Saint Mar Magdelene; or, The Weeper

By Richard Crashaw

Hail, sister springs,

Parents of silver-footed rills!

Ever bubbling things,

Thawing crystal, snowy hills!

Still spending, never spent; I mean

Thy fair eyes, sweet Magdalene.

Heavens thy fair eyes be;

Heavens of ever-falling stars;

'Tis seed-time still with thee,

And stars thou sow'st whose harvest dares

Promise the earth to countershine

Whatever makes Heaven's forehead fine.

But we're deceived all.

Stars indeed they are, too true,

For they but seem to fall,

As heav'n's other spangles do.

It is not for our earth and us

To shine in things so precious.

Upwards thou dost weep;

Heavn's bosom drinks the gentle stream;

Where the milky rivers creep,

Thine floats above, and is the cream.

Waters above th' heav'n's, what they be

We're taught best by thy tears and thee.

Every morn from hence

A brisk cherub something sips

Whose soft influence

Adds sweetness to his sweetest lips;

Then to his music: and his song

Tastes of this breakfast all day long.

Not in the evening's eyes,

When they red with weeping are

For the sun that dies,

Sits sorrow with a face so fair;

Nowhere but here did ever meet

Sweetness so sad, sadness so sweet.

When sorrow would be seen

In her brightest majesty,

For she is a queen,

Then is she dressed by none but thee;

Then, and only then, she wears

Her proudest pearls; I mean thy tears.

The dew no more will weep

The primrose's pale cheek to deck;

The dew no more will sleep,

Nuzzled in the lily's neck;

Much rather would it be thy tear,

And leave them both to tremble here.

There's no need at all

That the balsam-sweating bough

So coyly should let fall

His med'cinable tears, for now

Nature hath learn't extract a dew

More sovereign and sweet from you.

You let the poor drops weep,

Weeping is the ease of woe;

Softly let them creep,

Sad that they are vanquished so;

They, though to others no relief,

Balsam may be for their own grief.

Such the maiden gem

By the purpling vine put on,

Peeps from her parent stem

And blushes at the bridegroom sun;

This wat'ry blossom of thy eyne,

Ripe, will make the richer wine.

When some new bright guest

Takes up among the stars a room,

And Heav'n will make a feast,

Angels with crystal vials come

And draw from these full eyes of thine

Their Master's water, their own wine.

Golden though he be,

Golden Tagus murmurs though;

Were his way by thee,

Content and quiet he would go;

So much more rich would he esteem

Thy silver, than his golden stream.

Well does the May that lies

Smiling in thy cheeks confess

The April in thine eyes;

Mutual sweetness they express;

No April e'er lent kinder showers,

Nor May returned more faithful flowers.

O cheeks! beds of chaste loves

By your own showers seasonably dashed;

Eyes! nests of milky doves

In your own wells decently washed;

O wit of Love! that thus could place

Fountain and garden in one face.

O sweet contest, of woes

With loves, of tears with smiles disputing!

O fair and friendly foes,

Each other kissing and confuting!

While rain and sunshine, cheeks and eyes,

Close in kind contrarieties.

But can these fair floods be

Friends with the bosom fires that fill thee?

Can so great flames agree

Eternal tears should thus distill thee?

O floods, O fires, O suns, O showers!

Mixed and made friends by Love's sweet powers.

'Twas his well-pointed dart

That digged these wells and dressed this vine;

And taught the wounded heart

The way into these weeping eyne.

Vain loves, avaunt! bold hands, forbear!

The Lamb hath dipped His white foot here.

And now where'er He strays

Among the Galilean mountains,

Or more unwelcome ways,

He's followed by two faithful fountains,

Two walking baths, two weeping motions,

Portable and compendious oceans.

O thou, thy Lord's fair store!

In thy so rich and rare expenses,

Even when He showed most poor,

He might provoke the wealth of princes;

What prince's wanton'st pride e'er could

Wash with silver, wipe with gold?

Who is that King, but He

Who call'st His crown to be called thine,

That thus can boast to be

Waited on by a wand'ring mine,

A voluntary mint, that strows

Warm silver showers where'er He goes!

O precious prodigal!

Fair spendthrift of thyself! thy measure,

Merciless love, is all,

Even to the last pearl in thy treasure;

All places, times, and objects be

Thy tears' sweet opportunity.

Does the day-star rise?

Still thy tears do fall and fall.

Does day close his eyes?

Still the fountain weeps for all.

Let night or day do what they will,

Thou hast thy task, thou weepest still.

Does thy song lull the air?

Thy falling tears keep faithful time.

Does thy sweet-breathed prayer

Up in clouds in incense climb?

Still at each sigh, that is, each stop,

A bead, that is, a tear, does drop.

At these thy weeping gates,

Watching their wat'ry motion,

Each winged moment waits,

Takes his tear and gets him gone;

By thine eye's tinct ennobled thus,

Time lays him up, he's precious.

Not, "So long she lived,"

Shall thy tomb report of thee;

But, "So long she grieved,"

Thus must we date thy memory.

Others by moments, months and years,

Measure their ages, thou by tears.

So do perfumes expire;

So sigh tormented sweets, oppressed

With proud unpitying fire;

Such tears the suff'ring rose that's vexed

With ungentle flames does shed,

Sweating in a too warm bed.

Say, ye bright brothers,

The fugitive sons of those fair eyes,

Your faithful mothers,

What make you here? What hopes can 'tice

You to be born? What cause can borrow

You from those nests of noble sorrow?

Whither away so fast?

For sure the sordid earth

Your sweetness cannot taste,

Nor does the dust deserve your birth.

Sweet, whiter haste you then? O say

Why you trip so fast away!

"We go not to seek

The darlings of Aurora's bed,

The rose's modest cheek,

Nor the violet's humble head;

Though the field's eyes, too, weepers be

Because they want such tears as we.

"Much less mean we to trace

The fortune of inferior gems,

Preferred to some proud face,

Or perched upon feared diadems:

Crowned heads are toys. We go to meet

A worthy object, our Lord's feet."