Confession

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  O What a cunning guest
Is this same Grief!  Within my heart I made
  Closets; and in them many a chest;
  And like a master in my trade,
In those chests, boxes; in each box, a till:
Yet Grief knows all, and enters when he will.

  No scrue, no piercer can
Into a piece of timber work and winde,
  As God's afflictions into man,
  When he a torture hath design'd.
They are too subtill for the subt'llest hearts;
And fall, like rheumes, upon the tendrest parts.

  We are the earth; and they,
Like moles within us, heave and cast about:
  And till they foot and clutch their prey,
  They never cool, much lesse give out.
No smith can make such locks, but they have keyes;
Closets are halls to them; and hearts, high-wayes.

  Onely an open breast
Doth shut them out, so that they cannot enter;
  Or, if they enter, cannot rest,
  But quickly seek some new adventure.
Smooth open hearts no fastning have; but fiction
Doth give a hold and handle to affliction.

  Wherefore my faults and sinnes,
Lord, I acknowledge; take thy plagues away:
  For since confession pardon winnes,
  I challenge here the brightest day,
The clearest diamond: let them do their best,
They shall be thick and cloudie to my breast.

© George Herbert