All after pleasures as I rid one day, My horse and I, both tired, body and mind, With full cry of affections, quite astray; I took up in the next inn I could find. There when I came, Whom found I but my dear, My dearest LORD, expecting till the grief Of pleasures brought me to Him, ready there To be all passengers' most sweet relief. O Thou, Whose glorious yet contracted light, Wrapt in Night's mantle, stole into a manger; Since my dark soul and brutish, is Thy right, -- To Man, of all beasts, be not Thou a stranger: Furnish and deck my soul, that Thou may'st have A better lodging than a rack or grave. |