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Home  »  The Book of Restoration Verse  »  Patrick Cary (fl. 1651)

William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. The Book of Restoration Verse. 1910.

Crucifixus Pro Nobis

Patrick Cary (fl. 1651)

CHRIST IN THE CRADLE
LOOK, how he shakes for cold!

How pale his lips are grown!

Wherein his limbs to fold

Yet mantle has he none.

His pretty feet and hands

(Of late more pure and white

Than is the snow

That pains them so)

Have lost their candour quite.

His lips are blue

(Where roses grew),

He’s frozen ev’erywhere:

All th’ heat he has

Joseph, alas!

Gives in a groan; or Mary in a tear.

CHRIST IN THE GARDEN
Look, how he glows for heat!

What flames come from his eyes!

’Tis blood that he does sweat,

Blood his bright forehead dyes:

See, see! It trickles down:

Look, how it showers amain!

Through every pore

His blood runs o’er,

And empty leaves each vein.

His very heart

Burns in each part;

A fire his breast doth sear:

For all this flame,

To cool the same

He only breathes a sigh, and weeps a tear.

CHRIST IN HIS PASSION
What bruises do I see!

What hideous stripes are those!

Could any cruel be

Enough, to give such blows?

Look, how they bind his arms

And vex his soul with scorns,

Upon his hair

They make him wear

A crown of piercing thorns.

Through hands and feet

Sharp nails they beat:

And now the cross they rear:

Many look on:

But only John

Stands by to sigh, Mary to shed a tear.

Why did he shake for cold?

Why did he glow for heat?

Dissolve that frost he could,

He could call back that sweat.

Those bruises, stripes, bonds, taunts,

Those thorns, which thou didst see,

Those nails, that cross,

His own life’s loss,

Why, O why suffered he?

’Twas for thy sake.

Thou, thou didst make

Him all those torments bear:

If then his love

Do thy soul move,

Sigh out a groan, weep down a melting tear.