Edward Taylor

Here you will find thePoemPreparatory Meditations - Second Series: 146of poet Edward Taylor

Preparatory Meditations - Second Series: 146

(Canticles 6:13. Return, oh Shulamite, Return, Return) My dear, dear Lord, I know not what to say: Speech is too coarse a web for me to clothe My love to Thee in or it to array Or make a mantle. Would'st Thou not such loathe? Thy love to me's too great for me to shape A vesture for the same at any rate. When as Thy love doth touch my heart down-tossed It tremblingly runs, seeking Thee its all, And as a child when it his nurse hath lost Runs seeking her, and after her doth call. So when Thou hid'st from me, I seek and sigh. Thou sayest, 'Return, return, Oh Shulamite.' Rent out on use Thy love, Thy love I pray. My love to Thee shall be Thy rent, and I Thee use on use, int'rest on int'rest pay. There's none extortion in such usury. I'll pay Thee use on for 't and therefore Thou shalt become the greatest usurer. But yet the principal I'll ne'er restore. The same is Thine and mine. We shall not jar. And so this blessed usury shall be Most profitable both to Thee and me. And shouldst Thou hide Thy shining face most fair Away from me. And in a sinking wise My trembling beating heart brought nigh t'despair Should cry to Thee and in a trembling guise, Lord, quicken it. Drop in its ears delight, Saying, 'Return, return, my Shulamite.'