Through this same text that I espied.?But may He on the bloody cross that died,?His holy hands with hard nails rent,?Give thee to pass when thou art tried,?Saved, not as righteous, but innocent."
"Of the sinless saved the tale is told,--?Read in the Book where it is said:?When Jesus walked, among men of old,?The people a passage to Him made;?Bringing their bairns for Him to hold,?For the blessing of His hand they prayed.?The twelve reproved them: 'Overbold?To seek the Master;' and sternly stayed.?But Jesus said: 'Be ye not afraid;?Suffer the children, nor prevent;?God's kingdom is for such arrayed.'?Surely saved are the innocent."
XIII
"Christ called to Him the innocents mild,?And said His kingdom no man might win,?Unless he came thither as a child,--Not?otherwise might he enter in,?Harmless, faithful, undefiled,?With never a spot of soiling sin,--For?these whom the world has not beguiled?Gladly shall one the gate unpin.?There shall that endless bliss begin,?The merchant sought, and straight was led?To barter all stuffs men weave and spin,?To buy him a pearl unblemished."
"'This pearl unblemished, bought so dear,?For which the merchant his riches gave,?Is like the kingdom of heaven clear;'?So said the Father of world and wave.?It is a flawless, perfect sphere,?Polished and pure, and bright and brave;?As on my heart it doth appear,?It is common to all who to virtue clave.?My Lord, the Lamb Who died to save,?Here set it in token of His blood shed?For peace. Then let the wild world rave,?But buy thee this pearl unblemish��d."
"O Pearl unblemished, in pure pearls dressed,?That beareth," said I, "the pearl of price,?Who formed thy figure-and thy vest??Truly he wrought with cunning nice;?For thy beauty, above nature's best,?Passeth Pygmalion's artifice;?Nor Aristotle the lore possessed?To depict in words so fair device.?Than fleur-de-lys thou art fairer thrice,?Angel-mannered and courtly bred,--?Tell to me truly: in Paradise?What meaneth the pearl unblemished?"
"My spotless Lamb, who all doth heal,"?She answered, "my dear Destiny,?Chose me in marriage bond to seal;?Unfit, He graced me regally,?From your world's woe come into weal.?He called me of His courtesy:?'Come hither to me, my lover leal,?For mote nor spot is none in thee.'?He gave me my might and great beauty;?He washed my weeds in His blood so red,?And crowned me, forever clean to be,?And clothed me in pearls unblemish��d."
"Unblemished bride, bright to behold,?That royalty
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 14
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.