Page:Life of William Blake, Pictor ignotus (Volume 2).djvu/116

Rh {| align="center" 2. For there the babe is born in joy That was begotten in dire woe; Just as we reap in joy the fruit Which we in bitter tears did sow. 3. And if the babe is born a boy, He's given to a woman old, Who nails him down upon a rock, Catches his shrieks in cups of gold. 4. She binds strong thorns around his head, She pierces both his hands and feet, She cuts his heart out at his side, To make it feel both cold and heat. 5. Her fingers number every nerve Just as a miser counts his gold; She lives upon his shrieks and cries, And she grows young as he grows old. 6. Till he becomes a bleeding youth, And she becomes a virgin bright; Then he rends up his manacles And binds her down for his delight. 7. He plants himself in all her nerves Just as a husbandman his mould, And she becomes his dwelling-place And garden fruitful seventyfold. 8. An aged shadow soon he fades, Wandering round an earthly cot, Full fillèd all with gems and gold Which he by industry had got.
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