1 Vain man on foolish pleasures bent,
Prepares for his own punishment;
What pains, what loathsome maladies,
From luxury and lust arise!
2 The drunkard feels his vitals waste:
Yet drowns his health to please his taste;
'Till all his active pow'rs are lost,
And fainting life draws near the dust.
3 The glutton groans, and loaths to eat,
His soul abhors delicious meat;
Nature, with heavy loads opprest,
Would yield to death to be releas'd.
4 Then how the frighten'd sinners fly
To God for help with earnest cry!
He hears their groans, prolongs their breath,
And saves them from approaching death.
5 No med'cines could effect the cure
So quick, so easy, or so sure:
The deadly sentence God repeals,
He sends his sov'reign word, and heals.
6 O may the sons of men record
The wond'rous goodness of the Lord!
And let their thankful off'ring prove
How they adore their Maker's love.
Text Information | |
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First Line: | Vain man on foolish pleasures bent |
Title: | Intemperance punished and pardoned, or, A Psalm for the Glutton and the Drunkard |
Meter: | Long Metre |
Language: | English |
Publication Date: | 1793 |
Scripture: | |
Notes: | Now Public Domain. Third Part |