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John Bunyan

Upon the Flint in the Water

This flint, time out of mind, has there abode,

Where crystal streams make their continual road.

Yet it abides a flint as much as ‘twere

Before it touched the water, or came there

Its hard obdurateness is not abated,

‘Tis not at all by water penetrated.

Though water hath a soft’ning virtue in’t,

This stone it can’t dissolve, for ‘tis a flint.

Yea, though it in the water doth remain,

It doth its fiery nature still retain.

If you oppose it with its opposite,

At you, yea, in your face, its fire ‘twill spit.



Comparison


This flint an emblem is of those that lie,

Like stones, under the Word, until they die.

Its crystal streams have not their nature changed,

They are not, from their lusts, by grace estranged.



Bunyan, J. (2006). A Book for Boys and Girls (Vol. 3, p. 750). Logos Bible Software. (Public Domain)

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