IN SACRAM ANCHORAM PISCATORIS, G. HERBERT. QUOD Crux nequibat fixa, clavique additi, Suavis erat, qui scripta dolens lacerando recludi, Although the cross could not Christ here detain, He writ; when his hand could write no more How sweet a friend was he who, being grieved TRANSLATED OUT OF GAZÆUS. Vota Amico facto, fol. 160. GOD grant thee thine own wish, and grant thee mine, HYMN TO GOD, MY GOD, IN MY SICKNESS. SINCE I am coming to that holy room I tune the instrument here at the door, Whilst my physicians by their love are grown I joy that in these straits I see my west; For though those currents yield return to none, What shall my west hurt me? as west and east In all flat maps (and I am one) are one, So death doth touch the resurrection. Is the Pacific Sea my home? or are All straits, and none but straits are ways to them, Whether where Japheth dwelt, or Cham, or Sem, We think that paradise and calvary, Christ's cross and Adam's tree, stood in one place; Look, Lord! and find both Adams met in me: As the first Adam's sweat surrounds my face, May the last Adam's blood my soul embrace. So in his purple wrapped receive me, Lord! By these his thorns give me his holy crown; And as to others' souls I preached thy Word, Be this my text, my sermon to mine owu; Therefore, that he may raise, the Lord throws down. THE END. PUBLISHED BY JOHN W. PARKER, WEST STRAND. MEMOIRS of the LIFE, CHARACTER, and WRITINGS, of BISHOP BUTLER, Author of The Analogy. By THOMAS BARTLETT, M.A., One of the Six Preachers of Canterbury Cathedral, and Rector of Kingstone, Kent. Dedicated, by Permission, to his Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury. Octavo, with an original Portrait. 12s. HISTORY of the RISE, PROGRESS, and ACCOMPLISHMENT, of the ABOLITION of the AFRICAN SLAVE-TRADE by the British Parliament. By THOMAS CLARKSON, M.A. A new Edition, with an INTRODUCTION, adapted to the Present Times, and a Portrait from a highlyapproved Picture, recently painted by Mr. ROOM. Published under the Direction of the CENTRAL NEGRO-EMANCIPATION COMMITTEE. In the Press. ELIZABETHAN RELIGIOUS By HENRY SOAMES, M.A., Author of The History of the Reformation; The Anglo-Saxon Church, &c. Octavo, 16s. THIS Work is intended to fill a long-acknowledged chasm in English literature, and especially in that which peculiarly concerns the Church of England. Both Romanists and Protestant Dissenters have been attentive to the important reign of Elizabeth, and by saying very little of each other, have given an invidious colouring to both the Church and the Government. The present work is meant to give every leading fact in sufficient detail, but to avoid unnecessary particulars. It reaches from the establishment of the Thirty-nine Articles, in 1563, to the Hampton-Court Conference, in 1604. THE ANGLO-SAXON CHURCH; its HISTORY, REVENUES, and General Character. By the Rev. HENRY SOAMES, M.A., Author of the Elizabethan Religious History. A NEW EDITION. 10s. 6d. HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE since LUTHER and HIS TIMES; History of the Rise and Progress of the German Reformation. By the Rev. J. E. RIDDLE, M.A., Author of First Sundays at Church. 5s. |