summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'old')
-rw-r--r--old/chryr10.txt9346
-rw-r--r--old/chryr10.zipbin0 -> 120055 bytes
2 files changed, 9346 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/old/chryr10.txt b/old/chryr10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d2ab2b4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/chryr10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9346 @@
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Christian Year
+by Rev. John Keble
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before distributing this or any other
+Project Gutenberg file.
+
+We encourage you to keep this file, exactly as it is, on your
+own disk, thereby keeping an electronic path open for future
+readers. Please do not remove this.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when anyone starts to
+view the etext. Do not change or edit it without written permission.
+The words are carefully chosen to provide users with the
+information they need to understand what they may and may not
+do with the etext.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These Etexts Are Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get etexts, and
+further information, is included below. We need your donations.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a 501(c)(3)
+organization with EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-6221541
+
+
+
+Title: The Christian Year
+
+Author: Rev. John Keble
+
+Release Date: July, 2003 [Etext #4272]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 25, 2001]
+[Most recently updated: December 25, 2001]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Christian Year
+by Rev. John Keble
+******This file should be named chryr10.txt or chryr10.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, chryr11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, chryr10a.txt
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk. From
+the 1887 Cassell & Company edition.
+
+Project Gutenberg Etexts are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep etexts in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our etexts one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+etexts, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any Etext before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2001 as we release over 50 new Etext
+files per month, or 500 more Etexts in 2000 for a total of 4000+
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+should reach over 300 billion Etexts given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third
+of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 4,000 Etexts. We need
+funding, as well as continued efforts by volunteers, to maintain
+or increase our production and reach our goals.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of November, 2001, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware,
+Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
+Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon,
+Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee,
+Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin,
+and Wyoming.
+
+*In Progress
+
+We have filed in about 45 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+All donations should be made to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fundraising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fundraising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etexts,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this etext,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the etext,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this header are copyright (C) 2001 by Michael S. Hart
+and may be reprinted only when these Etexts are free of all fees.]
+[Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be used in any sales
+of Project Gutenberg Etexts or other materials be they hardware or
+software or any other related product without express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.10/04/01*END*
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN YEAR
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+
+John Keble, two years older than his friend Dr. Arnold of Rugby,
+three years older than Thomas Carlyle, and nine years older than
+John Henry Newman, was born in 1792, at Fairford in Gloucestershire.
+He was born in his father's parsonage, and educated at home by his
+father till he went to college. His father then entered him at his
+own college at Oxford, Corpus Christi. Thoroughly trained, Keble
+obtained high reputation at his University for character and
+scholarship, and became a Fellow of Oriel. After some years he gave
+up work in the University, though he could not divest himself of a
+large influence there for good, returned home to his old father, who
+required help in his ministry, and undertook for his the duty of two
+little curacies. The father lived on to the age of ninety. John
+Keble's love for God and his devotion to the Church had often been
+expressed in verse. On days which the Church specially celebrated,
+he had from time to time written short poems to utter from the heart
+his own devout sense of their spiritual use and meaning. As the
+number of these poems increased, the desire rose to follow in like
+manner the while course of the Christian Year as it was marked for
+the people by the sequence of church services, which had been
+arranged to bring in due order before the minds of Christian
+worshippers all the foundations of their faith, and all the elements
+of a religious life. A book of poems, breathing faith and worship
+at all points, and in all attitudes of heavenward contemplation,
+within the circle of the Christian Year, would, he hoped, restore in
+many minds to many a benumbed form life and energy.
+
+In 1825, while the poems of the Christian Year were gradually being
+shaped into a single work, a brother became able to relieve John
+Keble in that pious care for which his father had drawn him away
+from a great University career, and he then went to a curacy at
+Hursley, four or five miles from Winchester.
+
+In 1827--when its author's age was thirty-five--"The Christian Year"
+was published. Like George Herbert, whose equal he was in piety
+though not in power, Keble was joined to the Church in fullest
+sympathy with all its ordinances, and desired to quicken worship by
+putting into each part of the ritual a life that might pass into and
+raise the life of man. The spirit of true religion, with a power
+beyond that of any earthly feuds and controversies, binds together
+those in whom it really lives. Setting aside all smaller questions
+of the relative value of different earthly means to the attainment
+of a life hidden with Christ in God, Christians of all forms who are
+one in spirit have found help from "John Keble's Christian Year, and
+think of its guileless author with kindly affection. Within five-
+and-twenty years of its publication, a hundred thousand copies had
+been sold. The book is still diffused so widely, in editions of all
+forms, that it may yet go on, until the circle of the years shall be
+no more, living and making live.
+
+Four years after "The Christian Year appeared, Keble was appointed
+(in 1831) to the usual five years' tenure of the Poetry
+Professorship at Oxford. Two years after he had been appointed
+Poetry Professor, he preached the Assize Sermon, and took for his
+theme "National Apostasy." John Henry Newman, who had obtained his
+Fellowship at Oriel some years before the publication of "The
+Christian Year," and was twenty-six years old when it appeared,
+received from it a strong impulse towards the endeavour to revive
+the spirit of the Church by restoring life and soul to all her
+ordinances, and even to the minutest detail of her ritual. The deep
+respect felt for the author of "The Christian Year" gave power to
+the sermon of 1833 upon National Apostasy, and made it the starting-
+point of the Oxford movement known as Tractarian, from the issue of
+tracts through which its promoters sought to stir life in the clergy
+and the people; known also as Puseyite because it received help at
+the end of the year 1833 from Dr. Pusey, who was of like age with J.
+H. Newman, and then Regius Professor of Hebrew. There was a danger,
+which some then foresaw, in the nature of this endeavour to put life
+into the Church; but we all now recognise the purity of Christian
+zeal that prompted the attempt to make dead forms of ceremonial glow
+again with spiritual fire, and serve as aids to the recovery of
+light and warmth in our devotions.
+
+It was in 1833 that Keble, by one earnest sermon, with a pure life
+at the back of it, and this book that had prepared the way, gave the
+direct impulse to an Oxford movement for the reformation of the
+Church. The movement then began. But Keble went back to his curacy
+at Hursley. Two years afterwards the curate became vicar, and then
+Keble married. His after-life continued innocent and happy. He and
+his wife died within two months of each other, in the came year,
+1866. He had taken part with his friends at Oxford by writing five
+of their Tracts, publishing a few sermons that laboured towards the
+same end, and editing a "Library of the Fathers." In 1847 he
+produced another volume of poems, "Lyra Innocentium," which
+associated doctrines of the Church with the lives of children, whom
+he loved, though his own marriage was childless.
+
+The power of Keble's verse lies in its truth. A faithful and pure
+nature, strong in home affections, full of love and reverence for
+all that is of heaven in our earthly lot, strives for the full
+consecration of man's life with love and faith. There is no rare
+gift of genius. Keble is not in subtlety of thought or of
+expression another George Herbert, or another Henry Vaughan. But
+his voice is not the less in unison with theirs, for every note is
+true, and wins us by its purity. His also are melodies of the
+everlasting chime.
+
+
+ "And be ye sure that Love can bless
+ E'en in this crowded loneliness,
+Where ever moving myriads seem to say,
+Go--thou art nought to us, nor we to thee--away!"
+
+"There are in this loud stunning tide
+ Of human care and crime,
+With whom the melodies abide
+ Of the everlasting chime;
+Who carry music in their heart
+ Through dusky lane and wrangling mart,
+Plying their daily task with busier feet,
+ Because their secret souls a holy strain repeat."
+
+With a peal, then, of such music let us ring in the New Year for our
+Library; and for our lives.
+
+January 1, 1887. H. M.
+
+
+
+DEDICATION.
+
+
+
+When in my silent solitary walk,
+ I sought a strain not all unworthy Thee,
+My heart, still ringing with wild worldly talk,
+ Gave forth no note of holier minstrelsy.
+
+Prayer is the secret, to myself I said,
+ Strong supplication must call down the charm,
+And thus with untuned heart I feebly prayed,
+ Knocking at Heaven's gate with earth-palsied arm.
+
+Fountain of Harmony! Thou Spirit blest,
+ By whom the troubled waves of earthly sound
+Are gathered into order, such as best
+ Some high-souled bard in his enchanted round
+
+May compass, Power divine! Oh, spread Thy wing,
+ Thy dovelike wing that makes confusion fly,
+Over my dark, void spirit, summoning
+ New worlds of music, strains that may not die.
+
+Oh, happiest who before thine altar wait,
+ With pure hands ever holding up on high
+The guiding Star of all who seek Thy gate,
+ The undying lamp of heavenly Poesy.
+
+Too weak, too wavering, for such holy task
+ Is my frail arm, O Lord; but I would fain
+Track to its source the brightness, I would bask
+ In the clear ray that makes Thy pathway plain.
+
+I dare not hope with David's harp to chase
+ The evil spirit from the troubled breast;
+Enough for me if I can find such grace
+ To listen to the strain, and be at rest.
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN YEAR.
+
+
+
+MORNING
+
+His compassions fail not. They are new every morning. Lament.
+iii. 22, 23.
+
+Hues of the rich unfolding morn,
+That, ere the glorious sun be born,
+By some soft touch invisible
+Around his path are taught to swell; -
+
+Thou rustling breeze so fresh and gay,
+That dancest forth at opening day,
+And brushing by with joyous wing,
+Wakenest each little leaf to sing; -
+
+Ye fragrant clouds of dewy steam,
+By which deep grove and tangled stream
+Pay, for soft rains in season given,
+Their tribute to the genial heaven; -
+
+Why waste your treasures of delight
+Upon our thankless, joyless sight;
+Who day by day to sin awake,
+Seldom of Heaven and you partake?
+
+Oh, timely happy, timely wise,
+Hearts that with rising morn arise!
+Eyes that the beam celestial view,
+Which evermore makes all things new!
+
+New every morning is the love
+Our wakening and uprising prove;
+Through sleep and darkness safely brought,
+Restored to life, and power, and thought.
+
+New mercies, each returning day,
+Hover around us while we pray;
+New perils past, new sins forgiven,
+New thoughts of God, new hopes of Heaven.
+
+If on our daily course our mind
+Be set to hallow all we find,
+New treasures still, of countless price,
+God will provide for sacrifice.
+
+Old friends, old scenes will lovelier be,
+As more of Heaven in each we see:
+Some softening gleam of love and prayer
+Shall dawn on every cross and care.
+
+As for some dear familiar strain
+Untired we ask, and ask again,
+Ever, in its melodious store,
+Finding a spell unheard before;
+
+Such is the bliss of souls serene,
+When they have sworn, and stedfast mean,
+Counting the cost, in all t' espy
+Their God, in all themselves deny.
+
+Oh, could we learn that sacrifice,
+What lights would all around us rise!
+How would our hearts with wisdom talk
+Along Life's dullest, dreariest walk!
+
+We need not bid, for cloistered cell,
+Our neighbour and our work farewell,
+Nor strive to wind ourselves too high
+For sinful man beneath the sky:
+
+The trivial round, the common task,
+Would furnish all we ought to ask;
+Room to deny ourselves; a road
+To bring us daily nearer God.
+
+Seek we no more; content with these,
+Let present Rapture, Comfort, Ease,
+As Heaven shall bid them, come and go:-
+The secret this of Rest below.
+
+Only, O Lord, in Thy dear love
+Fit us for perfect Rest above;
+And help us, this and every day,
+To live more nearly as we pray.
+
+
+
+EVENING
+
+
+
+Abide with us: for it is toward evening, and the day is far
+spent.--St. Luke xxiv. 29.
+
+'Tis gone, that bright and orbed blaze,
+Fast fading from our wistful gaze;
+You mantling cloud has hid from sight
+The last faint pulse of quivering light.
+
+In darkness and in weariness
+The traveller on his way must press,
+No gleam to watch on tree or tower,
+Whiling away the lonesome hour.
+
+Sun of my soul! Thou Saviour dear,
+It is not night if Thou be near:
+Oh, may no earth-born cloud arise
+To hide Thee from Thy servant's eyes!
+
+When round Thy wondrous works below
+My searching rapturous glance I throw,
+Tracing out Wisdom, Power and Love,
+In earth or sky, in stream or grove; -
+
+Or by the light Thy words disclose
+Watch Time's full river as it flows,
+Scanning Thy gracious Providence,
+Where not too deep for mortal sense:-
+
+When with dear friends sweet talk I hold,
+And all the flowers of life unfold;
+Let not my heart within me burn,
+Except in all I Thee discern.
+
+When the soft dews of kindly sleep
+My wearied eyelids gently steep,
+Be my last thought, how sweet to rest
+For ever on my Saviour's breast.
+
+Abide with me from morn till eve,
+For without Thee I cannot live:
+Abide with me when night is nigh,
+For without Thee I dare not die.
+
+Thou Framer of the light and dark,
+Steer through the tempest Thine own ark:
+Amid the howling wintry sea
+We are in port if we have Thee.
+
+The Rulers of this Christian land,
+'Twixt Thee and us ordained to stand, -
+Guide Thou their course, O Lord, aright,
+Let all do all as in Thy sight.
+
+Oh! by Thine own sad burthen, borne
+So meekly up the hill of scorn,
+Teach Thou Thy Priests their daily cross
+To bear as Thine, nor count it loss!
+
+If some poor wandering child of Thine
+Have spurned to-day the voice divine,
+Now, Lord, the gracious work begin;
+Let him no more lie down in sin.
+
+Watch by the sick: enrich the poor
+With blessings from Thy boundless store:
+Be every mourner's sleep to-night,
+Like infants' slumbers, pure and light.
+
+Come near and bless us when we wake,
+Ere through the world our way we take;
+Till in the ocean of Thy love
+We lose ourselves, in Heaven above.
+
+
+
+ADVENT SUNDAY
+
+
+
+Now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now is our
+salvation nearer than when we believed.--Romans xiii 11.
+
+Awake--again the Gospel-trump is blown -
+From year to year it swells with louder tone,
+ From year to year the signs of wrath
+ Are gathering round the Judge's path,
+Strange words fulfilled, and mighty works achieved,
+And truth in all the world both hated and believed.
+
+Awake! why linger in the gorgeous town,
+Sworn liegemen of the Cross and thorny crown?
+ Up from your beds of sloth for shame,
+ Speed to the eastern mount like flame,
+Nor wonder, should ye find your King in tears,
+E'en with the loud Hosanna ringing in His ears.
+
+Alas! no need to rouse them: long ago
+They are gone forth to swell Messiah's show:
+ With glittering robes and garlands sweet
+ They strew the ground beneath His feet:
+All but your hearts are there--O doomed to prove
+The arrows winged in Heaven for Faith that will not love!
+
+Meanwhile He passes through th' adoring crowd,
+Calm as the march of some majestic cloud,
+ That o'er wild scenes of ocean-war
+ Holds its still course in Heaven afar:
+E'en so, heart-searching Lord, as years roll on,
+Thou keepest silent watch from Thy triumphal throne:
+
+E'en so, the world is thronging round to gaze
+On the dread vision of the latter days,
+ Constrained to own Thee, but in heart
+ Prepared to take Barabbas' part:
+"Hosanna" now, to-morrow "Crucify,"
+The changeful burden still of their rude lawless cry.
+
+Yet in that throng of selfish hearts untrue
+Thy sad eye rests upon Thy faithful few,
+ Children and childlike souls are there,
+ Blind Bartimeus' humble prayer,
+And Lazarus wakened from his four days' sleep,
+Enduring life again, that Passover to keep.
+
+And fast beside the olive-bordered way
+Stands the blessed home where Jesus deigned to stay,
+ The peaceful home, to Zeal sincere
+ And heavenly Contemplation dear,
+Where Martha loved to wait with reverence meet,
+And wiser Mary lingered at Thy sacred feet.
+
+Still through decaying ages as they glide,
+Thou lov'st Thy chosen remnant to divide;
+ Sprinkled along the waste of years
+ Full many a soft green isle appears:
+Pause where we may upon the desert road,
+Some shelter is in sight, some sacred safe abode.
+
+When withering blasts of error swept the sky,
+And Love's last flower seemed fain to droop and die,
+ How sweet, how lone the ray benign
+ On sheltered nooks of Palestine!
+Then to his early home did Love repair,
+And cheered his sickening heart with his own native air.
+
+Years roll away: again the tide of crime
+Has swept Thy footsteps from the favoured clime
+ Where shall the holy Cross find rest?
+ On a crowned monarch's mailed breast:
+Like some bright angel o'er the darkling scene,
+Through court and camp he holds his heavenward course serene.
+
+A fouler vision yet; an age of light,
+Light without love, glares on the aching sight:
+ Oh, who can tell how calm and sweet,
+ Meek Walton, shows thy green retreat,
+When wearied with the tale thy times disclose,
+The eye first finds thee out in thy secure repose?
+
+Thus bad and good their several warnings give
+Of His approach, whom none may see and live:
+ Faith's ear, with awful still delight,
+ Counts them like minute-bells at night.
+Keeping the heart awake till dawn of morn,
+While to her funeral pile this aged world is borne.
+
+But what are Heaven's alarms to hearts that cower
+In wilful slumber, deepening every hour,
+ That draw their curtains closer round,
+ The nearer swells the trumpet's sound?
+Lord, ere our trembling lamps sink down and die,
+Touch us with chastening hand, and make us feel Thee nigh.
+
+
+
+SECOND SUNDAY IN ADVENT
+
+
+
+And when these things begin to pass, then look up, and lift up your
+heads; for your redemption draweth night. St. Luke xxi. 28.
+
+Not till the freezing blast is still,
+Till freely leaps the sparkling rill,
+And gales sweep soft from summer skies,
+As o'er a sleeping infant's eyes
+A mother's kiss; ere calls like these,
+No sunny gleam awakes the trees,
+Nor dare the tender flowerets show
+Their bosoms to th' uncertain glow.
+
+Why then, in sad and wintry time,
+Her heavens all dark with doubt and crime,
+Why lifts the Church her drooping head,
+As though her evil hour were fled?
+Is she less wise than leaves of spring,
+Or birds that cower with folded wing?
+What sees she in this lowering sky
+To tempt her meditative eye?
+
+She has a charm, a word of fire,
+A pledge of love that cannot tire;
+By tempests, earthquakes, and by wars,
+By rushing waves and falling stars,
+By every sign her Lord foretold,
+She sees the world is waxing old,
+And through that last and direst storm
+Descries by faith her Saviour's form.
+
+Not surer does each tender gem,
+Set in the fig-tree's polish'd stem,
+Foreshow the summer season bland,
+Than these dread signs Thy mighty hand:
+But, oh, frail hearts, and spirits dark!
+The season's flight unwarn'd we mark,
+But miss the Judge behind the door,
+For all the light of sacred lore:
+
+Yet is He there; beneath our eaves
+Each sound His wakeful ear receives:
+Hush, idle words, and thoughts of ill,
+Your Lord is listening: peace, be still.
+Christ watches by a Christian's hearth,
+Be silent, "vain deluding mirth,"
+Till in thine alter'd voice be known
+Somewhat of Resignation's tone.
+
+But chiefly ye should lift your gaze
+Above the world's uncertain haze,
+And look with calm unwavering eye
+On the bright fields beyond the sky,
+Ye, who your Lord's commission bear
+His way of mercy to prepare:
+Angels He calls ye: be your strife
+To lead on earth an Angel's life.
+
+Think not of rest; though dreams be sweet,
+Start up, and ply your heavenward feet.
+Is not God's oath upon your head,
+Ne'er to sink back on slothful bed,
+Never again your loans untie,
+Nor let your torches waste and die,
+Till, when the shadows thickest fall,
+Ye hear your Master's midnight call?
+
+
+
+THIRD SUNDAY IN ADVENT
+
+
+
+What went ye out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken with
+the wind? . . . But what went ye out for to see? A prophet? yea, I
+say unto you, and more than a prophet. St. Matthew xi. 7, 9.
+
+ What went ye out to see
+ O'er the rude sandy lea,
+Where stately Jordan flows by many a palm,
+ Or where Gennesaret's wave
+ Delights the flowers to lave,
+That o'er her western slope breathe airs of balm.
+
+ All through the summer night,
+ Those blossoms red and bright
+Spread their soft breasts, unheeding, to the breeze,
+ Like hermits watching still
+ Around the sacred hill,
+Where erst our Saviour watched upon His knees.
+
+ The Paschal moon above
+ Seems like a saint to rove,
+Left shining in the world with Christ alone;
+ Below, the lake's still face
+ Sleeps sweetly in th' embrace
+Of mountains terrac'd high with mossy stone.
+
+ Here may we sit, and dream
+ Over the heavenly theme,
+Till to our soul the former days return;
+ Till on the grassy bed,
+ Where thousands once He fed,
+The world's incarnate Maker we discern.
+
+ O cross no more the main,
+ Wandering so will and vain,
+To count the reeds that tremble in the wind,
+ On listless dalliance bound,
+ Like children gazing round,
+Who on God's works no seal of Godhead find.
+
+ Bask not in courtly bower,
+ Or sun-bright hall of power,
+Pass Babel quick, and seek the holy land -
+ From robes of Tyrian dye
+ Turn with undazzled eye
+To Bethlehem's glade, or Carmel's haunted strand.
+
+ Or choose thee out a cell
+ In Kedron's storied dell,
+Beside the springs of Love, that never die;
+ Among the olives kneel
+ The chill night-blast to feel,
+And watch the Moon that saw thy Master's agony.
+
+ Then rise at dawn of day,
+ And wind thy thoughtful way,
+Where rested once the Temple's stately shade,
+ With due feet tracing round
+ The city's northern bound,
+To th' other holy garden, where the Lord was laid.
+
+ Who thus alternate see
+ His death and victory,
+Rising and falling as on angel wings,
+ They, while they seem to roam,
+ Draw daily nearer home,
+Their heart untravell'd still adores the King of kings.
+
+ Or, if at home they stay,
+ Yet are they, day by day,
+In spirit journeying through the glorious land,
+ Not for light Fancy's reed,
+ Nor Honour's purple meed,
+Nor gifted Prophet's lore, nor Science' wondrous wand.
+
+ But more than Prophet, more
+ Than Angels can adore
+With face unveiled, is He they go to seek:
+ Blessed be God, Whose grace
+ Shows Him in every place
+To homeliest hearts of pilgrims pure and meek.
+
+
+
+FOURTH SUNDAY IN ADVENT
+
+
+
+The eyes of them that see shall not be dim, and the ears of them
+that hear shall hearken. Isaiah xxxii. 3
+
+Of the bright things in earth and air
+ How little can the heart embrace!
+Soft shades and gleaming lights are there -
+ I know it well, but cannot trace.
+
+Mine eye unworthy seems to read
+ One page of Nature's beauteous book;
+It lies before me, fair outspread -
+ I only cast a wishful look.
+
+I cannot paint to Memory's eye
+ The scene, the glance, I dearest love -
+Unchanged themselves, in me they die,
+ Or faint or false their shadows prove.
+
+In vain, with dull and tuneless ear,
+ I linger by soft Music's cell,
+And in my heart of hearts would hear
+ What to her own she deigns to tell.
+
+'Tis misty all, both sight and sound -
+ I only know 'tis fair and sweet -
+'Tis wandering on enchanted ground
+ With dizzy brow and tottering feet.
+
+But patience! there may come a time
+ When these dull ears shall scan aright
+Strains that outring Earth's drowsy chime,
+ As Heaven outshines the taper's light.
+
+These eyes, that dazzled now and weak,
+ At glancing motes in sunshine wink.
+Shall see the Kings full glory break,
+ Nor from the blissful vision shrink:
+
+In fearless love and hope uncloyed
+ For ever on that ocean bright
+Empowered to gaze; and undestroyed,
+ Deeper and deeper plunge in light.
+
+Though scarcely now their laggard glance
+ Reach to an arrow's flight, that day
+They shall behold, and not in trance,
+ The region "very far away."
+
+If Memory sometimes at our spell
+ Refuse to speak, or speak amiss,
+We shall not need her where we dwell
+ Ever in sight of all our bliss.
+
+Meanwhile, if over sea or sky
+ Some tender lights unnoticed fleet,
+Or on loved features dawn and die,
+ Unread, to us, their lesson sweet;
+
+Yet are there saddening sights around,
+ Which Heaven, in mercy, spares us too,
+And we see far in holy ground,
+ If duly purged our mental view.
+
+The distant landscape draws not nigh
+ For all our gazing; but the soul,
+That upward looks, may still descry
+ Nearer, each day, the brightening goal.
+
+And thou, too curious ear, that fain
+ Wouldst thread the maze of Harmony,
+Content thee with one simple strain,
+ The lowlier, sure, the worthier thee;
+
+Till thou art duly trained, and taught
+ The concord sweet of Love divine:
+Then, with that inward Music fraught,
+ For ever rise, and sing, and shine.
+
+
+
+CHRISTMAS DAY
+
+
+
+And suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the heavenly
+host, praising God. St. Luke ii. 13.
+
+ What sudden blaze of song
+ Spreads o'er th' expanse of Heaven?
+ In waves of light it thrills along,
+ Th' angelic signal given -
+ "Glory to God!" from yonder central fire
+Flows out the echoing lay beyond the starry choir;
+
+ Like circles widening round
+ Upon a clear blue river,
+ Orb after orb, the wondrous sound
+ Is echoed on for ever:
+ "Glory to God on high, on earth be peace,
+And love towards men of love--salvation and release."
+
+ Yet stay, before thou dare
+ To join that festal throng;
+ Listen and mark what gentle air
+ First stirred the tide of song;
+ 'Tis not, "the Saviour born in David's home,
+To Whom for power and health obedient worlds should come:" -
+
+ 'Tis not, "the Christ the Lord:"
+ With fixed adoring look
+ The choir of Angels caught the word,
+ Nor yet their silence broke:
+ But when they heard the sign where Christ should be,
+In sudden light they shone and heavenly harmony.
+
+ Wrapped in His swaddling bands,
+ And in His manger laid,
+ The Hope and Glory of all lands
+ Is come to the world's aid:
+ No peaceful home upon his cradle smiled,
+Guests rudely went and came, where slept the royal Child.
+
+ But where Thou dwellest, Lord,
+ No other thought should be,
+ Once duly welcomed and adored,
+ How should I part with Thee?
+ Bethlehem must lose Thee soon, but Thou wilt grace
+The single heart to be Thy sure abiding-place.
+
+ Thee, on the bosom laid
+ Of a pure virgin mind,
+ In quiet ever, and in shade,
+ Shepherd and sage may find;
+ They, who have bowed untaught to Nature's sway,
+And they, who follow Truth along her star-paved way.
+
+ The pastoral spirits first
+ Approach Thee, Babe divine,
+ For they in lowly thoughts are nursed,
+ Meet for Thy lowly shrine:
+ Sooner than they should miss where Thou dost dwell,
+Angela from Heaven will stoop to guide them to Thy cell.
+
+ Still, as the day comes round
+ For Thee to be revealed,
+ By wakeful shepherds Thou art found,
+ Abiding in the field.
+ All through the wintry heaven and chill night air,
+In music and in light Thou dawnest on their prayer.
+
+ O faint not ye for fear -
+ What though your wandering sheep,
+ Reckless of what they see and hear,
+ Lie lost in wilful sleep?
+ High Heaven in mercy to your sad annoy
+Still greets you with glad tidings of immortal joy.
+
+ Think on th' eternal home,
+ The Saviour left for you;
+ Think on the Lord most holy, come
+ To dwell with hearts untrue:
+ So shall ye tread untired His pastoral ways,
+And in the darkness sing your carol of high praise.
+
+
+
+ST. STEPHEN'S DAY
+
+
+
+He, being full of the Holy Ghost, looked up steadfastly into
+heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right
+hand of God. Acts vii. 55
+
+As rays around the source of light
+Stream upward ere he glow in sight,
+And watching by his future flight
+ Set the clear heavens on fire;
+So on the King of Martyrs wait
+Three chosen bands, in royal state,
+And all earth owns, of good and great,
+ Is gather'd in that choir.
+
+One presses on, and welcomes death:
+One calmly yields his willing breath,
+Nor slow, nor hurrying, but in faith
+ Content to die or live:
+And some, the darlings of their Lord,
+Play smiling with the flame and sword,
+And, ere they speak, to His sure word
+ Unconscious witness give.
+
+Foremost and nearest to His throne,
+By perfect robes of triumph known,
+And likest Him in look and tone,
+ The holy Stephen kneels,
+With stedfast gaze, as when the sky
+Flew open to his fainting eye,
+Which, like a fading lamp, flash'd high,
+ Seeing what death conceals.
+
+Well might you guess what vision bright
+Was present to his raptured sight,
+E'en as reflected streams of light
+ Their solar source betray -
+The glory which our God surrounds,
+The Son of Man, the atoning wounds -
+He sees them all; and earth's dull bounds
+ Are melting fast away.
+
+He sees them all--no other view
+Could stamp the Saviour's likeness true,
+Or with His love so deep embrue
+ Man's sullen heart and gross -
+"Jesus, do Thou my soul receive:
+Jesu, do Thou my foes forgive;"
+He who would learn that prayer must live
+ Under the holy Cross.
+
+He, though he seem on earth to move,
+Must glide in air like gentle dove,
+From yon unclouded depths above
+ Must draw his purer breath;
+Till men behold his angel face
+All radiant with celestial grace,
+Martyr all o'er, and meet to trace
+ The lines of Jesus' death.
+
+
+
+ST. JOHN'S DAY
+
+
+
+Peter seeing him, saith to Jesus, Lord, and what shall this man do?
+Jesus saith unto him, If I will that he tarry till I come, what is
+that to thee? follow thou Me. St. John xxi. 21, 22.
+
+"Lord, and what shall this man do?"
+ Ask'st thou, Christian, for thy friend?
+If his love for Christ be true,
+ Christ hath told thee of his end:
+This is he whom God approves,
+This is he whom Jesus loves.
+
+Ask not of him more than this,
+ Leave it in his Saviour's breast,
+Whether, early called to bliss,
+ He in youth shall find his rest,
+Or armed in his station wait
+Till his Lord be at the gate:
+
+Whether in his lonely course
+ (Lonely, not forlorn) he stay,
+Or with Love's supporting force
+ Cheat the toil, and cheer the way:
+Leave it all in His high hand,
+Who doth hearts as streams command.
+
+Gales from Heaven, if so He will,
+ Sweeter melodies can wake
+On the lonely mountain rill
+ Than the meeting waters make.
+Who hath the Father and the Son,
+May be left, but not alone.
+
+Sick or healthful, slave or free,
+ Wealthy, or despised and poor -
+What is that to him or thee,
+ So his love to Christ endure?
+When the shore is won at last,
+Who will count the billows past?
+
+Only, since our souls will shrink
+ At the touch of natural grief,
+When our earthly loved ones sink,
+ Lend us, Lord, Thy sure relief;
+Patient hearts, their pain to see,
+And Thy grace, to follow Thee.
+
+
+
+THE HOLY INNOCENTS
+
+
+
+These were redeemed from among men, being the firstfruits unto God
+and to the Lamb. Rev. xiv. 4.
+
+ Say, ye celestial guards, who wait
+In Bethlehem, round the Saviour's palace gate,
+ Say, who are these on golden wings,
+That hover o'er the new-born King of kings,
+ Their palms and garlands telling plain
+That they are of the glorious martyr-train,
+ Next to yourselves ordained to praise
+His Name, and brighten as on Him they gaze?
+
+ But where their spoils and trophies? where
+The glorious dint a martyr's shield should bear?
+ How chance no cheek among them wears
+The deep-worn trace of penitential tears,
+ But all is bright and smiling love,
+As if, fresh-borne from Eden's happy grove,
+ They had flown here, their King to see,
+Nor ever had been heirs of dark mortality?
+
+ Ask, and some angel will reply,
+"These, like yourselves, were born to sin and die,
+ But ere the poison root was grown,
+God set His seal, and marked them for His own.
+ Baptised its blood for Jesus' sake,
+Now underneath the Cross their bed they make,
+ Not to be scared from that sure rest
+By frightened mother's shriek, or warrior's waving crest."
+
+ Mindful of these, the firstfruits sweet
+Borne by this suffering Church her Lord to greet;
+ Blessed Jesus ever loved to trace
+The "innocent brightness" of an infant's face.
+ He raised them in His holy arms,
+He blessed them from the world and all its harms:
+ Heirs though they were of sin and shame,
+He blessed them in his own and in his Father's Name.
+
+ Then, as each fond unconscious child
+ On the everlasting Parent sweetly smiled
+ (Like infants sporting on the shore,
+That tremble not at Ocean's boundless roar),
+ Were they not present to Thy thought,
+All souls, that in their cradles Thou hast bought?
+ But chiefly these, who died for Thee,
+That Thou might'st live for them a sadder death to see.
+
+ And next to these, Thy gracious word
+Was as a pledge of benediction stored
+ For Christian mothers, while they moan
+Their treasured hopes, just born, baptised, and gone.
+ Oh, joy for Rachel's broken heart!
+She and her babes shall meet no more to part;
+ So dear to Christ her pious haste
+To trust them in His arms for ever safe embraced.
+
+ She dares not grudge to leave them there,
+Where to behold them was her heart's first prayer;
+ She dares not grieve--but she must weep,
+As her pale placid martyr sinks to sleep,
+ Teaching so well and silently
+How at the shepherd's call the lamb should die:
+ How happier far than life the end
+Of souls that infant-like beneath their burthen bend.
+
+
+
+FIRST SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS
+
+
+
+So the sun returned ten degrees, by which degrees it was gone down.
+Isaiah xxxviii. 8; compare Josh. x. 13.
+
+ 'Tis true, of old the unchanging sun
+ His daily course refused to run,
+ The pale moon hurrying to the west
+ Paused at a mortal's call, to aid
+ The avenging storm of war, that laid
+Seven guilty realms at once on earth's defiled breast.
+
+ But can it be, one suppliant tear
+ Should stay the ever-moving sphere?
+ A sick man's lowly-breathed sigh,
+ When from the world he turns away,
+ And hides his weary eyes to pray,
+Should change your mystic dance, ye wanderers of the sky?
+
+ We too, O Lord, would fain command,
+ As then, Thy wonder-working hand,
+ And backward force the waves of Time,
+ That now so swift and silent bear
+ Our restless bark from year to year;
+Help us to pause and mourn to Thee our tale of crime.
+
+ Bright hopes, that erst the bosom warmed,
+ And vows, too pure to be performed,
+ And prayers blown wide by gales of care; -
+ These, and such faint half-waking dreams,
+ Like stormy lights on mountain streams,
+Wavering and broken all, athwart the conscience glare.
+
+ How shall we 'scape the o'erwhelming Past?
+ Can spirits broken, joys o'ercast,
+ And eyes that never more may smile: -
+ Can these th' avenging bolt delay,
+ Or win us back one little day
+The bitterness of death to soften and beguile?
+
+ Father and Lover of our souls!
+ Though darkly round Thine anger rolls,
+ Thy sunshine smiles beneath the gloom,
+ Thou seek'st to warn us, not confound,
+ Thy showers would pierce the hardened ground
+And win it to give out its brightness and perfume.
+
+ Thou smil'st on us in wrath, and we,
+ E'en in remorse, would smile on Thee,
+ The tears that bathe our offered hearts,
+ We would not have them stained and dim,
+ But dropped from wings of seraphim,
+All glowing with the light accepted love imparts.
+
+ Time's waters will not ebb, nor stay;
+ Power cannot change them, but Love may;
+ What cannot be, Love counts it done.
+ Deep in the heart, her searching view
+ Can read where Faith is fixed and true,
+Through shades of setting life can see Heaven's work begun.
+
+ O Thou, who keep'st the Key of Love,
+ Open Thy fount, eternal Dove,
+ And overflow this heart of mine,
+ Enlarging as it fills with Thee,
+ Till in one blaze of charity
+Care and remorse are lost, like motes in light divine;
+
+ Till as each moment wafts us higher,
+ By every gush of pure desire,
+ And high-breathed hope of joys above,
+ By every secret sigh we heave,
+ Whole years of folly we outlive,
+In His unerring sight, who measures Life by Love.
+
+
+
+THE CIRCUMCISION OF CHRIST
+
+
+
+In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without
+hands. Coloss. ii. 11.
+
+ The year begins with Thee,
+ And Thou beginn'st with woe,
+To let the world of sinners see
+ That blood for sin must flow.
+
+ Thine infant cries, O Lord,
+ Thy tears upon the breast,
+Are not enough--the legal sword
+ Must do its stern behest.
+
+ Like sacrificial wine
+ Poured on a victim's head
+Are those few precious drops of Thine,
+ Now first to offering led.
+
+ They are the pledge and seal
+ Of Christ's unswerving faith
+Given to His Sire, our souls to heal,
+ Although it cost His death.
+
+ They to His Church of old,
+ To each true Jewish heart,
+In Gospel graces manifold
+ Communion blest impart.
+
+ Now of Thy love we deem
+ As of an ocean vast,
+Mounting in tides against the stream
+ Of ages gone and past.
+
+ Both theirs and ours Thou art,
+ As we and they are Thine;
+Kings, Prophets, Patriarchs--all have part
+ Along the sacred line.
+
+ By blood and water too
+ God's mark is set on Thee,
+That in Thee every faithful view
+ Both covenants might see.
+
+ O bond of union, dear
+ And strong as is Thy grace!
+Saints, parted by a thousand year,
+ May thus in heart embrace.
+
+ Is there a mourner true,
+ Who fallen on faithless days,
+Sighs for the heart-consoling view
+ Of those Heaven deigned to praise?
+
+ In spirit may'st thou meet
+ With faithful Abraham here,
+Whom soon in Eden thou shalt greet
+ A nursing Father dear.
+
+ Would'st thou a poet be?
+ And would thy dull heart fain
+Borrow of Israel's minstrelsy
+ One high enraptured strain?
+
+ Come here thy soul to tune,
+ Here set thy feeble chant,
+Here, if at all beneath the moon,
+ Is holy David's haunt.
+
+ Art thou a child of tears,
+ Cradled in care and woe?
+And seems it hard, thy vernal years
+ Few vernal joys can show?
+
+ And fall the sounds of mirth
+ Sad on thy lonely heart,
+From all the hopes and charms of earth
+ Untimely called to part?
+
+ Look here, and hold thy peace:
+ The Giver of all good
+E'en from the womb takes no release
+ From suffering, tears, and blood.
+
+ If thou would'st reap in love,
+ First sow in holy fear:
+So life a winter's morn may prove
+ To a bright endless year.
+
+
+
+SECOND SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS
+
+
+
+When the poor and needy seek water, and there is none, and their
+tongue faileth for thirst, I the Lord will hear them, I the God of
+Israel will not forsake them. Isaiah, xli. 17.
+
+And wilt thou hear the fevered heart
+ To Thee in silence cry?
+And as th' inconstant wildfires dart
+ Out of the restless eye,
+Wilt thou forgive the wayward though
+By kindly woes yet half untaught
+A Saviours right, so dearly bought,
+ That Hope should never die?
+
+Thou wilt: for many a languid prayer
+ Has reached Thee from the wild,
+Since the lorn mother, wandering there,
+ Cast down her fainting child,
+Then stole apart to weep and die,
+Nor knew an angel form was nigh,
+To show soft waters gushing by,
+ And dewy shadows mild.
+
+Thou wilt--for Thou art Israel's God,
+ And Thine unwearied arm
+Is ready yet with Moses' rod,
+ The hidden rill to charm
+Out of the dry unfathomed deep
+Of sands, that lie in lifeless sleep,
+Save when the scorching whirlwinds heap
+ Their waves in rude alarm.
+
+These moments of wild wrath are Thine -
+ Thine, too, the drearier hour
+When o'er th' horizon's silent line
+ Fond hopeless fancies cower,
+And on the traveller's listless way
+Rises and sets th' unchanging day,
+No cloud in heaven to slake its ray,
+ On earth no sheltering bower.
+
+Thou wilt be there, and not forsake,
+ To turn the bitter pool
+Into a bright and breezy lake,
+ This throbbing brow to cool:
+Till loft awhile with Thee alone
+The wilful heart be fain to own
+That He, by whom our bright hours shone,
+ Our darkness best may rule.
+
+The scent of water far away
+ Upon the breeze is flung;
+The desert pelican to-day
+ Securely leaves her young,
+Reproving thankless man, who fears
+To journey on a few lone years,
+Where on the sand Thy step appears,
+ Thy crown in sight is hung.
+
+Thou, who did sit on Jacob's well
+ The weary hour of noon,
+The languid pulses Thou canst tell,
+ The nerveless spirit tune.
+Thou from Whose cross in anguish burst
+The cry that owned Thy dying thirst,
+To Thee we turn, our Last and First,
+ Our Sun and soothing Moon.
+
+From darkness, here, and dreariness
+ We ask not full repose,
+Only be Thou at hand, to bless
+ Our trial hour of woes.
+Is not the pilgrim's toil o'erpaid
+By the clear rill and palmy shade?
+And see we not, up Earth's dark glade,
+ The gate of Heaven unclose?
+
+
+
+THE EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+And lo, the star, which they saw in the east, went before them,
+till it came and stood over where the young Child was. When they
+saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy. St. Matthew
+ii. 9, 10.
+
+Star of the East, how sweet art Thou,
+ Seen in life's early morning sky,
+Ere yet a cloud has dimmed the brow,
+ While yet we gaze with childish eye;
+
+When father, mother, nursing friend,
+ Most dearly loved, and loving best,
+First bid us from their arms ascend,
+ Pointing to Thee, in Thy sure rest.
+
+Too soon the glare of earthly day
+ Buries, to us, Thy brightness keen,
+And we are left to find our way
+ By faith and hope in Thee unseen.
+
+What matter? if the waymarks sure
+ On every side are round us set,
+Soon overleaped, but not obscure?
+ 'Tis ours to mark them or forget.
+
+What matter? if in calm old age
+ Our childhood's star again arise,
+Crowning our lonely pilgrimage
+ With all that cheers a wanderer's eyes?
+
+Ne'er may we lose it from our sight,
+ Till all our hopes and thoughts are led
+To where it stays its lucid flight
+ Over our Saviour's lowly bed.
+
+There, swathed in humblest poverty,
+ On Chastity's meek lap enshrined,
+With breathless Reverence waiting by,
+ When we our Sovereign Master find,
+
+Will not the long-forgotten glow
+ Of mingled joy and awe return,
+When stars above or flowers below
+ First made our infant spirits burn?
+
+Look on us, Lord, and take our parts
+ E'en on Thy throne of purity!
+From these our proud yet grovelling hearts
+ Hide not Thy mild forgiving eye.
+
+Did not the Gentile Church find grace,
+ Our mother dear, this favoured day?
+With gold and myrrh she sought Thy face;
+ Nor didst Thou turn Thy face away.
+
+She too, in earlier, purer days,
+ Had watched thee gleaming faint and far -
+But wandering in self-chosen ways
+ She lost Thee quite, Thou lovely star.
+
+Yet had her Father's finger turned
+ To Thee her first inquiring glance:
+The deeper shame within her burned,
+ When wakened from her wilful trance.
+
+Behold, her wisest throng Thy gate,
+ Their richest, sweetest, purest store,
+(Yet owned too worthless and too late,)
+ They lavish on Thy cottage-floor.
+
+They give their best--O tenfold shame
+ On us their fallen progeny,
+Who sacrifice the blind and lame -
+ Who will not wake or fast with Thee!
+
+
+
+FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+They shall spring up as among the grass, as willows by the water
+courses. Isaiah xliv. 4.
+
+Lessons sweet of spring returning,
+ Welcome to the thoughtful heart!
+May I call ye sense or learning,
+ Instinct pure, or Heaven-taught art?
+Be your title what it may,
+Sweet this lengthening April day,
+While with you the soul is free,
+Ranging wild o'er hill and lea.
+
+Soft as Memnon's harp at morning,
+ To the inward ear devout,
+Touched by light, with heavenly warning
+ Your transporting chords ring out.
+Every leaf in every nook,
+Every wave in every brook,
+Chanting with a solemn voice,
+Minds us of our better choice.
+
+Needs no show of mountain hoary,
+ Winding shore or deepening glen,
+Where the landscape in its glory
+ Teaches truth to wandering men:
+Give true hearts but earth and sky,
+And some flowers to bloom and die,
+Homely scenes and simple views
+Lowly thoughts may best infuse.
+
+See the soft green willow springing
+ Where the waters gently pass,
+Every way her free arms flinging
+ O'er the moist and reedy grass.
+Long ere winter blasts are fled,
+See her tipped with vernal red,
+And her kindly flower displayed
+Ere her leaf can cast a shade.
+
+Though the rudest hand assail her,
+ Patiently she droops awhile,
+But when showers and breezes hail her,
+ Wears again her willing smile.
+Thus I learn Contentment's power
+From the slighted willow bower,
+Ready to give thanks and live
+On the least that Heaven may give.
+
+If, the quiet brooklet leaving,
+ Up the stony vale I wind,
+Haply half in fancy grieving
+ For the shades I leave behind,
+By the dusty wayside drear,
+Nightingales with joyous cheer
+Sing, my sadness to reprove,
+Gladlier than in cultured grove.
+
+Where the thickest boughs are twining
+ Of the greenest darkest tree,
+There they plunge, the light declining -
+ All may hear, but none may see.
+Fearless of the passing hoof,
+Hardly will they fleet aloof;
+So they live in modest ways,
+Trust entire, and ceaseless praise.
+
+
+
+SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+Every man at the beginning doth set forth good wine: and when men
+have well drunk, then that which is worse; but thou hast kept the
+good wine until now. St. John ii. 10.
+
+The heart of childhood is all mirth:
+ We frolic to and fro
+As free and blithe, as if on earth
+ Were no such thing as woe.
+
+But if indeed with reckless faith
+ We trust the flattering voice,
+Which whispers, "Take thy fill ere death,
+ Indulge thee and rejoice;"
+
+Too surely, every setting day,
+ Some lost delight we mourn;
+The flowers all die along our way
+ Till we, too, die forlorn.
+
+Such is the world's gay garish feast,
+ In her first charming bowl
+Infusing all that fires the breast,
+ And cheats the unstable soul.
+
+And still, as loud the revel swells,
+ The fevered pulse beats higher,
+Till the seared taste from foulest wells
+ Is fain to slake its fire.
+
+Unlike the feast of heavenly love
+ Spread at the Saviour's word
+For souls that hear His call, and prove
+ Meet for His bridal board.
+
+Why should we fear, youth's draught of joy
+ If pure would sparkle less?
+Why should the cup the sooner cloy,
+ Which God hath deigned to bless?
+
+For, is it Hope, that thrills so keen
+ Along each bounding vein,
+Still whispering glorious things unseen? -
+ Faith makes the vision plain.
+
+The world would kill her soon: but Faith
+ Her daring dreams will cherish,
+Speeding her gaze o'er time and death
+ To realms where nought can perish.
+
+Or is it Love, the dear delight
+ Of hearts that know no guile,
+That all around see all things bright
+ With their own magic smile?
+
+The silent joy that sinks so deep,
+ Of confidence and rest,
+Lulled in a father's arms to sleep,
+ Clasped to a mother's breast?
+
+Who, but a Christian, through all life
+ That blessing may prolong?
+Who, through the world's sad day of strife,
+ Still chant his morning song?
+
+Fathers may hate us or forsake,
+ God's foundlings then are we:
+Mother on child no pity take,
+ But we shall still have Thee.
+
+We may look home, and seek in vain
+ A fond fraternal heart,
+But Christ hath given His promise plain
+ To do a Brother's part.
+
+Nor shall dull age, as worldlings say,
+ The heavenward flame annoy:
+The Saviour cannot pass away,
+ And with Him lives our joy.
+
+Ever the richest, tenderest glow
+ Sets round the autumnal sun -
+But there sight fails: no heart may know
+ The bliss when life is done.
+
+Such is Thy banquet, dearest Lord;
+ O give us grace, to cast
+Our lot with Thine, to trust Thy word,
+ And keep our best till last.
+
+
+
+THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+When Jesus heard it, He marvelled, and said to them that followed,
+Verily I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in
+Israel. St. Matthew viii. 10.
+
+ I marked a rainbow in the north,
+ What time the wild autumnal sun
+ From his dark veil at noon looked forth,
+ As glorying in his course half done,
+ Flinging soft radiance far and wide
+Over the dusky heaven and bleak hill-side.
+
+ It was a gleam to Memory dear,
+ And as I walk and muse apart,
+ When all seems faithless round and drear,
+ I would revive it in my heart,
+ And watch how light can find its way
+To regions farthest from the fount of day.
+
+ Light flashes in the gloomiest sky,
+ And Music in the dullest plain,
+ For there the lark is soaring high
+ Over her flat and leafless reign,
+ And chanting in so blithe a tone,
+It shames the weary heart to feel itself alone.
+
+ Brighter than rainbow in the north,
+ More cheery than the matin lark,
+ Is the soft gleam of Christian worth,
+ Which on some holy house we mark;
+ Dear to the pastor's aching heart
+To think, where'er he looks, such gleam may have a part;
+
+ May dwell, unseen by all but Heaven,
+ Like diamond blazing in the mine;
+ For ever, where such grace is given,
+ It fears in open day to shine,
+ Lest the deep stain it owns within
+Break out, and Faith be shamed by the believer's sin.
+
+ In silence and afar they wait,
+ To find a prayer their Lord may hear:
+ Voice of the poor and desolate,
+ You best may bring it to His ear;
+ Your grateful intercessions rise
+With more than royal pomp, and pierce the skies.
+
+ Happy the soul whose precious cause
+ You in the Sovereign Presence plead -
+ "This is the lover of Thy laws,
+ The friend of Thine in fear and need,"
+ For to the poor Thy mercy lends
+That solemn style, "Thy nation and Thy friends."
+
+ He too is blest whose outward eye
+ The graceful lines of art may trace,
+ While his free spirit, soaring high,
+ Discerns the glorious from the base;
+ Till out of dust his magic raise
+A home for prayer and love, and full harmonious praise,
+
+ Where far away and high above,
+ In maze on maze the tranced sight
+ Strays, mindful of that heavenly love
+ Which knows no end in depth or height,
+ While the strong breath of Music seems
+To waft us ever on, soaring in blissful dreams.
+
+ What though in poor and humble guise
+ Thou here didst sojourn, cottage-born?
+ Yet from Thy glory in the skies
+ Our earthly gold Thou dost not scorn.
+ For Love delights to bring her best,
+And where Love is, that offering evermore is blest.
+
+ Love on the Saviour's dying head
+ Her spikenard drops unblamed may pour,
+ May mount His cross, and wrap Him dead
+ In spices from the golden shore;
+ Risen, may embalm His sacred name
+With all a Painter's art, and all a Minstrel's flame.
+
+ Worthless and lost our offerings seem,
+ Drops in the ocean of His praise;
+ But Mercy with her genial beam
+ Is ripening them to pearly blaze,
+ To sparkle in His crown above,
+Who welcomes here a child's as there an angel's love.
+
+
+
+FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+When they saw Him, they besought Him that He would depart out of
+their coasts. St. Matthew viii. 34.
+
+ They know the Almighty's power,
+ Who, wakened by the rushing midnight shower,
+ Watch for the fitful breeze
+ To howl and chafe amid the bending trees,
+ Watch for the still white gleam
+ To bathe the landscape in a fiery stream,
+ Touching the tremulous eye with sense of light
+Too rapid and too pure for all but angel sight.
+
+ They know the Almighty's love,
+ Who, when the whirlwinds rock the topmost grove,
+ Stand in the shade, and hear
+ The tumult with a deep exulting fear,
+ How, in their fiercest sway,
+ Curbed by some power unseen, they die away,
+ Like a bold steed that owns his rider's arm,
+Proud to be checked and soothed by that o'er-mastering chains.
+
+ But there are storms within
+ That heave the struggling heart with wilder din,
+ And there is power and love
+ The maniac's rushing frenzy to reprove,
+ And when he takes his seat,
+ Clothed and in calmness, at his Savour's feet,
+ Is not the power as strange, the love as blest,
+As when He said, "Be still," and ocean sank to rest?
+
+ Woe to the wayward heart,
+ That gladlier turns to eye the shuddering start
+ Of Passion in her might,
+ Than marks the silent growth of grace and light; -
+ Pleased in the cheerless tomb
+ To linger, while the morning rays illume
+ Green lake, and cedar tuft, and spicy glade,
+Shaking their dewy tresses now the storm is laid.
+
+ The storm is laid--and now
+ In His meek power He climbs the mountain's brow,
+ Who bade the waves go sleep,
+ And lashed the vexed fiends to their yawning deep.
+ How on a rock they stand,
+ Who watch His eye, and hold His guiding hand!
+ Not half so fixed, amid her vassal hills,
+Rises the holy pile that Kedron's valley fills.
+
+ And wilt thou seek again
+ Thy howling waste, thy charnel-house and chain,
+ And with the demons be,
+ Rather than clasp thine own Deliverer's knee?
+ Sure 'tis no Heaven-bred awe
+ That bids thee from His healing touch withdraw;
+ The world and He are struggling in thine heart,
+And in thy reckless mood thou bidd'st thy Lord depart.
+
+ He, merciful and mild,
+ As erst, beholding, loves His wayward child;
+ When souls of highest birth
+ Waste their impassioned might on dreams of earth,
+ He opens Nature's book,
+ And on His glorious Gospel bids them look,
+ Till, by such chords as rule the choirs above,
+Their lawless cries are tuned to hymns of perfect love.
+
+
+
+FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+Behold, the Lord's hand is not shortened, that it cannot save;
+neither His ear heavy, that it cannot hear; but your iniquities
+have separated between you and your God. Isaiah lix. 1, 2.
+
+ "Wake, arm Divine! awake,
+ Eye of the only Wise!
+ Now for Thy glory's sake,
+ Saviour and God, arise,
+And may Thine ear, that sealed seems,
+In pity mark our mournful themes!"
+
+ Thus in her lonely hour
+ Thy Church is fain to cry,
+ As if Thy love and power
+ Were vanished from her sky;
+Yet God is there, and at His side
+He triumphs, who for sinners died.
+
+ Ah! 'tis the world enthralls
+ The Heaven-betrothed breast:
+ The traitor Sense recalls
+ The soaring soul from rest.
+That bitter sigh was all for earth,
+For glories gone and vanished mirth.
+
+ Age would to youth return,
+ Farther from Heaven would be,
+ To feel the wildfire burn,
+ On idolising knee
+Again to fall, and rob Thy shrine
+Of hearts, the right of Love Divine.
+
+ Lord of this erring flock!
+ Thou whose soft showers distil
+ On ocean waste or rock,
+ Free as on Hermon hill,
+Do Thou our craven spirits cheer,
+And shame away the selfish tear.
+
+ 'Twas silent all and dead
+ Beside the barren sea,
+ Where Philip's steps were led,
+ Led by a voice from Thee -
+He rose and went, nor asked Thee why,
+Nor stayed to heave one faithless sigh:
+
+ Upon his lonely way
+ The high-born traveller came,
+ Reading a mournful lay
+ Of "One who bore our shame,
+Silent Himself, His name untold,
+And yet His glories were of old."
+
+ To muse what Heaven might mean
+ His wondering brow he raised,
+ And met an eye serene
+ That on him watchful gazed.
+No Hermit e'er so welcome crossed
+A child's lone path in woodland lost.
+
+ Now wonder turns to love;
+ The scrolls of sacred lore
+ No darksome mazes prove;
+ The desert tires no more
+They bathe where holy waters flow,
+Then on their way rejoicing go.
+
+ They part to meet in Heaven;
+ But of the joy they share,
+ Absolving and forgiven,
+ The sweet remembrance bear.
+Yes--mark him well, ye cold and proud.
+Bewildered in a heartless crowd,
+
+ Starting and turning pale
+ At Rumour's angry din -
+ No storm can now assail
+ The charm he wears within,
+Rejoicing still, and doing good,
+And with the thought of God imbued.
+
+ No glare of high estate,
+ No gloom of woe or want,
+ The radiance can abate
+ Where Heaven delights to haunt:
+Sin only bides the genial ray,
+And, round the Cross, makes night of day.
+
+ Then weep it from thy heart;
+ So mayst thou duly learn
+ The intercessor's part;
+ Thy prayers and tears may earn
+For fallen souls some healing breath,
+Era they have died the Apostate's death.
+
+
+
+SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
+
+
+
+Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear
+what we shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear, we shall
+be like Him; for we shall see Him as he is. St. John iii. 2.
+
+ There are, who darkling and alone,
+ Would wish the weary night were gone,
+ Though dawning morn should only show
+ The secret of their unknown woe:
+ Who pray for sharpest throbs of pain
+ To ease them of doubt's galling chain:
+ "Only disperse the cloud," they cry,
+"And if our fate be death, give light and let us die."
+
+ Unwise I deem them, Lord, unmeet
+ To profit by Thy chastenings sweet,
+ For Thou wouldst have us linger still
+ Upon the verge of good or ill.
+ That on Thy guiding hand unseen
+ Our undivided hearts may lean,
+ And this our frail and foundering bark
+Glide in the narrow wake of Thy beloved ark.
+
+ 'Tis so in war--the champion true
+ Loves victory more when dim in view
+ He sees her glories gild afar
+ The dusky edge of stubborn war,
+ Than if the untrodden bloodless field
+ The harvest of her laurels yield;
+ Let not my bark in calm abide,
+But win her fearless way against the chafing tide.
+
+ 'Tis so in love--the faithful heart
+ From her dim vision would not part,
+ When first to her fond gaze is given
+ That purest spot in Fancy's heaven,
+ For all the gorgeous sky beside,
+ Though pledged her own and sure to abide:
+ Dearer than every past noon-day
+That twilight gleam to her, though faint and far away.
+
+ So have I seen some tender flower
+ Prized above all the vernal bower,
+ Sheltered beneath the coolest shade,
+ Embosomed in the greenest glade,
+ So frail a gem, it scarce may bear
+ The playful touch of evening air;
+ When hardier grown we love it less,
+And trust it from our sight, not needing our caress.
+
+ And wherefore is the sweet spring-tide
+ Worth all the changeful year beside?
+ The last-born babe, why lies its part
+ Deep in the mother's inmost heart?
+ But that the Lord and Source of love
+ Would have His weakest ever prove
+ Our tenderest care--and most of all
+Our frail immortal souls, His work and Satan's thrall.
+
+ So be it, Lord; I know it best,
+ Though not as yet this wayward breast
+ Beat quite in answer to Thy voice,
+ Yet surely I have made my choice;
+ I know not yet the promised bliss,
+ Know not if I shall win or miss;
+ So doubting, rather let me die,
+Than close with aught beside, to last eternally.
+
+ What is the Heaven we idly dream?
+ The self-deceiver's dreary theme,
+ A cloudless sun that softly shines,
+ Bright maidens and unfailing vines,
+ The warrior's pride, the hunter's mirth,
+ Poor fragments all of this low earth:
+ Such as in sleep would hardly soothe
+A soul that once had tasted of immortal Truth.
+
+ What is the Heaven our God bestows?
+ No Prophet yet, no Angel knows;
+ Was never yet created eye
+ Could see across Eternity;
+ Not seraph's wing for ever soaring
+ Can pass the flight of souls adoring,
+ That nearer still and nearer grow
+To the unapproached Lord, once made for them so low.
+
+ Unseen, unfelt their earthly growth,
+ And self-accused of sin and sloth,
+ They live and die; their names decay,
+ Their fragrance passes quite away;
+ Like violets in the freezing blast
+ No vernal steam around they cast. -
+ But they shall flourish from the tomb,
+The breath of God shall wake them into odorous bloom.
+
+ Then on the incarnate Saviour's breast,
+ The fount of sweetness, they shall rest,
+ Their spirits every hour imbued
+ More deeply with His precious blood.
+ But peace--still voice and closed eye
+ Suit best with hearts beyond the sky,
+ Hearts training in their low abode,
+Daily to lose themselves in hope to find their God.
+
+
+
+SEPTUAGESIMA SUNDAY
+
+
+
+The invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are
+clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made. Romans
+i. 20.
+
+There is a book, who runs may read,
+ Which heavenly truth imparts,
+And all the lore its scholars need,
+ Pure eyes and Christian hearts.
+
+The works of God above, below,
+ Within us and around,
+Are pages in that book, to show
+ How God Himself is found.
+
+The glorious sky embracing all
+ Is like the Maker's love,
+Wherewith encompassed, great and small
+ In peace and order move.
+
+The Moon above, the Church below,
+ A wondrous race they run,
+But all their radiance, all their glow,
+ Each borrows of its Sun.
+
+The Savour lends the light and heat
+ That crowns His holy hill;
+The saints, like stars, around His seat
+ Perform their courses still.
+
+The saints above are stars in heaven -
+ What are the saints on earth?
+Like tress they stand whom God has given,
+ Our Eden's happy birth.
+
+Faith is their fixed unswerving root,
+ Hope their unfading flower,
+Fair deeds of charity their fruit,
+ The glory of their bower.
+
+The dew of heaven is like Thy grace,
+ It steals in silence down;
+But where it lights, this favoured place
+ By richest fruits is known.
+
+One Name above all glorious names
+ With its ten thousand tongues
+The everlasting sea proclaims.
+ Echoing angelic songs.
+
+The raging Fire, the roaring Wind,
+ Thy boundless power display;
+But in the gentler breeze we find
+ Thy Spirit's viewless way.
+
+Two worlds are ours: 'tis only Sin
+ Forbids us to descry
+The mystic heaven and earth within,
+ Plain as the sea and sky.
+
+Thou, who hast given me eyes to see
+ And love this sight so fair,
+Give me a heart to find out Thee,
+ And read Thee everywhere.
+
+
+
+SEXAGESIMA SUNDAY
+
+
+
+So He drove out the man; and He placed at the east of the garden of
+Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep
+the way of the tree of life. Genesis iii. 24; compare chap. vi.
+
+ Foe of mankind! too bold thy race:
+ Thou runn'st at such a reckless pace,
+Thine own dire work thou surely wilt confound:
+ 'Twas but one little drop of sin
+ We saw this morning enter in,
+And lo! at eventide the world is drowned.
+
+ See here the fruit of wandering eyes,
+ Of worldly longings to be wise,
+Of Passion dwelling on forbidden sweets:
+ Ye lawless glances, freely rove;
+ Ruin below and wrath above
+Are all that now the wildering fancy meets.
+
+ Lord, when in some deep garden glade,
+ Of Thee and of myself afraid.
+From thoughts like these among the bowers I hide,
+ Nearest and loudest then of all
+ I seem to hear the Judge's call:-
+"Where art thou, fallen man? come forth, and be thou tried."
+
+ Trembling before Thee as I stand,
+ Where'er I gaze on either hand
+The sentence is gone forth, the ground is cursed:
+ Yet mingled with the penal shower
+ Some drops of balm in every bower
+Steal down like April dews, that softest fall and first.
+
+ If filial and maternal love
+ Memorial of our guilt must prove,
+If sinful babes in sorrow must be born,
+ Yet, to assuage her sharpest throes,
+ The faithful mother surely knows,
+This was the way Thou cam'st to save the world forlorn.
+
+ If blessed wedlock may not bless
+ Without some tinge of bitterness
+To dash her cup of joy, since Eden lost,
+ Chaining to earth with strong desire
+ Hearts that would highest else aspire,
+And o'er the tenderer sex usurping ever most;
+
+ Yet by the light of Christian lore
+ 'Tis blind Idolatry no more,
+But a sweet help and pattern of true love,
+ Showing how best the soul may cling
+ To her immortal Spouse and King,
+How He should rule, and she with full desire approve.
+
+ If niggard Earth her treasures hide,
+ To all but labouring hands denied,
+Lavish of thorns and worthless weeds alone,
+ The doom is half in mercy given,
+ To train us in our way to Heaven,
+And show our lagging souls how glory must be won.
+
+ If on the sinner's outward frame
+ God hath impressed His mark of blame,
+And e'en our bodies shrink at touch of light,
+ Yet mercy hath not left us bare:
+ The very weeds we daily wear
+Are to Faith's eye a pledge of God's forgiving might.
+
+ And oh! if yet one arrow more,
+ The sharpest of the Almighty's store,
+Tremble upon the string--a sinner's death -
+ Art Thou not by to soothe and save,
+ To lay us gently in the grave,
+To close the weary eye and hush the parting breath?
+
+ Therefore in sight of man bereft
+ The happy garden still was left;
+The fiery sword that guarded, showed it too;
+ Turning all ways, the world to teach,
+ That though as yet beyond our reach,
+Still in its place the tree of life and glory grew.
+
+
+
+QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY
+
+
+
+I do set My bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a
+covenant between Me and the earth. Genesis ix. 13.
+
+Sweet Dove! the softest, steadiest plume,
+ In all the sunbright sky,
+Brightening in ever-changeful bloom
+ As breezes change on high; -
+
+Sweet Leaf! the pledge of peace and mirth,
+ "Long sought, and lately won,"
+Blessed increase of reviving Earth,
+ When first it felt the Sun; -
+
+Sweet Rainbow! pride of summer days,
+ High set at Heaven's command,
+Though into drear and dusky haze
+ Thou melt on either hand; -
+
+Dear tokens of a pardoning God,
+ We hail ye, one and all,
+As when our fathers walked abroad,
+ Freed from their twelvemonth's thrall.
+
+How joyful from the imprisoning ark
+ On the green earth they spring!
+Not blither, after showers, the lark
+ Mounts up with glistening wing.
+
+So home-bound sailors spring to shore,
+ Two oceans safely past;
+So happy souls, when life is o'er,
+ Plunge in this empyreal vast.
+
+What wins their first and fondest gaze
+ In all the blissful field,
+And keeps it through a thousand days?
+ Love face to face revealed:
+
+Love imaged in that cordial look
+ Our Lord in Eden bends
+On souls that sin and earth forsook
+ In time to die His friends.
+
+And what most welcome and serene
+ Dawns on the Patriarch's eye,
+In all the emerging hills so green,
+ In all the brightening sky?
+
+What but the gentle rainbow's gleam,
+ Soothing the wearied sight,
+That cannot bear the solar beam,
+ With soft undazzling light?
+
+Lord, if our fathers turned to Thee
+ With such adoring gaze,
+Wondering frail man Thy light should see
+ Without Thy scorching blaze;
+
+Where is our love, and where our hearts,
+ We who have seen Thy Son,
+Have tried Thy Spirit's winning arts,
+ And yet we are not won?
+
+The Son of God in radiance beamed
+ Too bright for us to scan,
+But we may face the rays that streamed
+ From the mild Son of Man.
+
+There, parted into rainbow hues,
+ In sweet harmonious strife
+We see celestial love diffuse
+ Its light o'er Jesus' life.
+
+God, by His bow, vouchsafes to write
+ This truth in Heaven above:
+As every lovely hue is Light,
+ So every grace is Love.
+
+
+
+ASH WEDNESDAY
+
+
+
+When thou fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face; that thou
+appear not unto men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in
+secret. St. Matthew vi. 17, 18.
+
+"Yes--deep within and deeper yet
+ The rankling shaft of conscience hide,
+Quick let the swelling eye forget
+ The tears that in the heart abide.
+Calm be the voice, the aspect bold,
+ No shuddering pass o'er lip or brow,
+For why should Innocence be told
+ The pangs that guilty spirits bow?
+
+"The loving eye that watches thine
+ Close as the air that wraps thee round -
+Why in thy sorrow should it pine,
+ Since never of thy sin it found?
+And wherefore should the heathen see
+ What chains of darkness thee enslave,
+And mocking say, 'Lo, this is he
+ Who owned a God that could not save'?"
+
+Thus oft the mourner's wayward heart
+ Tempts him to hide his grief and die,
+Too feeble for Confession's smart,
+ Too proud to bear a pitying eye;
+How sweet, in that dark hour, to fall
+ On bosoms waiting to receive
+Our sighs, and gently whisper all!
+ They love us--will not God forgive?
+
+Else let us keep our fast within,
+ Till Heaven and we are quite alone,
+Then let the grief, the shame, the sin,
+ Before the mercy-seat be thrown.
+Between the porch and altar weep,
+ Unworthy of the holiest place,
+Yet hoping near the shrine to keep
+ One lowly cell in sight of grace.
+
+Nor fear lest sympathy should fail -
+ Hast thou not seen, in night hours drear,
+When racking thoughts the heart assail,
+ The glimmering stars by turns appear,
+And from the eternal house above
+ With silent news of mercy steal?
+So Angels pause on tasks of love,
+ To look where sorrowing sinners kneel.
+
+Or if no Angel pass that way,
+ He who in secret sees, perchance
+May bid His own heart-warming ray
+ Toward thee stream with kindlier glance,
+As when upon His drooping head
+ His Father's light was poured from Heaven,
+What time, unsheltered and unfed,
+ Far in the wild His steps were driven.
+
+High thoughts were with Him in that hour,
+ Untold, unspeakable on earth -
+And who can stay the soaring power
+ Of spirits weaned from worldly mirth,
+While far beyond the sound of praise
+ With upward eye they float serene,
+And learn to bear their Saviour's blaze
+ When Judgment shall undraw the screen?
+
+
+
+FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT.
+
+
+
+Haste thee, escape thither: for I cannot do any thing till thou be
+come thither. Therefore the name of the city was called Zoar.
+Genesis xix. 22.
+
+"Angel of wrath! why linger in mid-air,
+ While the devoted city's cry
+Louder and louder swells? and canst thou spare,
+ Thy full-charged vial standing by?"
+Thus, with stern voice, unsparing Justice pleads:
+ He hears her not--with softened gaze
+His eye is following where sweet Mercy leads,
+And till she give the sign, his fury stays.
+
+Guided by her, along the mountain road,
+ Far through the twilight of the morn,
+With hurried footsteps from the accursed abode
+ He sees the holy household borne;
+Angels, or more, on either hand are nigh,
+ To speed them o'er the tempting plain,
+Lingering in heart, and with frail sidelong eye
+Seeking how near they may unharmed remain.
+
+"Ah! wherefore gleam those upland slopes so fair?
+ And why, through every woodland arch,
+Swells yon bright vale, as Eden rich and rare,
+ Where Jordan winds his stately march;
+If all must be forsaken, ruined all,
+ If God have planted but to burn? -
+Surely not yet the avenging shower will fall,
+Though to my home for one last look I turn."
+
+Thus while they waver, surely long ago
+ They had provoked the withering blast,
+But that the merciful Avengers know
+ Their frailty well, and hold them fast.
+"Haste, for thy life escape, nor look behind" -
+ Ever in thrilling sounds like these
+They check the wandering eye, severely kind,
+Nor let the sinner lose his soul at ease.
+
+And when, o'erwearied with the steep ascent,
+ We for a nearer refuge crave,
+One little spot of ground in mercy lent,
+ One hour of home before the grave,
+Oft in His pity o'er His children weak,
+ His hand withdraws the penal fire,
+And where we fondly cling, forbears to wreak
+Full vengeance, till our hearts are weaned entire.
+
+Thus, by the merits of one righteous man,
+ The Church, our Zoar, shall abide,
+Till she abuse, so sore, her lengthened span,
+ E'en Mercy's self her face must hide.
+Then, onward yet a step, thou hard-won soul;
+ Though in the Church thou know thy place,
+The mountain farther lies--there seek thy goal,
+There breathe at large, o'erpast thy dangerous race.
+
+Sweet is the smile of home; the mutual look
+ When hearts are of each other sure;
+Sweet all the joys that crowd the household nook,
+ The haunt of all affections pure;
+Yet in the world e'en these abide, and we
+ Above the world our calling boast;
+Once gain the mountain-top, and thou art free:
+Till then, who rest, presume; who turn to look, are lost.
+
+
+
+SECOND SUNDAY IN LENT
+
+
+
+And when Esau heard the words of his father, he cried with a great
+and exceeding bitter cry, and said unto his father, Bless me, even
+me also, O my father. Genesis xxvii. 34. (Compare Hebrew xii. 17.
+He found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with
+tears.)
+
+"And is there in God's world so drear a place
+ Where the loud bitter cry is raised in vain?
+Where tears of penance come too late for grace,
+ As on the uprooted flower the genial rain?"
+
+'Tis even so: the sovereign Lord of souls
+ Stores in the dungeon of His boundless realm
+Each bolt that o'er the sinner vainly rolls,
+ With gathered wrath the reprobate to whelm.
+
+Will the storm hear the sailor's piteous cry,
+ Taught so mistrust, too late, the tempting wave,
+When all around he sees but sea and sky,
+ A God in anger, a self-chosen grave?
+
+Or will the thorns, that strew intemperance' bed,
+ Turn with a wish to down? will late remorse
+Recall the shaft the murderer's hand has sped,
+ Or from the guiltless bosom turn its course?
+
+Then may the unbodied soul in safety fleet
+ Through the dark curtains of the world above,
+Fresh from the stain of crime; nor fear to meet
+ The God whom here she would not learn to love;
+
+Then is there hope for such as die unblest,
+ That angel wings may waft them to the shore,
+Nor need the unready virgin strike her breast,
+ Nor wait desponding round the bridegroom's door.
+
+But where is then the stay of contrite hearts?
+ Of old they leaned on Thy eternal word,
+But with the sinner's fear their hope departs,
+ Fast linked as Thy great Name to Thee, O Lord:
+
+That Name, by which Thy faithful oath is past,
+ That we should endless be, for joy or woe:-
+And if the treasures of Thy wrath could waste,
+ Thy lovers must their promised Heaven forego.
+
+But ask of elder days, earth's vernal hour,
+ When in familiar talk God's voice was heard,
+When at the Patriarch's call the fiery shower
+ Propitious o'er the turf-built shrine appeared.
+
+Watch by our father Isaac's pastoral door -
+ The birthright sold, the blessing lost and won;
+Tell, Heaven has wrath that can relent no more;
+ The Grave, dark deeds that cannot be undone.
+
+We barter life for pottage; sell true bliss
+ For wealth or power, for pleasure or renown;
+Thus, Esau-like, our Father's blessing miss,
+ Then wash with fruitless tears our faded crown.
+
+Our faded crown, despised and flung aside,
+ Shall on some brother's brow immortal bloom;
+No partial hand the blessing may misguide,
+ No flattering fancy change our Monarch's doom:
+
+His righteous doom, that meek true-hearted
+ Love
+ The everlasting birthright should receive,
+The softest dews drop on her from above,
+ The richest green her mountain garland weave:
+
+Her brethren, mightiest, wisest, eldest-born,
+ Bow to her sway, and move at her behest;
+Isaac's fond blessing may not fall on scorn,
+ Nor Balaam's curse on Love, which God hath blest.
+
+
+
+THIRD SUNDAY IN LENT
+
+
+
+When a strong man armed keepeth his place, his goods are in peace;
+but when a stronger than he shall come upon him, and overcome him,
+he taketh from him all his armour wherein he trusted, and divideth
+his spoils. St. Luke xi. 21, 22.
+
+ See Lucifer like lightning fall,
+ Dashed from his throne of pride;
+ While, answering Thy victorious call,
+ The Saints his spoils divide;
+ This world of Thine, by him usurped too long,
+Now opening all her stores to heal Thy servants' wrong.
+
+ So when the first-born of Thy foes
+ Dead in the darkness lay,
+ When Thy redeemed at midnight rose
+ And cast their bonds away,
+ The orphaned realm threw wide her gates, and told
+Into freed Israel's lap her jewels and her gold.
+
+ And when their wondrous march was o'er,
+ And they had won their homes,
+ Where Abraham fed his flock of yore,
+ Among their fathers' tombs; -
+ A land that drinks the rain of Heaven at will,
+Whose waters kiss the feet of many a vine-clad hill; -
+
+ Oft as they watched, at thoughtful eve,
+ A gale from bowers of balm
+ Sweep o'er the billowy corn, and heave
+ The tresses of the palm,
+ Just as the lingering Sun had touched with gold,
+Far o'er the cedar shade, some tower of giants old;
+
+ It was a fearful joy, I ween,
+ To trace the Heathen's toil,
+ The limpid wells, the orchards green,
+ Left ready for the spoil,
+ The household stores untouched, the roses bright
+Wreathed o'er the cottage walls in garlands of delight.
+
+ And now another Canaan yields
+ To Thine all-conquering ark: -
+ Fly from the "old poetic" fields,
+ Ye Paynim shadows dark!
+ Immortal Greece, dear land of glorious lays,
+Lo! here the "unknown God" of thy unconscious praise.
+
+ The olive-wreath, the ivied wand,
+ "The sword in myrtles drest,"
+ Each legend of the shadowy strand
+ Now wakes a vision blest;
+ As little children lisp, and tell of Heaven,
+So thoughts beyond their thought to those high Bards were given.
+
+ And these are ours: Thy partial grace
+ The tempting treasure lends:
+ These relies of a guilty race
+ Are forfeit to Thy friends;
+ What seemed an idol hymn, now breathes of Thee,
+Tuned by Faith's ear to some celestial melody.
+
+ There's not a strain to Memory dear,
+ Nor flower in classic grove,
+ There's not a sweet note warbled here,
+ But minds us of Thy Love.
+ O Lord, our Lord, and spoiler of our foes,
+There is no light but Thine: with Thee all beauty glows.
+
+
+
+FOURTH SUNDAY IN LENT
+
+
+
+Joseph made haste; for his bowels did yearn upon his brother; and
+he sought where to weep, and he entered into his chamber and wept
+there. Genesis xliii. 30.
+
+There stood no man with him, while Joseph made himself known unto
+his brethren. Genesis xlv. 1.
+
+When Nature tries her finest touch,
+ Weaving her vernal wreath,
+Mark ye, how close she veils her round,
+Not to be traced by sight or sound,
+ Nor soiled by ruder breath?
+
+Who ever saw the earliest rose
+ First open her sweet breast?
+Or, when the summer sun goes down,
+The first soft star in evening's crown
+ Light up her gleaming crest?
+
+Fondly we seek the dawning bloom
+ On features wan and fair,
+The gazing eye no change can trace,
+But look away a little space,
+ Then turn, and lo! 'tis there.
+
+But there's a sweeter flower than e'er
+ Blushed on the rosy spray -
+A brighter star, a richer bloom
+Than e'er did western heaven illume
+ At close of summer day.
+
+'Tis Love, the last best gift of Heaven;
+ Love gentle, holy, pure;
+But tenderer than a dove's soft eye,
+The searching sun, the open sky,
+ She never could endure.
+
+E'en human Love will shrink from sight
+ Here in the coarse rude earth:
+How then should rash intruding glance
+Break in upon HER sacred trance
+ Who boasts a heavenly birth?
+
+So still and secret is her growth,
+ Ever the truest heart,
+Where deepest strikes her kindly root
+For hope or joy, for flower or fruit,
+ Least knows its happy part.
+
+God only, and good angels, look
+ Behind the blissful screen -
+As when, triumphant o'er His woes,
+The Son of God by moonlight rose,
+ By all but Heaven unseen:
+
+As when the holy Maid beheld
+ Her risen Son and Lord:
+Thought has not colours half so fair
+That she to paint that hour may dare,
+ In silence best adored.
+
+The gracious Dove, that brought from Heaven
+ The earnest of our bliss,
+Of many a chosen witness telling,
+On many a happy vision dwelling,
+ Sings not a note of this.
+
+So, truest image of the Christ,
+ Old Israel's long-lost son,
+What time, with sweet forgiving cheer,
+He called his conscious brethren near,
+ Would weep with them alone.
+
+He could not trust his melting soul
+ But in his Maker's sight -
+Then why should gentle hearts and true
+Bare to the rude world's withering view
+ Their treasure of delight!
+
+No--let the dainty rose awhile
+ Her bashful fragrance hide -
+Rend not her silken veil too soon,
+But leave her, in her own soft noon,
+ To flourish and abide.
+
+
+
+FIFTH SUNDAY IN LENT
+
+
+
+And Moses said, I will now turn aside, and see this great sight,
+why the bush is not burnt. Exodus iii. 3.
+
+The historic Muse, from age to age,
+Through many a waste heart-sickening page
+ Hath traced the works of Man:
+But a celestial call to-day
+Stays her, like Moses, on her way,
+ The works of God to scan.
+
+Far seen across the sandy wild,
+Where, like a solitary child,
+ He thoughtless roamed and free,
+One towering thorn was wrapt in flame -
+Bright without blaze it went and came:
+ Who would not turn and see?
+
+Along the mountain ledges green
+The scattered sheep at will may glean
+ The Desert's spicy stores:
+The while, with undivided heart,
+The shepherd talks with God apart,
+ And, as he talks, adores.
+
+Ye too, who tend Christ's wildering flock,
+Well may ye gather round the rock
+ That once was Sion's hill:
+To watch the fire upon the mount
+Still blazing, like the solar fount,
+ Yet unconsuming still.
+
+Caught from that blaze by wrath Divine,
+Lost branches of the once-loved vine,
+ Now withered, spent, and sere,
+See Israel's sons, like glowing brands,
+Tossed wildly o'er a thousand lands
+ For twice a thousand year.
+
+God will not quench nor slay them quite,
+But lifts them like a beacon-light
+ The apostate Church to scare;
+Or like pale ghosts that darkling roam,
+Hovering around their ancient home,
+ But find no refuge there.
+
+Ye blessed Angels! if of you
+There be, who love the ways to view
+ Of Kings and Kingdoms here;
+(And sure, 'tis worth an Angel's gaze,
+To see, throughout that dreary maze,
+ God teaching love and fear:)
+
+Oh say, in all the bleak expanse
+Is there a spot to win your glance,
+ So bright, so dark as this?
+A hopeless faith, a homeless race,
+Yet seeking the most holy place,
+ And owning the true bliss!
+
+Salted with fire they seem, to show
+How spirits lost in endless woe
+ May undecaying live.
+Oh, sickening thought! yet hold it fast
+Long as this glittering world shall last,
+ Or sin at heart survive.
+
+And hark! amid the flashing fire,
+Mingling with tones of fear and ire,
+ Soft Mercy's undersong -
+'Tis Abraham's God who speaks so loud,
+His people's cries have pierced the cloud,
+ He sees, He sees their wrong;
+
+He is come down to break their chain;
+Though nevermore on Sion's fane
+ His visible ensign wave;
+'Tis Sion, wheresoe'er they dwell,
+Who, with His own true Israel,
+ Shall own Him strong to save.
+
+He shall redeem them one by one,
+Where'er the world-encircling sun
+ Shall see them meekly kneel:
+All that He asks on Israel's part,
+Is only that the captive heart
+ Its woe and burthen feel.
+
+Gentiles! with fixed yet awful eye
+Turn ye this page of mystery,
+ Nor slight the warning sound:
+"Put off thy shoes from off thy feet -
+The place where man his God shall meet,
+ Be sure, is holy ground."
+
+
+
+PALM SUNDAY
+
+
+
+And He answered and said unto them, I tell you that, if these
+should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out. St.
+Luke xix. 40.
+
+Ye whose hearts are beating high
+With the pulse of Poesy,
+Heirs of more than royal race,
+Framed by Heaven's peculiar grace,
+God's own work to do on earth,
+ (If the word be not too bold,)
+Giving virtue a new birth,
+ And a life that ne'er grows old -
+
+Sovereign masters of all hearts!
+Know ye, who hath set your parts?
+He who gave you breath to sing,
+By whose strength ye sweep the string,
+He hath chosen you, to lead
+ His Hosannas here below; -
+Mount, and claim your glorious meed;
+ Linger not with sin and woe.
+
+But if ye should hold your peace,
+Deem not that the song would cease -
+Angels round His glory-throne,
+Stars, His guiding hand that own,
+Flowers, that grow beneath our feet,
+ Stones in earth's dark womb that rest,
+High and low in choir shall meet,
+ Ere His Name shall be unblest.
+
+Lord, by every minstrel tongue
+Be Thy praise so duly sung,
+That Thine angels' harps may ne'er
+Fail to find fit echoing here:
+We the while, of meaner birth,
+ Who in that divinest spell
+Dare not hope to join on earth,
+ Give us grace to listen well.
+
+But should thankless silence seal
+Lips that might half Heaven reveal,
+Should bards in idol-hymns profane
+The sacred soul-enthralling strain,
+(As in this bad world below
+ Noblest things find vilest using,)
+Then, Thy power and mercy show,
+ In vile things noble breath infusing;
+
+Then waken into sound divine
+The very pavement of Thy shrine,
+Till we, like Heaven's star-sprinkled floor,
+Faintly give back what we adore:
+Childlike though the voices be,
+ And untunable the parts,
+Thou wilt own the minstrelsy
+ If it flow from childlike hearts.
+
+
+
+MONDAY BEFORE EASTER
+
+
+
+Doubtless Thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us,
+and Israel acknowledge us not. Isaiah lxiii. 16.
+
+"Father to me thou art and mother dear,
+ And brother too, kind husband of my heart -
+So speaks Andromache in boding fear,
+ Ere from her last embrace her hero part -
+So evermore, by Faith's undying glow,
+We own the Crucified in weal or woe.
+
+Strange to our ears the church-bells of our home,
+ This fragrance of our old paternal fields
+May be forgotten; and the time may come
+ When the babe's kiss no sense of pleasure yields
+E'en to the doting mother: but Thine own
+Thou never canst forget, nor leave alone.
+
+There are who sigh that no fond heart is theirs,
+ None loves them best--O vain and selfish sigh!
+Out of the bosom of His love He spares -
+ The Father spares the Son, for thee to die:
+For thee He died--for thee He lives again:
+O'er thee He watches in His boundless reign.
+
+Thou art as much His care, as if beside
+ Nor man nor angel lived in Heaven or earth:
+Thus sunbeams pour alike their glorious tide
+ To light up worlds, or wake an insect's mirth:
+They shine and shine with unexhausted store -
+Thou art thy Saviour's darling--seek no more.
+
+On thee and thine, thy warfare and thine end,
+ E'en in His hour of agony He thought,
+When, ere the final pang His soul should rend,
+ The ransomed spirits one by one were brought
+To His mind's eye--two silent nights and days
+In calmness for His far-seen hour He stays.
+
+Ye vaulted cells, where martyred seers of old
+ Far in the rocky walls of Sion sleep,
+Green terraces and arched fountains cold,
+ Where lies the cypress shade so still and deep,
+Dear sacred haunts of glory and of woe,
+Help us, one hour, to trace His musings high and low:
+
+One heart-ennobling hour! It may not be:
+ The unearthly thoughts have passed from earth away,
+And fast as evening sunbeams from the sea
+ Thy footsteps all in Sion's deep decay
+Were blotted from the holy ground: yet dear
+Is every stone of hers; for Thou want surely here.
+
+There is a spot within this sacred dale
+ That felt Thee kneeling--touched Thy prostrate brow:
+One Angel knows it. O might prayer avail
+ To win that knowledge! sure each holy vow
+Less quickly from the unstable soul would fade,
+Offered where Christ in agony was laid.
+
+Might tear of ours once mingle with the blood
+ That from His aching brow by moonlight fell,
+Over the mournful joy our thoughts would brood,
+ Till they had framed within a guardian spell
+To chase repining fancies, as they rise,
+Like birds of evil wing, to mar our sacrifice.
+
+So dreams the heart self-flattering, fondly dreams; -
+ Else wherefore, when the bitter waves o'erflow,
+Miss we the light, Gethsemane, that streams
+ From thy dear name, where in His page of woe
+It shines, a pale kind star in winter's sky?
+Who vainly reads it there, in vain had seen Him die.
+
+
+
+TUESDAY BEFORE EASTER
+
+
+
+They gave Him to drink wine mingled with myrrh: but He received in
+not. St. Mark xv. 23.
+
+"Fill high the bowl, and spice it well, and pour
+The dews oblivious: for the Cross is sharp,
+ The Cross is sharp, and He
+ Is tenderer than a lamb.
+
+"He wept by Lazarus' grave--how will He bear
+This bed of anguish? and His pale weak form
+ Is worn with many a watch
+ Of sorrow and unrest.
+
+"His sweat last night was as great drops of blood,
+And the sad burthen pressed Him so to earth,
+ The very torturers paused
+ To help Him on His way.
+
+"Fill high the bowl, benumb His aching sense
+With medicined sleep."--O awful in Thy woe!
+ The parching thirst of death
+ Is on Thee, and Thou triest
+
+The slumb'rous potion bland, and wilt not drink:
+Not sullen, nor in scorn, like haughty man
+ With suicidal hand
+ Putting his solace by:
+
+But as at first Thine all-pervading look
+Saw from Thy Father's bosom to the abyss
+ Measuring in calm presage
+ The infinite descent;
+
+So to the end, though now of mortal pangs
+Made heir, and emptied of Thy glory, awhile,
+ With unaverted eye
+ Thou meetest all the storm.
+
+Thou wilt feel all, that Thou mayst pity all;
+And rather wouldst Thou wreathe with strong pain,
+ Than overcloud Thy soul,
+ So clear in agony,
+
+Or lose one glimpse of Heaven before the time
+O most entire and perfect sacrifice,
+ Renewed in every pulse
+ That on the tedious Cross
+
+Told the long hours of death, as, one by one,
+The life-strings of that tender heart gave way;
+ E'en sinners, taught by Thee,
+ Look Sorrow in the face,
+
+And bid her freely welcome, unbeguiled
+By false kind solaces, and spells of earth:-
+ And yet not all unsoothed;
+ For when was Joy so dear,
+
+As the deep calm that breathed, "Father, forgive,"
+Or, "Be with Me in Paradise to-day?"
+ And, though the strife be sore,
+ Yet in His parting breath
+
+Love masters Agony; the soul that seemed
+Forsaken, feels her present God again,
+ And in her Father's arms
+ Contented dies away.
+
+
+
+WEDNESDAY BEFORE EASTER
+
+
+
+Saying, Father, if Thou be willing, remove this cup from Me;
+nevertheless not My will, but Thine, be done. St. Luke xxii. 42.
+
+O Lord my God, do thou Thy holy will -
+ I will lie still -
+I will not stir, lest I forsake Thine arm,
+ And break the charm
+Which lulls me, clinging to my Father's breast,
+ In perfect rest.
+
+Wild fancy, peace! thou must not me beguile
+ With thy false smile:
+I know thy flatteries and thy cheating ways;
+ Be silent, Praise,
+Blind guide with siren voice, and blinding all
+ That hear thy call.
+
+Come, Self-devotion, high and pure,
+Thoughts that in thankfulness endure,
+Though dearest hopes are faithless found,
+And dearest hearts are bursting round.
+Come, Resignation, spirit meek,
+And let me kiss thy placid cheek,
+And read in thy pale eye serene
+Their blessing, who by faith can wean
+Their hearts from sense, and learn to love
+God only, and the joys above.
+
+They say, who know the life divine,
+And upward gaze with eagle eyne,
+That by each golden crown on high,
+Rich with celestial jewelry,
+Which for our Lord's redeemed is set,
+There hangs a radiant coronet,
+All gemmed with pure and living light,
+Too dazzling for a sinner's sight,
+Prepared for virgin souls, and them
+Who seek the martyr's diadem.
+
+Nor deem, who to that bliss aspire,
+Must win their way through blood and fire.
+The writhings of a wounded heart
+Are fiercer than a foeman's dart.
+Oft in Life's stillest shade reclining,
+In Desolation unrepining,
+Without a hope on earth to find
+A mirror in an answering mind,
+Meek souls there are, who little dream
+Their daily strife an Angel's theme,
+Or that the rod they take so calm
+Shall prove in Heaven a martyr's palm.
+
+And there are souls that seem to dwell
+Above this earth--so rich a spell
+Floats round their steps, where'er they move,
+From hopes fulfilled and mutual love.
+Such, if on high their thoughts are set,
+Nor in the stream the source forget,
+If prompt to quit the bliss they know,
+Following the Lamb where'er He go,
+By purest pleasures unbeguiled
+To idolise or wife or child;
+Such wedded souls our God shall own
+For faultless virgins round His throne.
+
+Thus everywhere we find our suffering God,
+ And where He trod
+May set our steps: the Cross on Calvary
+ Uplifted high
+Beams on the martyr host, a beacon light
+ In open fight.
+
+To the still wrestlings of the lonely heart
+ He doth impart
+The virtue of his midnight agony,
+ When none was nigh,
+Save God and one good angel, to assuage
+ The tempest's rage.
+
+Mortal! if life smile on thee, and thou find
+ All to thy mind,
+Think, who did once from Heaven to Hell descend,
+ Thee to befriend:
+So shalt thou dare forego, at His dear call,
+ Thy best, thine all.
+
+"O Father! not My will, but Thine be done" -
+ So spake the Son.
+Be this our charm, mellowing Earth's ruder noise
+ Of griefs and joys:
+That we may cling for ever to Thy breast
+ In perfect rest!
+
+
+
+THURSDAY BEFORE EASTER
+
+
+
+As the beginning of thy supplications the commandment came forth,
+and I am come to shew thee; for thou art greatly beloved:
+therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision. Daniel
+ix. 23.
+
+ "O Holy mountain of my God,
+ How do thy towers in ruin lie,
+ How art thou riven and strewn abroad,
+ Under the rude and wasteful sky!"
+ 'Twas thus upon his fasting-day
+ The "Man of Loves" was fain to pray,
+ His lattice open toward his darling west,
+Mourning the ruined home he still must love the best.
+
+ Oh! for a love like Daniel's now,
+ To wing to Heaven but one strong prayer
+ For GOD'S new Israel, sunk as low,
+ Yet flourishing to sight as fair,
+ As Sion in her height of pride,
+ With queens for handmaids at her side,
+ With kings her nursing-fathers, throned high,
+And compassed with the world's too tempting blazonry.
+
+ 'Tis true, nor winter stays thy growth,
+ Nor torrid summer's sickly smile;
+ The flashing billows of the south
+ Break not upon so lone an isle,
+ But thou, rich vine, art grafted there,
+ The fruit of death or life to bear,
+ Yielding a surer witness every day,
+To thine Almighty Author and His steadfast sway.
+
+ Oh! grief to think, that grapes of gall
+ Should cluster round thine healthiest shoot!
+ God's herald prove a heartless thrall,
+ Who, if he dared, would fain be mute!
+ E'en such is this bad world we see,
+ Which self-condemned in owning Thee,
+ Yet dares not open farewell of Thee take,
+For very pride, and her high-boasted Reason's sake.
+
+ What do we then? if far and wide
+ Men kneel to CHRIST, the pure and meek,
+ Yet rage with passion, swell with pride,
+ Have we not still our faith to seek?
+ Nay--but in steadfast humbleness
+ Kneel on to Him, who loves to bless
+ The prayer that waits for him; and trembling strive
+To keep the lingering flame in thine own breast alive.
+
+ Dark frowned the future e'en on him,
+ The loving and beloved Seer,
+ What time he saw, through shadows dim,
+ The boundary of th' eternal year;
+ He only of the sons of men
+ Named to be heir of glory then.
+ Else had it bruised too sore his tender heart
+To see GOD'S ransomed world in wrath and flame depart
+
+ Then look no more: or closer watch
+ Thy course in Earth's bewildering ways,
+ For every glimpse thine eye can catch
+ Of what shall be in those dread days:
+ So when th' Archangel's word is spoken,
+ And Death's deep trance for ever broken,
+ In mercy thou mayst feel the heavenly hand,
+And in thy lot unharmed before thy Savour stand.
+
+
+
+GOOD FRIDAY
+
+
+
+He is despised and rejected of men. Isaiah liii. 3.
+
+ Is it not strange, the darkest hour
+ That ever dawned on sinful earth
+ Should touch the heart with softer power
+ For comfort than an angel's mirth?
+That to the Cross the mourner's eye should turn
+Sooner than where the stars of Christmas burn?
+
+ Sooner than where the Easter sun
+ Shines glorious on yon open grave,
+ And to and fro the tidings run,
+ "Who died to heal, is risen to save?"
+Sooner than where upon the Saviour's friends
+The very Comforter in light and love descends?
+
+ Yet so it is: for duly there
+ The bitter herbs of earth are set,
+ Till tempered by the Saviour's prayer,
+ And with the Saviour's life-blood wet,
+They turn to sweetness, and drop holy balm,
+Soft as imprisoned martyr's deathbed calm.
+
+ All turn to sweet--but most of all
+ That bitterest to the lip of pride,
+ When hopes presumptuous fade and fall,
+ Or Friendship scorns us, duly tried,
+Or Love, the flower that closes up for fear
+When rude and selfish spirits breathe too near.
+
+ Then like a long-forgotten strain
+ Comes sweeping o'er the heart forlorn
+ What sunshine hours had taught in vain
+ Of JESUS suffering shame and scorn,
+As in all lowly hearts he suffers still,
+While we triumphant ride and have the world at will.
+
+ His pierced hands in vain would hide
+ His face from rude reproachful gaze,
+ His ears are open to abide
+ The wildest storm the tongue can raise,
+He who with one rough word, some early day,
+Their idol world and them shall sweep for aye away.
+
+ But we by Fancy may assuage
+ The festering sore by Fancy made,
+ Down in some lonely hermitage
+ Like wounded pilgrims safely laid,
+Where gentlest breezes whisper souls distressed,
+That Love yet lives, and Patience shall find rest.
+
+ O! shame beyond the bitterest thought
+ That evil spirit ever framed,
+ That sinners know what Jesus wrought,
+ Yet feel their haughty hearts untamed -
+That souls in refuge, holding by the Cross,
+Should wince and fret at this world's little loss.
+
+ Lord of my heart, by Thy last cry,
+ Let not Thy blood on earth be spent -
+ Lo, at Thy feet I fainting lie,
+ Mine eyes upon Thy wounds are bent,
+Upon Thy streaming wounds my weary eyes
+Wait like the parched earth on April skies.
+
+ Wash me, and dry these bitter tears,
+ O let my heart no further roam,
+ 'Tis Thine by vows, and hopes, and fears.
+ Long since--O call Thy wanderer home;
+To that dear home, safe in Thy wounded side,
+Where only broken hearts their sin and shame may hide.
+
+
+
+EASTER EVE.
+
+
+
+As for thee also, by the blood of thy covenant I have sent forth
+thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water. Zechariah ix.
+11.
+
+ At length the worst is o'er, and Thou art laid
+ Deep in Thy darksome bed;
+ All still and cold beneath yon dreary stone
+ Thy sacred form is gone;
+ Around those lips where power and mercy hung,
+ The dews of deaths have clung;
+ The dull earth o'er Thee, and Thy foes around,
+Thou sleep'st a silent corse, in funeral fetters wound.
+
+ Sleep'st Thou indeed? or is Thy spirit fled,
+ At large among the dead?
+ Whether in Eden bowers Thy welcome voice
+ Wake Abraham to rejoice,
+ Or in some drearier scene Thine eye controls
+ The thronging band of souls;
+ That, as Thy blood won earth, Thine agony
+Might set the shadowy realm from sin and sorrow free.
+
+ Where'er Thou roam'st, one happy soul, we know,
+ Seen at Thy side in woe,
+ Waits on Thy triumphs--even as all the blest
+ With him and Thee shall rest.
+ Each on his cross; by Thee we hang a while,
+ Watching Thy patient smile,
+ Till we have learned to say, "'Tis justly done,
+Only in glory, LORD, Thy sinful servant own."
+
+ Soon wilt Thou take us to Thy tranquil bower
+ To rest one little hour,
+ Till Thine elect are numbered, and the grave
+ Call Thee to come and save:
+ Then on Thy bosom borne shall we descend
+ Again with earth to blend,
+ Earth all refined with bright supernal fires,
+Tinctured with holy blood, and winged with pure desires.
+
+ Meanwhile with every son and saint of Thine
+ Along the glorious line,
+ Sitting by turns beneath Thy sacred feet
+ We'll hold communion sweet,
+ Know them by look and voice, and thank them all
+ For helping us in thrall,
+ For words of hope, and bright examples given
+To show through moonless skies that there is light in Heaven.
+
+ O come that day, when in this restless heart
+ Earth shall resign her part,
+ When in the grave with Thee my limbs shall rest,
+ My soul with Thee be blest!
+ But stay, presumptuous--CHRIST with Thee abides
+ In the rock's dreary sides:
+ He from this stone will wring Celestial dew
+If but this prisoner's heart he faithful found and true.
+
+ When tears are spent, and then art left alone
+ With ghosts of blessings gone,
+ Think thou art taken from the cross, and laid
+ In JESUS' burial shade;
+ Take Moses' rod, the rod of prayer, and call
+ Out of the rocky wall
+ The fount of holy blood; and lift on high
+Thy grovelling soul that feels so desolate and dry.
+
+ Prisoner of Hope thou art--look up and sing
+ In hope of promised spring.
+ As in the pit his father's darling lay
+ Beside the desert way,
+ And knew not how, but knew his GOD would save
+ E'en from that living grave,
+ So, buried with our LORD, we'll chose our eyes
+To the decaying world, till Angels bid us rise.
+
+
+
+EASTER DAY
+
+
+
+And as they were afraid, and bowed down their faces to the earth,
+they said unto them, Why seek ye the living among the dead? He is
+not here, but is risen. St. Luke xxiv. 5, 6.
+
+Oh! day of days! shall hearts set free
+No "minstrel rapture" find for thee?
+Thou art this Sun of other days,
+They shine by giving back thy rays:
+
+Enthroned in thy sovereign sphere,
+Thou shedd'st thy light on all the year;
+Sundays by thee more glorious break,
+An Easter Day in every week:
+
+And week days, following in their train,
+The fulness of thy blessing gain,
+Till all, both resting soil employ,
+Be one Lord's day of holy joy.
+
+Then wake, my soul, to high desires,
+And earlier light thine altar fires:
+The World some hours is on her way,
+Nor thinks on thee, thou blessed day:
+
+Or, if she think, it is in scorn:
+The vernal light of Easter morn
+To her dark gaze no brighter seems
+Than Reason's or the Law's pale beams.
+
+"Where is your Lord?" she scornful asks:
+"Where is His hire? we know his tasks;
+Sons of a King ye boast to be:
+Let us your crowns and treasures see."
+
+We in the words of Truth reply,
+(An angel brought them from this sky,)
+"Our crown, our treasure is not here,
+'Tis stored above the highest sphere:
+
+"Methinks your wisdom guides amiss,
+To seek on earth a Christian's bliss;
+We watch not now the lifeless stone;
+Our only Lord is risen and gone."
+
+Yet e'en the lifeless stone is dear
+For thoughts of Him who late lay here;
+And the base world, now Christ hath died,
+Ennobled is and glorified.
+
+No more a charnel-house, to fence
+The relics of lost innocence,
+A vault of ruin and decay;
+Th' imprisoning stone is rolled away:
+
+'Tis now a cell, where angels use
+To come and go with heavenly news,
+And in the ears of mourners say,
+"Come, see the place where Jesus lay:"
+
+'Tis now a fane, where Love can find
+Christ everywhere embalmed and shined:
+Aye gathering up memorials sweet,
+Where'er she sets her duteous feet.
+
+Oh! joy to Mary first allowed,
+When roused from weeping o'er His shroud,
+By His own calm, soul-soothing tone,
+Breathing her name, as still His own!
+
+Joy to the faithful Three renewed,
+As their glad errand they pursued!
+Happy, who so Christ's word convey,
+That he may meet them on their way!
+
+So is it still: to holy tears,
+In lonely hours, Christ risen appears:
+In social hours, who Christ would see
+Must turn all tasks to Charity.
+
+
+
+MONDAY IN EASTER WEEK
+
+
+
+Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons: but in
+every nation he that feareth Him, and worketh righteousness, is
+accepted with Him. Acts x. 34, 35.
+
+Go up and watch the new-born rill
+ Just trickling from its mossy bed,
+ Streaking the heath-clad hill
+ With a bright emerald thread.
+
+Canst thou her bold career foretell,
+ What rocks she shall o'erleap or rend,
+ How far in Ocean's swell
+ Her freshening billows send?
+
+Perchance that little brook shall flow
+ The bulwark of some mighty realm,
+ Bear navies to and fro
+ With monarchs at their helm.
+
+Or canst thou guess, how far away
+ Some sister nymph, beside her urn
+ Reclining night and day,
+ 'Mid reeds and mountain fern,
+
+Nurses her store, with thine to blend
+ When many a moor and glen are past,
+ Then in the wide sea end
+ Their spotless lives at last?
+
+E'en so, the course of prayer who knows?
+ It springs in silence where it will,
+ Springs out of sight, and flows
+ At first a lonely rill:
+
+But streams shall meet it by and by
+ From thousand sympathetic hearts,
+ Together swelling high
+ Their chant of many parts.
+
+Unheard by all but angel ears
+ The good Cornelius knelt alone,
+ Nor dreamed his prayers and tears
+ Would help a world undone.
+
+The while upon his terraced roof
+ The loved Apostle to his Lord
+ In silent thought aloof
+ For heavenly vision soared.
+
+Far o'er the glowing western main
+ His wistful brow was upward raised,
+ Where, like an angel's train,
+ The burnished water blazed.
+
+The saint beside the ocean prayed,
+ This soldier in his chosen bower,
+ Where all his eye surveyed
+ Seemed sacred in that hour.
+
+To each unknown his brother's prayer,
+ Yet brethren true in dearest love
+ Were they--and now they share
+ Fraternal joys above.
+
+There daily through Christ's open gate
+ They see the Gentile spirits press,
+ Brightening their high estate
+ With dearer happiness.
+
+What civic wreath for comrades saved
+ Shone ever with such deathless gleam,
+ Or when did perils braved
+ So sweet to veterans seem?
+
+
+
+TUESDAY IN EASTER WEEK
+
+
+
+And they departed quickly from the sepulchre with fear and great
+joy, and did run to bring His disciples word. St. Matthew xxviii.
+8.
+
+TO THE SNOWDROP.
+
+Thou first-born of the year's delight,
+ Pride of the dewy glade,
+In vernal green and virgin white,
+ Thy vestal robes, arrayed:
+
+'Tis not because thy drooping form
+ Sinks graceful on its nest,
+When chilly shades from gathering storm
+ Affright thy tender breast;
+
+Nor for yon river islet wild
+ Beneath the willow spray,
+Where, like the ringlets of a child,
+ Thou weav'st thy circle gay;
+
+'Tis not for these I love thee dear -
+ Thy shy averted smiles
+To Fancy bode a joyous year,
+ One of Life's fairy isles.
+
+They twinkle to the wintry moon,
+ And cheer th' ungenial day,
+And tell us, all will glisten soon
+ As green and bright as they.
+
+Is there a heart that loves the spring,
+ Their witness can refuse?
+Yet mortals doubt, when angels bring
+ From Heaven their Easter news:
+
+When holy maids and matrons speak
+ Of Christ's forsaken bed,
+And voices, that forbid to seek
+ The hiving 'mid the dead,
+
+And when they say, "Turn, wandering heart,
+ Thy Lord is ris'n indeed,
+Let Pleasure go, put Care apart,
+ And to His presence speed;"
+
+We smile in scorn: and yet we know
+ They early sought the tomb,
+Their hearts, that now so freshly glow,
+ Lost in desponding gloom.
+
+They who have sought, nor hope to find,
+ Wear not so bright a glance:
+They, who have won their earthly mind,
+ Lees reverently advance.
+
+But where in gentle spirits, fear
+ And joy so duly meet,
+These sure have seen the angels near,
+ And kissed the Saviour's feet.
+
+Nor let the Pastor's thankful eye
+ Their faltering tale disdain,
+As on their lowly couch they lie,
+ Prisoners of want and pain.
+
+O guide us, when our faithless hearts
+ From Thee would start aloof,
+Where Patience her sweet skill imparts
+ Beneath some cottage roof:
+
+Revive our dying fires, to burn
+ High as her anthems soar,
+And of our scholars let us learn
+ Our own forgotten lore.
+
+
+
+FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EASTER
+
+
+
+Seemeth it but a small thing unto you, that the God of Israel hath
+separated you from the congregation of Israel, to bring you near to
+Himself? Numbers xvi. 9.
+
+First Father of the holy seed,
+If yet, invoked in hour of need,
+ Thou count me for Thine own
+Not quite an outcast if I prove,
+(Thou joy'st in miracles of love),
+ Hear, from Thy mercy-throne!
+
+Upon Thine altar's horn of gold
+Help me to lay my trembling hold,
+ Though stained with Christian gore; -
+The blood of souls by Thee redeemed,
+But, while I roved or idly dreamed,
+ Lost to be found no more.
+
+For oft, when summer leaves were bright,
+And every flower was bathed in light,
+ In sunshine moments past,
+My wilful heart would burst away
+From where the holy shadow lay,
+ Where heaven my lot had cast.
+
+I thought it scorn with Thee to dwell,
+A Hermit in a silent cell,
+ While, gaily sweeping by,
+Wild Fancy blew his bugle strain,
+And marshalled all his gallant train
+ In the world's wondering eye.
+
+I would have joined him--but as oft
+Thy whispered warnings, kind and soft,
+ My better soul confessed.
+"My servant, let the world alone -
+Safe on the steps of Jesus' throne
+ Be tranquil and be blest."
+
+"Seems it to thee a niggard hand
+That nearest Heaven has bade thee stand,
+ The ark to touch and bear,
+With incense of pure heart's desire
+To heap the censer's sacred fire,
+ The snow-white Ephod wear?"
+
+Why should we crave the worldling's wreath,
+On whom the Savour deigned to breathe,
+ To whom His keys were given,
+Who lead the choir where angels meet,
+With angels' food our brethren greet,
+ And pour the drink of Heaven?
+
+When sorrow all our heart would ask,
+We need not shun our daily task,
+ And hide ourselves for calm;
+The herbs we seek to heal our woe
+Familiar by our pathway grow,
+ Our common air is balm.
+
+Around each pure domestic shrine
+Bright flowers of Eden bloom and twine,
+ Our hearths are altars all;
+The prayers of hungry souls and poor,
+Like armed angels at the door,
+ Our unseen foes appal.
+
+Alms all around and hymns within -
+What evil eye can entrance win
+ Where guards like these abound?
+If chance some heedless heart should roam,
+Sure, thought of these will lure it home
+ Ere lost in Folly's round.
+
+O joys, that sweetest in decay,
+Fall not, like withered leaves, away,
+ But with the silent breath
+Of violets drooping one by one,
+Soon as their fragrant task is done,
+ Are wafted high in death!
+
+
+
+SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EASTER
+
+
+
+He hath said, which heard the words of God, and knew the knowledge
+of the Most High, which saw the vision of the Almighty, falling
+into a trance, but having his eyes open: I shall see Him, but not
+now; I shall behold Him, but not nigh; there shall come a Star out
+at Jacob, and a Sceptre shall rise out of Israel, and shall smite
+the corners of Moab, and destroy all the children at Sheth.
+Numbers xxiv. 16, 17.
+
+ O for a sculptor's hand,
+ That thou might'st take thy stand,
+Thy wild hair floating on the eastern breeze,
+ Thy tranced yet open gaze
+ Fixed on the desert haze,
+As one who deep in heaven some airy pageant sees.
+
+ In outline dim and vast
+ Their fearful shadows cast
+This giant forms of empires on their way
+ To ruin: one by one
+ They tower and they are gone,
+Yet in the Prophet's soul the dreams of avarice stay.
+
+ No sun or star so bright
+ In all the world of light
+That they should draw to Heaven his downward eye:
+ He hears th' Almighty's word,
+ He sees the angel's sword,
+Yet low upon the earth his heart and treasure lie.
+
+ Lo! from you argent field,
+ To him and us revealed,
+One gentle Star glides down, on earth to dwell.
+ Chained as they are below
+ Our eyes may see it glow,
+And as it mounts again, may track its brightness well.
+
+ To him it glared afar,
+ A token of wild war,
+The banner of his Lord's victorious wrath:
+ But close to us it gleams,
+ Its soothing lustre streams
+Around our home's green walls, and on our church-way path.
+
+ We in the tents abide
+ Which he at distance eyed
+Like goodly cedars by the waters spread,
+ While seven red altar-fires
+ Rose up in wavy spires,
+Where on the mount he watched his sorceries dark and dread.
+
+ He watched till morning's ray
+ On lake and meadow lay,
+And willow-shaded streams that silent sweep
+ Around the bannered lines,
+ Where by their several signs
+The desert-wearied tribes in sight of Canaan sleep.
+
+ He watched till knowledge came
+ Upon his soul like flame,
+Not of those magic fires at random caught:
+ But true Prophetic light
+ Flashed o'er him, high and bright,
+Flashed once, and died away, and left his darkened thought.
+
+ And can he choose but fear,
+ Who feels his GOD so near,
+That when he fain would curse, his powerless tongue
+ In blessing only moves? -
+ Alas! the world he loves
+Too close around his heart her tangling veil hath flung.
+
+ Sceptre and Star divine,
+ Who in Thine inmost shrine
+Hash made us worshippers, O claim Thine own;
+ More than Thy seers we know -
+ O teach our love to grow
+Up to Thy heavenly light, and reap what Thou hast sown.
+
+
+
+THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EASTER
+
+
+
+A woman when she is in travail hath sorrow, because her hour is
+come; but as soon as she is delivered of the child, she remembereth
+no more the anguish, for joy that a man is born into the world.
+St. John xvi. 21.
+
+ Well may I guess and feel
+ Why Autumn should be sad;
+ But vernal airs should sorrow heal,
+ Spring should be gay and glad:
+ Yet as along this violet bank I rove,
+ The languid sweetness seems to choke my breath,
+ I sit me down beside the hazel grove,
+And sigh, and half could wish my weariness were death.
+
+ Like a bright veering cloud
+ Grey blossoms twinkle there,
+ Warbles around a busy crowd
+ Of larks in purest air.
+ Shame on the heart that dreams of blessings gone,
+ Or wakes the spectral forms of woe and crime,
+ When nature sings of joy and hope alone,
+Reading her cheerful lesson in her own sweet time.
+
+ Nor let the proud heart say,
+ In her self-torturing hour,
+ The travail pangs must have their way,
+ The aching brow must lower.
+ To us long since the glorious Child is born
+ Our throes should be forgot, or only seem
+ Like a sad vision told for joy at morn,
+For joy that we have waked and found it but a dream.
+
+ Mysterious to all thought
+ A mother's prime of bliss,
+ When to her eager lips is brought
+ Her infant's thrilling kiss.
+ O never shall it set, the sacred light
+ Which dawns that moment on her tender gaze,
+ In the eternal distance blending bright
+Her darling's hope and hers, for love and joy and praise.
+
+ No need for her to weep
+ Like Thracian wives of yore,
+ Save when in rapture still and deep
+ Her thankful heart runs o'er.
+ They mourned to trust their treasure on the main,
+ Sure of the storm, unknowing of their guide:
+ Welcome to her the peril and the pain,
+For well she knows the bonus where they may safely hide.
+
+ She joys that one is born
+ Into a world forgiven,
+ Her Father's household to adorn,
+ And dwell with her in Heaven.
+ So have I seen, in Spring's bewitching hour,
+ When the glad Earth is offering all her best,
+ Some gentle maid bend o'er a cherished flower,
+And wish it worthier on a Parent's heart to rest.
+
+
+
+FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EASTER
+
+
+
+Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I
+go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto
+you; but if I depart, I will send Him unto you. St. John xvi 7.
+
+My Saviour, can it ever be
+That I should gain by losing Thee?
+The watchful mother tarries nigh,
+Though sleep have closed her infant's eye;
+For should he wake, and find her gone.
+She knows she could not bear his moan.
+But I am weaker than a child,
+ And Thou art more than mother dear;
+Without Thee Heaven were but a wild;
+ How can I live without Thee here!
+
+"'Tis good for you, that I should go,
+"You lingering yet awhile below;" -
+'Tis Thine own gracious promise, Lord!
+Thy saints have proved the faithful word,
+When heaven's bright boundless avenue
+Far opened on their eager view,
+And homeward to Thy Father's throne,
+ Still lessening, brightening on their sight,
+Thy shadowy car went soaring on;
+ They tracked Thee up th' abyss of light.
+
+Thou bidd'st rejoice; they dare not mourn,
+But to their home in gladness turn,
+Their home and God's, that favoured place,
+Where still He shines on Abraham's race,
+In prayers and blessings there to wait
+Like suppliants at their Monarch's gate,
+Who bent with bounty rare to aid
+ The splendours of His crowning day,
+Keeps back awhile His largess, made
+ More welcome for that brief delay:
+
+In doubt they wait, but not unblest;
+They doubt not of their Master's rest,
+Nor of the gracious will of Heaven -
+Who gave His Son, sure all has given -
+But in ecstatic awe they muse
+What course the genial stream may choose,
+And far and wide their fancies rove,
+ And to their height of wonder strain,
+What secret miracle of love
+ Should make their Saviour's going gain.
+
+The days of hope and prayer are past,
+The day of comfort dawns at last,
+The everlasting gates again
+Roll back, and, lo! a royal train -
+From the far depth of light once more
+The floods of glory earthward pour:
+They part like shower-drops in mid air,
+ But ne'er so soft fell noon-tide shower,
+Nor evening rainbow gleamed so fair
+ To weary swains in parched bower.
+
+Swiftly and straight each tongue of flame
+Through cloud and breeze unwavering came,
+And darted to its place of rest
+On some meek brow of Jesus blest.
+Nor fades it yet, that living gleam,
+And still those lambent lightnings stream;
+Where'er the Lord is, there are they;
+ In every heart that gives them room,
+They light His altar every day,
+ Zeal to inflame, and vice consume.
+
+Soft as the plumes of Jesus' Dove
+They nurse the soul to heavenly love;
+The struggling spark of good within,
+Just smothered in the strife of sin,
+They quicken to a timely glow,
+The pure flame spreading high and low.
+Said I, that prayer and hope were o'er?
+ Nay, blessed Spirit! but by Thee
+The Church's prayer finds wings to soar,
+ The Church's hope finds eyes to see.
+
+Then, fainting soul, arise and sing;
+Mount, but be sober on the wing;
+Mount up, for Heaven is won by prayer,
+Be sober, for thou art not there;
+Till Death the weary spirit free,
+Thy God hath said, 'Tis good for thee
+To walk by faith and not by sight:
+ Take it on trust a little while;
+Soon shalt thou read the mystery right
+ In the full sunshine of His smile.
+
+Or if thou yet more knowledge crave,
+Ask thine own heart, that willing slave
+To all that works thee woe or harm
+Shouldst thou not need some mighty charm
+To win thee to thy Saviour's side,
+Though He had deigned with thee to bide?
+The Spirit must stir the darkling deep,
+ The Dove must settle on the Cross,
+Else we should all sin on or sleep
+ With Christ in sight, turning our gain to loss.
+
+
+
+FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER EASTER--ROGATION SUNDAY
+
+
+
+And the Lord was very angry with Aaron to have destroyed him: and
+I prayed for Aaron also the same time. Deuteronomy ix. 20.
+
+Now is there solemn pause in earth and heaven;
+ The Conqueror now
+ His bonds hath riven,
+And Angels wonder why He stays below:
+ Yet hath not man his lesson learned,
+ How endless love should be returned.
+
+Deep is the silence as of summer noon,
+ When a soft shower
+ Will trickle soon,
+A gracious rain, freshening the weary bower -
+ O sweetly then far off is heard
+ The clear note of some lonely bird.
+
+So let Thy turtle-dove's sad call arise
+ In doubt and fear
+ Through darkening skies,
+And pierce, O Lord, Thy justly-sealed ear,
+ Where on the house-top, all night long
+ She trills her widowed, faltering song.
+
+Teach her to know and love her hour of prayer,
+ And evermore,
+ As faith grows rare,
+Unlock her heart, and offer all its store
+ In holier love and humbler vows,
+ As suits a lost returning spouse.
+
+Not as at first, but with intenser cry,
+ Upon the mount
+ She now must lie,
+Till Thy dear love to blot the sad account
+ Of her rebellious race be won,
+ Pitying the mother in the son.
+
+But chiefly (for she knows Thee angered worst
+ By holiest things
+ Profaned and curst),
+Chiefly for Aaron's seed she spreads her wings,
+ If but one leaf she may from Thee
+ Win of the reconciling tree.
+
+For what shall heal, when holy water banes!
+ Or who may guide
+ O'er desert plains
+Thy loved yet sinful people wandering wide,
+ If Aaron's hand unshrinking mould
+ An idol form of earthly gold?
+
+Therefore her tears are bitter, and as deep
+ Her boding sigh,
+ As, while men sleep,
+Sad-hearted mothers heave, that wakeful lie,
+ To muse upon some darling child
+ Roaming in youth's uncertain wild.
+
+Therefore on fearful dreams her inward sight
+ Is fain to dwell -
+ What lurid light
+Shall the last darkness of the world dispel,
+ The Mediator in His wrath
+ Descending down the lightning's path.
+
+Yet, yet awhile, offended Saviour, pause,
+ In act to break
+ Thine outraged laws,
+O spare Thy rebels for Thine own dear sake;
+ Withdraw Thine hand, nor dash to earth
+ The covenant of our second birth.
+
+'Tis forfeit like the first--we own it all -
+ Yet for love's sake
+ Let it not fall;
+But at Thy touch let veiled hearts awake,
+ That nearest to Thine altar lie,
+ Yet least of holy things descry.
+
+Teacher of teachers! Priest of priests! from Thee
+ The sweet strong prayer
+ Must rise, to free
+First Levi, then all Israel, from the snare.
+ Thou art our Moses out of sight -
+ Speak for us, or we perish quite.
+
+
+
+ASCENSION DAY
+
+
+
+Why stand ye gazing up into Heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken
+up from you into Heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have
+seen Him go into Heaven. Acts i. 11
+
+ Soft cloud, that while the breeze of May
+Chants her glad matins in the leafy arch,
+ Draw'st thy bright veil across the heavenly way
+Meet pavement for an angel's glorious march:
+
+ My soul is envious of mine eye,
+That it should soar and glide with thee so fast,
+ The while my grovelling thoughts half buried lie,
+Or lawless roam around this earthly waste.
+
+ Chains of my heart, avaunt I say -
+I will arise, and in the strength of love
+ Pursue the bright track ere it fade away,
+My Saviour's pathway to His home above.
+
+ Sure, when I reach the point where earth
+Melts into nothing from th' uncumbered sight,
+ Heaven will o'ercome th' attraction of my birth.
+And I shall sink in yonder sea of light:
+
+ Till resting by th' incarnate LORD,
+Once bleeding, now triumphant for my sake,
+ I mark Him, how by seraph hosts adored,
+He to earth's lowest cares is still awake.
+
+ The sun and every vassal star,
+All space, beyond the soar of angel wings,
+ Wait on His word: and yet He stays His car
+For every sigh a contrite suppliant brings.
+
+ He listens to the silent tear
+For all the anthems of the boundless sky -
+ And shall our dreams of music bar our ear
+To His soul-piercing voice for ever nigh?
+
+ Nay, gracious Saviour--but as now
+Our thoughts have traced Thee to Thy glory-throne
+ So help us evermore with thee to bow
+Where human sorrow breathes her lowly moan.
+
+ We must not stand to gaze too long,
+Though on unfolding Heaven our gaze we bend
+ Where lost behind the bright angelic throng
+We see CHRIST'S entering triumph slow ascend.
+
+ No fear but we shall soon behold,
+Faster than now it fades, that gleam revive,
+ When issuing from his cloud of fiery gold
+Our wasted frames feel the true sun, and live.
+
+ Then shall we see Thee as Thou art,
+For ever fixed in no unfruitful gaze,
+ But such as lifts the new-created heart,
+Age after age, in worthier love and praise.
+
+
+
+SUNDAY AFTER ASCENSION
+
+
+
+As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same one
+to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. 1 St.
+Peter iv. 10.
+
+The Earth that in her genial breast
+Makes for the down a kindly nest,
+Where wafted by the warm south-west
+ It floats at pleasure,
+Yields, thankful, of her very best,
+ To nurse her treasure:
+
+True to her trust, tree, herb, or reed,
+She renders for each scattered seed,
+And to her Lord with duteous heed
+ Gives large increase:
+Thus year by year she works unfeed,
+ And will not cease.
+
+Woe worth these barren hearts of ours,
+Where Thou hast set celestial flowers,
+And watered with more balmy showers
+ Than e'er distilled
+In Eden, on th' ambrosial bowers -
+ Yet nought we yield.
+
+Largely Thou givest, gracious Lord,
+Largely Thy gifts should be restored;
+Freely Thou givest, and Thy word
+ Is, "Freely give."
+He only, who forgets to hoard,
+ Has learned to live.
+
+Wisely Thou givest--all around
+Thine equal rays are resting found,
+Yet varying so on various ground
+ They pierce and strike,
+That not two roseate cups are crowned
+ With drew alike:
+
+E'en so, in silence, likest Thee,
+Steals on soft-handed Charity,
+Tempering her gifts, that seem so free,
+ By time and place,
+Till not a woe the bleak world see,
+ But finds her grace:
+
+Eyes to the blind, and to the lame
+Feet, and to sinners wholesome blame,
+To starving bodies food and flame,
+ By turns she brings;
+To humbled souls, that sink for shame,
+ Lends heaven-ward wings:
+
+Leads them the way our Saviour went,
+And shows Love's treasure yet unspent;
+As when th' unclouded heavens were rent.
+ Opening His road,
+Nor yet His Holy Spirit sent
+ To our abode.
+
+Ten days th' eternal doors displayed
+Were wondering (so th' Almighty bade)
+Whom Love enthroned would send, in aid
+ Of souls that mourn,
+Left orphans in Earth's dreary shade
+ As noon as born.
+
+Open they stand, that prayers in throngs
+May rise on high, and holy songs,
+Such incense as of right belongs
+ To the true shrine,
+Where stands the Healer of all wrongs
+ In light divine;
+
+The golden censer in His hand,
+He offers hearts from every land,
+Tied to His own by gentlest band
+ Of silent Love:
+About Him winged blessings stand
+ In act to move.
+
+A little while, and they shall fleet
+From Heaven to Earth, attendants meet
+On the life-giving Paraclete
+ Speeding His flight,
+With all that sacred is and sweet,
+ On saints to light.
+
+Apostles, Prophets, Pastors, all
+Shall feel the shower of Mercy fall,
+And startling at th' Almighty's call,
+ Give what He gave,
+Till their high deeds the world appal,
+ And sinners save.
+
+
+
+WHITSUNDAY
+
+
+
+And suddenly there came a sound from Heaven as of a rushing mighty
+wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And
+there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat
+upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost.
+Acts ii. 2-4
+
+When God of old came down from Heaven,
+ In power and wrath He came;
+Before His feet the clouds were riven,
+ Half darkness and half flame:
+
+Around the trembling mountain's base
+ The prostrate people lay;
+A day of wrath and not of grace;
+ A dim and dreadful day.
+
+But when he came the second time,
+ He came in power and love,
+Softer than gale at morning prime
+ Hovered His holy Dove.
+
+The fires that rushed on Sinai down
+ In sudden torrents dread,
+Now gently light, a glorious crown,
+ On every sainted head.
+
+Like arrows went those lightnings forth
+ Winged with the sinner's doom,
+But these, like tongues, o'er all the earth
+ Proclaiming life to come:
+
+And as on Israel's awe-struck ear
+ The voice exceeding loud,
+The trump, that angels quake to hear,
+ Thrilled from the deep, dark cloud;
+
+So, when the Spirit of our God
+ Came down His flock to find,
+A voice from Heaven was heard abroad,
+ A rushing, mighty wind.
+
+Nor doth the outward ear alone
+ At that high warning start;
+Conscience gives back th' appalling tone;
+ 'Tis echoed in the heart.
+
+It fills the Church of God; it fills
+ The sinful world around;
+Only in stubborn hearts and wills
+ No place for it is found.
+
+To other strains our souls are set:
+ A giddy whirl of sin
+Fills ear and brain, and will not let
+ Heaven's harmonies come in.
+
+Come Lord, Come Wisdom, Love, and Power,
+ Open our ears to hear;
+Let us not miss th' accepted hour;
+ Save, Lord, by Love or Fear.
+
+
+
+MONDAY IN WHITSUN-WEEK
+
+
+
+So the Lord scattered them abroad from thence upon the face of all
+the earth; and they left off to build the city. Genesis xi. 8
+
+Since all that is not Heaven must fade,
+Light be the hand of Ruin laid
+ Upon the home I love:
+With lulling spell let soft Decay
+Steal on, and spare the giant sway,
+ The crash of tower and grove.
+
+Far opening down some woodland deep
+In their own quiet glade should sleep
+ The relics dear to thought,
+And wild-flower wreaths from side to side
+Their waving tracery hang, to hide
+ What ruthless Time has wrought.
+
+Such are the visions green and sweet
+That o'er the wistful fancy fleet
+ In Asia's sea-like plain,
+Where slowly, round his isles of sand,
+Euphrates through the lonely land
+ Winds toward the pearly main.
+
+Slumber is there, but not of rest;
+There her forlorn and weary nest
+ The famished hawk has found,
+The wild dog howls at fall of night,
+The serpent's rustling coils affright
+ The traveller on his round.
+
+What shapeless form, half lost on high,
+Half seen against the evening sky,
+ Seems like a ghost to glide,
+And watch, from Babel's crumbling heap,
+Where in her shadow, fast asleep,
+ Lies fallen imperial Pride?
+
+With half-closed eye a lion there
+Is basking in his noontide lair,
+ Or prowls in twilight gloom.
+The golden city's king he seems,
+Such as in old prophetic dreams
+ Sprang from rough ocean's womb.
+
+But where are now his eagle wings,
+That sheltered erst a thousand kings,
+ Hiding the glorious sky
+From half the nations, till they own
+No holier name, no mightier throne?
+ That vision is gone by.
+
+Quenched is the golden statue's ray,
+The breath of heaven has blown away
+ What toiling earth had piled,
+Scattering wise heart and crafty hand,
+As breezes strew on ocean's sand
+ The fabrics of a child.
+
+Divided thence through every age
+Thy rebels, Lord, their warfare wage,
+ And hoarse and jarring all
+Mount up their heaven-assailing cries
+To Thy bright watchmen in the skies
+ From Babel's shattered wall.
+
+Thrice only since, with blended might
+The nations on that haughty height
+ Have met to scale the Heaven:
+Thrice only might a Seraph's look
+A moment's shade of sadness brook -
+ Such power to guilt was given.
+
+Now the fierce bear and leopard keen
+Are perished as they ne'er had been,
+ Oblivion is their home:
+Ambition's boldest dream and last
+Must melt before the clarion blast
+ That sounds the dirge of Rome.
+
+Heroes and kings, obey the charm,
+Withdraw the proud high-reaching arm,
+ There is an oath on high:
+That ne'er on brow of mortal birth
+Shall blend again the crowns of earth,
+ Nor in according cry
+
+Her many voices mingling own
+One tyrant Lord, one idol throne:
+ But to His triumphs soon
+HE shall descend, who rules above,
+And the pure language of His love,
+ All tongues of men shall tune.
+
+Nor let Ambition heartless mourn;
+When Babel's very ruins burn,
+ Her high desires may breathe; -
+O'ercome thyself, and thou mayst share
+With Christ His Father's throne, and wear
+ The world's imperial wreath.
+
+
+
+TUESDAY IN WHITSUN-WEEK
+
+
+
+When He putteth forth His own sheep, He goeth before them. St.
+John x. 4.
+(Addressed to Candidates for Ordination.)
+
+"Lord, in Thy field I work all day,
+I read, I teach, I warn, I pray,
+And yet these wilful wandering sheep
+Within Thy fold I cannot keep.
+
+"I journey, yet no step is won -
+Alas! the weary course I run!
+Like sailors shipwrecked in their dreams,
+All powerless and benighted seems."
+
+What? wearied out with half a life?
+Scared with this smooth unbloody strife?
+Think where thy coward hopes had flown
+Had Heaven held out the martyr's crown.
+
+How couldst thou hang upon the cross,
+To whom a weary hour is loss?
+Or how the thorns and scourging brook
+Who shrinkest from a scornful look?
+
+Yet ere thy craven spirit faints,
+Hear thine own King, the King of Saints;
+Though thou wert toiling in the grave,
+'Tis He can cheer thee, He can save.
+
+He is th' eternal mirror bright,
+Where Angels view the FATHER'S light,
+And yet in Him the simplest swain
+May read his homely lesson plain.
+
+Early to quit His home on earth,
+And claim His high celestial birth,
+Alone with His true Father found
+Within the temple's solemn round:-
+
+Yet in meek duty to abide
+For many a year at Mary's side,
+Nor heed, though restless spirits ask,
+"What, hath the Christ forgot His task?"
+
+Conscious of Deity within,
+To bow before an heir of sin,
+With folded arms on humble breast,
+By His own servant washed and blest:-
+
+Then full of Heaven, the mystic Dove
+Hovering His gracious brow above,
+To shun the voice and eye of praise,
+And in the wild His trophies raise:-
+
+With hymns of angels in His ears,
+Back to His task of woe and tears,
+Unmurmuring through the world to roam
+With not a wish or thought at home:-
+
+All but Himself to heal and save,
+Till ripened for the cross and grave,
+He to His Father gently yield
+The breath that our redemption sealed:-
+
+Then to unearthly life arise,
+Yet not at once to seek the skies,
+But glide awhile from saint to saint,
+Lest on our lonely way we faint;
+
+And through the cloud by glimpses show
+How bright, in Heaven, the marks will glow
+Of the true cross, imprinted deep
+Both on the Shepherd and the sheep:-
+
+When out of sight, in heart and prayer,
+Thy chosen people still to bear,
+And from behind Thy glorious veil,
+Shed light that cannot change or fail:-
+
+This is Thy pastoral course, O LORD,
+Till we be saved, and Thou adored; -
+Thy course and ours--but who are they
+Who follow on the narrow way?
+
+And yet of Thee from year to year
+The Church's solemn chant we hear,
+As from Thy cradle to Thy throne
+She swells her high heart-cheering tone.
+
+Listen, ye pure white-robed souls,
+Whom in her list she now enrolls,
+And gird ye for your high emprize
+By these her thrilling minstrelsies.
+
+And wheresoe'er in earth's wide field,
+Ye lift, for Him, the red-cross shield,
+Be this your song, your joy and pride -
+"Our Champion went before and died."
+
+
+
+TRINITY SUNDAY
+
+
+
+If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye
+believe if I tell you of heavenly things? St. John iii. 12
+
+Creator, Saviour, strengthening Guide,
+Now on Thy mercy's ocean wide
+Far out of sight we seem to glide.
+
+Help us, each hour, with steadier eye
+To search the deepening mystery,
+The wonders of Thy sea and sky.
+
+The blessed Angels look and long
+To praise Thee with a worthier song,
+And yet our silence does Thee wrong. -
+
+Along the Church's central space
+The sacred weeks, with unfelt pace,
+Hath borne us on from grace to grace.
+
+As travellers on some woodland height,
+When wintry suns are gleaming bright,
+Lose in arched glades their tangled sight; -
+
+By glimpses such as dreamers love
+Through her grey veil the leafless grove
+Shows where the distant shadows rove; -
+
+Such trembling joy the soul o'er-awes
+As nearer to Thy shrine she draws:-
+And now before the choir we pause.
+
+The door is closed--but soft and deep
+Around the awful arches sweep,
+Such airs as soothe a hermit's sleep.
+
+From each carved nook and fretted bend
+Cornice and gallery seem to send
+Tones that with seraphs hymns might blend.
+
+Three solemn parts together twine
+In harmony's mysterious line;
+Three solemn aisles approach the shrine:
+
+Yet all are One--together all,
+In thoughts that awe but not appal,
+Teach the adoring heart to fall.
+
+Within these walls each fluttering guest
+Is gently lured to one safe nest -
+Without, 'tis moaning and unrest.
+
+The busy world a thousand ways
+Is hurrying by, nor ever stays
+To catch a note of Thy dear praise.
+
+Why tarries not her chariot wheel,
+That o'er her with no vain appeal
+One gust of heavenly song might steal?
+
+Alas! for her Thy opening flowers
+Unheeded breathe to summer showers,
+Unheard the music of Thy bowers.
+
+What echoes from the sacred dome
+The selfish spirit may o'ercome
+That will not hear of love or home!
+
+The heart that scorned a father's care,
+How can it rise in filial prayer?
+How an all-seeing Guardian bear?
+
+Or how shall envious brethren own
+A Brother on the eternal throne,
+Their Father's joy, their hops alone?
+
+How shall Thy Spirit's gracious wile
+The sullen brow of gloom beguile,
+That frowns on sweet Affection's smile?
+
+Eternal One, Almighty Trine!
+(Since Thou art ours, and we are Thine,)
+By all Thy love did once resign,
+
+By all the grace Thy heavens still hide,
+We pray Thee, keep us at Thy side,
+Creator, Saviour, strengthening Guide!
+
+
+
+FIRST SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+So Joshua smote all the country, . . . and all their kings; he left
+none remaining. Joshua x. 40.
+
+Where is the land with milk and honey flowing,
+ The promise of our God, our fancy's theme?
+Here over shattered walls dank weeds are growing,
+ And blood and fire have run in mingled stream;
+ Like oaks and cedars all around
+ The giant corses strew the ground,
+And haughty Jericho's cloud-piercing wall
+Lies where it sank at Joshua's trumpet call.
+
+These are not scenes for pastoral dance at even,
+ For moonlight rovings in the fragrant glades,
+Soft slumbers in the open eye of Heaven,
+ And all the listless joy of summer shades.
+ We in the midst of ruins live,
+ Which every hour dread warning give,
+Nor may our household vine or fig-tree hide
+The broken arches of old Canaan's pride.
+
+Where is the sweet repose of hearts repenting,
+ The deep calm sky, the sunshine of the soul,
+Now Heaven and earth are to our bliss consenting,
+ And all the Godhead joins to make us whole.
+ The triple crown of mercy now
+ Is ready for the suppliant's brow,
+By the Almighty Three for ever planned,
+And from behind the cloud held out by Jesus' hand.
+
+"Now, Christians, hold your own--the land before ye
+ Is open--win your way, and take your rest."
+So sounds our war-note; but our path of glory
+ By many a cloud is darkened and unblest:
+ And daily as we downward glide,
+ Life's ebbing stream on either side
+Shows at each turn some mouldering hope or joy,
+The Man seems following still the funeral of the Boy.
+
+Open our eyes, Thou Sun of life and gladness,
+ That we may see that glorious world of Thine!
+It shines for us in vain, while drooping sadness
+ Enfolds us here like mist: come Power benign,
+ Touch our chilled hearts with vernal smile,
+ Our wintry course do Thou beguile,
+Nor by the wayside ruins let us mourn,
+Who have th' eternal towers for our appointed bourne.
+
+
+
+SECOND SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you. We know that we
+have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren. 1
+St. John iii. 13, 14.
+
+The clouds that wrap the setting sun
+ When Autumn's softest gleams are ending,
+Where all bright hues together run
+ In sweet confusion blending: -
+Why, as we watch their floating wreath
+Seem they the breath of life to breathe?
+To Fancy's eye their motions prove
+They mantle round the Sun for love.
+
+When up some woodland dale we catch
+ The many-twinkling smile of ocean,
+Or with pleased ear bewildered watch
+ His chime of restless motion;
+Still as the surging waves retire
+They seem to gasp with strong desire,
+Such signs of love old Ocean gives,
+We cannot choose but think he lives.
+
+Wouldst thou the life of souls discern?
+ Nor human wisdom nor divine
+Helps thee by aught beside to learn;
+ Love is life's only sign.
+The spring of the regenerate heart,
+The pulse, the glow of every part,
+Is the true love of Christ our Lord,
+As man embraced, as God adored.
+
+But he, whose heart will bound to mark
+ The full bright burst of summer morn,
+Loves too each little dewy spark,
+ By leaf or flow'ret worn:
+Cheap forms, and common hues, 'tis true,
+Through the bright shower-drop' meet his view;
+The colouring may be of this earth;
+The lustre comes of heavenly birth.
+
+E'en so, who loves the Lord aright,
+ No soul of man can worthless find;
+All will be precious in his sight,
+ Since Christ on all hath shined:
+But chiefly Christian souls; for they,
+Though worn and soiled with sinful clay,
+Are yet, to eyes that see them true,
+All glistening with baptismal dew.
+
+Then marvel not, if such as bask
+ In purest light of innocence,
+Hope against mope, in love's dear task,
+ Spite of all dark offence.
+If they who hate the trespass most,
+Yet, when all other love is lost,
+Love the poor sinner, marvel not;
+Christ's mark outwears the rankest blot.
+
+No distance breaks this tie of blood;
+ Brothers are brothers evermore;
+Nor wrong, nor wrath of deadliest mood,
+ That magic may o'erpower;
+Oft, ere the common source be known,
+The kindred drops will claim their own,
+And throbbing pulses silently
+Move heart towards heart by sympathy.
+
+So it is with true Christian hearts;
+ Their mutual share in Jesus' blood
+An everlasting bond imparts
+ Of holiest brotherhood:
+Oh! might we all our lineage prove,
+Give and forgive, do good and love,
+By soft endearments in kind strife
+Lightening the load of daily life.
+
+There is much need; for not as yet
+ Are we in shelter or repose,
+The holy house is still beset
+ With leaguer of stern foes;
+Wild thoughts within, bad men without,
+All evil spirits round about,
+Are banded in unblest device,
+To spoil Love's earthly paradise.
+
+Then draw we nearer day by day,
+ Each to his brethren, all to God;
+Let the world take us as she may,
+ We must not change our road;
+Not wondering, though in grief, to find
+The martyr's foe still keep her mind;
+But fixed to hold Love's banner fast,
+And by submission win at last.
+
+
+
+THIRD SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+There is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner
+that repenteth. St. Luke xv. 10.
+
+O hateful spell of Sin! when friends are nigh,
+ To make stern Memory tell her tale unsought,
+And raise accusing shades of hours gone by,
+ To come between us and all kindly thought!
+
+Chilled at her touch, the self-reproaching soul
+ Flies from the heart and home she dearest loves,
+To where lone mountains tower, or billows roll,
+ Or to your endless depth, ye solemn groves.
+
+In vain: the averted cheek in loneliest dell
+ Is conscious of a gaze it cannot bear,
+The leaves that rustle near us seem to tell
+ Our heart's sad secret to the silent air.
+
+Nor is the dream untrue; for all around
+ The heavens are watching with their thousand eyes,
+We cannot pass our guardian angel's bound,
+ Resigned or sullen, he will hear our sighs.
+
+He in the mazes of the budding wood
+ Is near, and mourns to see our thankless glance
+Dwell coldly, where the fresh green earth is strewed
+ With the first flowers that lead the vernal dance.
+
+In wasteful bounty showered, they smile unseen,
+ Unseen by man--but what if purer sprights
+By moonlight o'er their dewy bosoms lean
+ To adore the Father of all gentle lights?
+
+If such there be, O grief and shame to think
+ That sight of thee should overcloud their joy,
+A new-born soul, just waiting on the brink
+ Of endless life, yet wrapt in earth's annoy!
+
+O turn, and be thou turned! the selfish tear,
+ In bitter thoughts of low-born care begun,
+Let it flow on, but flow refined and clear,
+ The turbid waters brightening as they run.
+
+Let it flow on, till all thine earthly heart
+ In penitential drops have ebbed away,
+Then fearless turn where Heaven hath set thy part,
+ Nor shudder at the Eye that saw thee stray.
+
+O lost and found! all gentle souls below
+ Their dearest welcome shall prepare, and prove
+Such joy o'er thee, as raptured seraphs know,
+ Who learn their lesson at the Throne of Love.
+
+
+
+FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the
+manifestation of the sons of God. For the creature was made
+subject to vanity, not willingly, but by the reason of Him who hath
+subjected the same in hope, because the creature itself also shall
+be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious
+liberty of the children of God. For we know that the whole
+creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now.
+Romans viii 19-22.
+
+It was not then a poet's dream,
+ An idle vaunt of song,
+Such as beneath the moon's soft gleam
+ On vacant fancies throng;
+
+Which bids us see in heaven and earth,
+ In all fair things around,
+Strong yearnings for a blest new birth
+ With sinless glories crowned;
+
+Which bids us hear, at each sweet pause
+ From care and want and toil,
+When dewy eve her curtain draws
+ Over the day's turmoil,
+
+In the low chant of wakeful birds,
+ In the deep weltering flood,
+In whispering leaves, these solemn words -
+ "God made us all for good."
+
+All true, all faultless, all in tune
+ Creation's wondrous choir,
+Opened in mystic unison
+ To last till time expire.
+
+And still it lasts; by day and night,
+ With one consenting voice,
+All hymn Thy glory, Lord, aright,
+ All worship and rejoice.
+
+Man only mars the sweet accord
+ O'erpowering with "harsh din"
+The music of Thy works and word,
+ Ill matched with grief and sin.
+
+Sin is with man at morning break,
+ And through the livelong day
+Deafens the ear that fain would wake
+ To Nature's simple lay.
+
+But when eve's silent footfall steals
+ Along the eastern sky,
+And one by one to earth reveals
+ Those purer fires on high,
+
+When one by one each human sound
+ Dies on the awful ear,
+Then Nature's voice no more is drowned,
+ She speaks, and we must hear.
+
+Then pours she on the Christian heart
+ That warning still and deep,
+At which high spirits of old would start
+ E'en from their Pagan sleep.
+
+Just guessing, through their murky blind
+ Few, faint, and baffling sight,
+Streaks of a brighter heaven behind,
+ A cloudless depth of light.
+
+Such thoughts, the wreck of Paradise,
+ Through many a dreary age,
+Upbore whate'er of good and wise
+ Yet lived in bard or sage:
+
+They marked what agonizing throes
+ Shook the great mother's womb:
+But Reason's spells might not disclose
+ The gracious birth to come:
+
+Nor could the enchantress Hope forecast
+ God's secret love and power;
+The travail pangs of Earth must last
+ Till her appointed hour.
+
+The hour that saw from opening heaven
+ Redeeming glory stream,
+Beyond the summer hues of even,
+ Beyond the mid-day beam.
+
+Thenceforth, to eyes of high desire,
+ The meanest thing below,
+As with a seraph's robe of fire
+ Invested, burn and glow:
+
+The rod of Heaven has touched them all,
+ The word from Heaven is spoken:
+"Rise, shine, and sing, thou captive thrall;
+ Are not thy fetters broken?
+
+"The God Who hallowed thee and blest,
+ Pronouncing thee all good -
+Hath He not all thy wrongs redrest,
+ And all thy bliss renewed?
+
+"Why mourn'st thou still as one bereft,
+ Now that th' eternal Son
+His blessed home in Heaven hath left
+ To make thee all His own?"
+
+Thou mourn'st because sin lingers still
+ In Christ's new heaven and earth;
+Because our rebel works and will
+ Stain our immortal birth:
+
+Because, as Love and Prayer grow cold,
+ The Saviour hides His face,
+And worldlings blot the temple's gold
+ With uses vile and base.
+
+Hence all thy groans and travail pains,
+ Hence, till thy God return,
+In Wisdom's ear thy blithest strains,
+ Oh Nature, seem to mourn.
+
+
+
+FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+And Simon answering said unto Him, Master, we have toiled all the
+night, and have taken nothing; nevertheless at Thy word I will let
+down the net. And when they had this done, they inclosed a great
+multitude of fishes: and their net brake. St. Luke v. 5, 6.
+
+"The livelong night we've toiled in vain,
+ But at Thy gracious word
+I will let down the net again:-
+ Do Thou Thy will, O Lord!"
+
+So spake the weary fisher, spent
+ With bootless darkling toil,
+Yet on his Master's bidding bent
+ For love and not for spoil.
+
+So day by day and week by week,
+ In sad and weary thought,
+They muse, whom God hath set to seek
+ The souls His Christ hath bought.
+
+For not upon a tranquil lake
+ Our pleasant task we ply,
+Where all along our glistening wake
+ The softest moonbeams lie;
+
+Where rippling wave and dashing oar
+ Our midnight chant attend,
+Or whispering palm-leaves from the shore
+ With midnight silence blend.
+
+Sweet thoughts of peace, ye may not last:
+ Too soon some ruder sound
+Calls us from where ye soar so fast
+ Back to our earthly round.
+
+For wildest storms our ocean sweep:-
+ No anchor but the Cross
+Might hold: and oft the thankless deep
+ Turns all our toil to loss.
+
+Full many a dreary anxious hour
+ We watch our nets alone
+In drenching spray, and driving shower,
+ And hear the night-bird's moan:
+
+At morn we look, and nought is there;
+ Sad dawn of cheerless day!
+Who then from pining and despair
+ The sickening heart can stay?
+
+There is a stay--and we are strong;
+ Our Master is at hand,
+To cheer our solitary song,
+ And guide us to the strand.
+
+In His own time; but yet a while
+ Our bark at sea must ride;
+Cast after cast, by force or guile
+ All waters must be tried:
+
+By blameless guile or gentle force,
+ As when He deigned to teach
+(The lode-star of our Christian course)
+ Upon this sacred beach.
+
+Should e'er thy wonder-working grace
+ Triumph by our weak arm,
+Let not our sinful fancy trace
+ Aught human in the charm:
+
+To our own nets ne'er bow we down,
+ Lest on the eternal shore
+The angels, while oar draught they own,
+ Reject us evermore:
+
+Or, if for our unworthiness
+ Toil, prayer, and watching fail,
+In disappointment Thou canst bless,
+ So love at heart prevail.
+
+
+
+SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+David said unto Nathan, I have sinned against the Lord. And Nathan
+said unto David, The Lord also hath put away thy sin; thou shalt
+not die. 2 Samuel xii. 13.
+
+ When bitter thoughts, of conscience born,
+ With sinners wake at morn,
+ When from our restless couch we start,
+ With fevered lips and withered heart,
+Where is the spell to charm those mists away,
+And make new morning in that darksome day?
+ One draught of spring's delicious air,
+ One steadfast thought, that GOD is there.
+
+ These are Thy wonders, hourly wrought,
+ Thou Lord of time and thought,
+ Lifting and lowering souls at will,
+ Crowding a world of good or ill
+Into a moment's vision; e'en as light
+Mounts o'er a cloudy ridge, and all is bright,
+ From west to east one thrilling ray
+ Turning a wintry world to May.
+
+ Would'st thou the pangs of guilt assuage?
+ Lo! here an open page,
+ Where heavenly mercy shines as free
+ Written in balm, sad heart, for thee.
+Never so fast, in silent April shower,
+Flushed into green the dry and leafless bower,
+ As Israel's crowned mourner felt
+ The dull hard stone within him melt.
+
+ The absolver saw the mighty grief,
+ And hastened with relief; -
+ "The Lord forgives; thou shalt not die:"
+ 'Twas gently spoke, yet heard on high,
+And all the band of angels, used to sing
+In heaven, accordant to his raptured string,
+ Who many a month had turned away
+ With veiled eyes, nor owned his lay,
+
+ Now spread their wings, and throng around
+ To the glad mournful sound,
+ And welcome, with bright open face,
+ The broken heart to love's embrace.
+The rock is smitten, and to future years
+Springs ever fresh the tide of holy tears
+ And holy music, whispering peace
+ Till time and sin together cease.
+
+ There drink: and when ye are at rest,
+ With that free Spirit blest,
+ Who to the contrite can dispense,
+ The princely heart of innocence,
+If ever, floating from faint earthly lyre,
+Was wafted to your soul one high desire,
+ By all the trembling hope ye feel,
+ Think on the minstrel as ye kneel:
+
+ Think on the shame, that dreadful hour
+ When tears shall have no power,
+ Should his own lay th' accuser prove,
+ Cold while he kindled others' love:
+And let your prayer for charity arise,
+That his own heart may hear his melodies,
+ And a true voice to him may cry,
+ "Thy GOD forgives--thou shalt not die."
+
+
+
+SEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+From whence can a man satisfy these men with bread here in the
+wilderness? St. Mark viii. 4.
+
+ Go not away, thou weary soul:
+ Heaven has in store a precious dole
+Here on Bethsaida's cold and darksome height,
+ Where over rocks and sands arise
+ Proud Sirion in the northern skies,
+And Tabor's lonely peak, 'twixt thee and noonday light.
+
+ And far below, Gennesaret's main
+ Spreads many a mile of liquid plain,
+(Though all seem gathered in one eager bound,)
+ Then narrowing cleaves you palmy lea,
+ Towards that deep sulphureous sea,
+Where five proud cities lie, by one dire sentence drowned.
+
+ Landscape of fear! yet, weary heart,
+ Thou need'st not in thy gloom depart,
+Nor fainting turn to seek thy distant home:
+ Sweetly thy sickening throbs are eyed
+ By the kind Saviour at thy side;
+For healing and for balm e'en now thine hour is come.
+
+ No fiery wing is seen to glide,
+ No cates ambrosial are supplied,
+But one poor fisher's rude and scanty store
+ Is all He asks (and more than needs)
+ Who men and angels daily feeds,
+And stills the wailing sea-bird on the hungry shore.
+
+ The feast is o'er, the guests are gone,
+ And over all that upland lone
+The breeze of eve sweeps wildly as of old -
+ But far unlike the former dreams,
+ The heart's sweet moonlight softly gleams
+Upon life's varied view, so joyless erst and cold.
+
+ As mountain travellers in the night,
+ When heaven by fits is dark and bright,
+Pause listening on the silent heath, and hear
+ Nor trampling hoof nor tinkling bell,
+ Then bolder scale the rugged fell,
+Conscious the more of One, ne'er seen, yet ever near:
+
+ So when the tones of rapture gay
+ On the lorn ear, die quite away,
+The lonely world seems lifted nearer heaven;
+ Seen daily, yet unmarked before,
+ Earth's common paths are strewn all o'er
+With flowers of pensive hope, the wreath of man forgiven.
+
+ The low sweet tones of Nature's lyre
+ No more on listless ears expire,
+Nor vainly smiles along the shady way
+ The primrose in her vernal nest,
+ Nor unlamented sink to rest
+Sweet roses one by one, nor autumn leaves decay.
+
+ There's not a star the heaven can show,
+ There's not a cottage-hearth below,
+But feeds with solace kind the willing soul -
+ Men love us, or they need our love;
+ Freely they own, or heedless prove
+The curse of lawless hearts, the joy of self-control.
+
+ Then rouse thee from desponding sleep,
+ Nor by the wayside lingering weep,
+Nor fear to seek Him farther in the wild,
+ Whose love can turn earth's worst and least
+ Into a conqueror's royal feast:
+Thou wilt not be untrue, thou shalt not be beguiled.
+
+
+
+EIGHT SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+It is the man of God, who was disobedient unto the word of the
+Lord. 1 King xiii. 26.
+
+Prophet of God, arise and take
+With thee the words of wrath divine,
+ The scourge of Heaven, to shake
+ O'er yon apostate shrine.
+
+Where Angels down the lucid stair
+Came hovering to our sainted sires
+ Now, in the twilight, glare
+ The heathen's wizard fires.
+
+Go, with thy voice the altar rend,
+Scatter the ashes, be the arm,
+ That idols would befriend,
+ Shrunk at thy withering charm.
+
+Then turn thee, for thy time is short,
+But trace not o'er the former way,
+ Lest idol pleasures court
+ Thy heedless soul astray.
+
+Thou know'st how hard to hurry by,
+Where on the lonely woodland road
+ Beneath the moonlight sky
+ The festal warblings flowed;
+
+Where maidens to the Queen of Heaven
+Wove the gay dance round oak or palm,
+ Or breathed their vows at even
+ In hymns as soft as balm.
+
+Or thee, perchance, a darker spell
+Enthralls: the smooth stones of the flood,
+ By mountain grot or fell,
+ Pollute with infant's blood;
+
+The giant altar on the rock,
+The cavern whence the timbrel's call
+ Affrights the wandering flock:-
+ Thou long'st to search them all.
+
+Trust not the dangerous path again -
+O forward step and lingering will!
+ O loved and warned in vain!
+ And wilt thou perish still?
+
+Thy message given, thine home in sight,
+To the forbidden feast return?
+ Yield to the false delight
+ Thy better soul could spurn?
+
+Alas, my brother! round thy tomb
+In sorrow kneeling, and in fear,
+ We read the Pastor's doom
+ Who speaks and will not hear.
+
+The grey-haired saint may fail at last,
+The surest guide a wanderer prove;
+ Death only binds us fast
+ To the bright shore of love.
+
+
+
+NINTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+And after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire:
+and after the fire a still small voice. 1 Kings xix. 12.
+
+In troublous days of anguish and rebuke,
+While sadly round them Israel's children look,
+ And their eyes fail for waiting on their Lord:
+While underneath each awful arch of green,
+On every mountain-top, God's chosen scene,
+ Of pure heart-worship, Baal is adored:
+
+'Tis well, true hearts should for a time retire
+To holy ground, in quiet to aspire
+ Towards promised regions of serener grace;
+On Horeb, with Elijah, let us lie,
+Where all around on mountain, sand, and sky,
+ God's chariot wheels have left distinctest trace;
+
+There, if in jealousy and strong disdain
+We to the sinner's God of sin complain,
+ Untimely seeking here the peace of Heaven -
+"It is enough. O Lord! now let me die
+E'en as my fathers did: for what am I
+ That I should stand where they have vainly striven?" -
+
+Perhaps our God may of our conscience ask,
+"What doest thou here frail wanderer from thy task?
+ Where hast thou left those few sheep in the wild?"
+Then should we plead our heart's consuming pain,
+At sight of ruined altars, prophets slain,
+ And God's own ark with blood of souls defiled;
+
+He on the rock may bid us stand, and see
+The outskirts of His march of mystery,
+ His endless warfare with man's wilful heart;
+First, His great Power He to the sinner shows
+Lo! at His angry blast the rocks unclose,
+ And to their base the trembling mountains part
+
+Yet the Lord is not here: 'Tis not by Power
+He will be known--but darker tempests lower;
+ Still, sullen heavings vex the labouring ground:
+Perhaps His Presence thro' all depth and height,
+Best of all gems that deck His crown of light,
+ The haughty eye may dazzle and confound.
+
+God is not in the earthquake; but behold
+From Sinai's caves are bursting, as of old,
+ The flames of His consuming jealous ire.
+Woe to the sinner should stern Justice prove
+His chosen attribute;--but He in love
+ Hastes to proclaim, "God is not in the fire."
+
+The storm is o'er--and hark! a still small voice
+Steals on the ear, to say, Jehovah's choice
+ Is ever with the soft, meek, tender soul;
+By soft, meek, tender ways He loves to draw
+The sinner, startled by His ways of awe:
+ Here is our Lord, and not where thunders roll.
+
+Back, then, complainer; loath thy life no more,
+Nor deem thyself upon a desert shore,
+ Because the rocks the nearer prospect close.
+Yet in fallen Israel are there hearts and eyes
+That day by day in prayer like thine arise;
+ Thou know'st them not, but their Creator knows.
+
+Go, to the world return, nor fear to cast
+Thy bread upon the waters, sure at last
+ In joy to find it after many days.
+The work be thine, the fruit thy children's part:
+Choose to believe, not see: sight tempts the heart
+ From sober walking in true Gospel ways.
+
+
+
+TENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+And when He was come near, He beheld the city, and wept over it.
+St. Luke xix. 41.
+
+Why doth my Saviour weep
+ At sight of Sion's bowers?
+Shows it not fair from yonder steep,
+ Her gorgeous crown of towers?
+Mark well His holy pains:
+ 'Tis not in pride or scorn,
+That Israel's King with sorrow stains
+ His own triumphal morn.
+
+It is not that His soul
+ Is wandering sadly on,
+In thought how soon at death's dark goal
+ Their course will all be run,
+Who now are shouting round
+ Hosanna to their chief;
+No thought like this in Him is found,
+ This were a Conquerer's grief.
+
+Or doth He feel the Cross
+ Already in His heart,
+The pain, the shame, the scorn, the loss?
+ Feel e'en His God depart?
+No: though He knew full well
+ The grief that then shall be -
+The grief that angels cannot tell -
+ Our God in agony.
+
+It is not thus He mourns;
+ Such might be martyr's tears,
+When his last lingering look he turns
+ On human hopes and fears;
+But hero ne'er or saint
+ The secret load might know,
+With which His spirit waxeth faint;
+ His is a Saviour's woe.
+
+"If thou had'st known, e'en thou,
+ At least in this thy day,
+The message of thy peace! but now
+ 'Tis passed for aye away:
+Now foes shall trench thee round,
+ And lay thee even with earth,
+And dash thy children to the ground,
+ Thy glory and thy mirth."
+
+And doth the Saviour weep
+ Over His people's sin,
+Because we will not let Him keep
+ The souls He died to win?
+Ye hearts, that love the Lord,
+ If at this, sight ye burn,
+See that in thought, in deed, in word,
+ Ye hate what made Him mourn.
+
+
+
+ELEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Is it a time to receive money, and to receive garments, and
+oliveyards, and vineyards, and sheep, and oxen, and menservants,
+and maidservants? 2 Kings v. 26.
+
+Is this a time to plant and build,
+Add house to house, and field to field,
+When round our walls the battle lowers,
+When mines are hid beneath our towers,
+And watchful foes are stealing round
+To search and spoil the holy ground?
+
+Is this a time for moonlight dreams
+Of love and home by mazy streams,
+For Fancy with her shadowy toys,
+Aerial hopes and pensive joys,
+While souls are wandering far and wide,
+And curses swarm on every side?
+
+No--rather steel thy melting heart
+To act the martyr's sternest part,
+To watch, with firm unshrinking eye,
+Thy darling visions as thy die,
+Till all bright hopes, and hues of day,
+Have faded into twilight gray.
+
+Yes--let them pass without a sigh,
+And if the world seem dull and dry,
+If long and sad thy lonely hours,
+And winds have rent thy sheltering bowers,
+Bethink thee what thou art and where,
+A sinner in a life of care.
+
+The fire of God is soon to fall
+(Thou know'st it) on this earthly ball;
+Full many a soul, the price of blood,
+Marked by th' Almighty's hand for good,
+To utter death that hour shall sweep -
+And will the saints in Heaven dare weep?
+
+Then in His wrath shall GOD uproot
+The trees He set, for lack of fruit,
+And drown in rude tempestuous blaze
+The towers His hand had deigned to raise;
+In silence, ere that storm begin,
+Count o'er His mercies and thy sin.
+
+Pray only that thine aching heart,
+From visions vain content to part,
+Strong for Love's sake its woe to hide
+May cheerful wait the Cross beside,
+Too happy if, that dreadful day,
+Thy life be given thee for a prey.
+
+Snatched sudden from th' avenging rod,
+Safe in the bosom of thy GOD,
+How wilt thou then look back, and smile
+On thoughts that bitterest seemed erewhile,
+And bless the pangs that made thee see
+This was no world of rest for thee!
+
+
+
+TWELFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+And looking up to heaven, He sighed, and saith unto him, Ephphatha,
+that is, Be opened. St. Mark vii. 34.
+
+The Son of God in doing good
+ Was fain to look to Heaven and sigh:
+And shall the heirs of sinful blood
+ Seek joy unmixed in charity?
+God will not let Love's work impart
+Full solace, lest it steal the heart;
+Be thou content in tears to sow,
+Blessing, like Jesus, in thy woe:
+
+He looked to Heaven, and sadly sighed -
+ What saw my gracious Saviour there,
+"With fear and anguish to divide
+ The joy of Heaven-accepted prayer?
+So o'er the bed where Lazarus slept
+He to His Father groaned and wept:
+What saw He mournful in that grave,
+Knowing Himself so strong to save?"
+
+O'erwhelming thoughts of pain and grief
+ Over His sinking spirit sweep; -
+What boots it gathering one lost leaf
+ Out of yon sere and withered heap,
+Where souls and bodies, hopes and joys,
+All that earth owns or sin destroys,
+Under the spurning hoof are cast,
+Or tossing in th' autumnal blast?
+
+The deaf may hear the Saviour's voice,
+ The fettered tongue its chain may break;
+But the deaf heart, the dumb by choice,
+ The laggard soul, that will not wake,
+The guilt that scorns to be forgiven; -
+These baffle e'en the spells of Heaven;
+In thought of these, His brows benign
+Not e'en in healing cloudless shine.
+
+No eye but His might ever bear
+ To gaze all down that drear abyss,
+Because none ever saw so clear
+ The shore beyond of endless bliss:
+The giddy waves so restless hurled,
+The vexed pulse of this feverish world,
+He views and counts with steady sight,
+Used to behold the Infinite.
+
+But that in such communion high
+ He hath a fount of strength within,
+Sure His meek heart would break and die,
+ O'erburthened by His brethren's sin;
+Weak eyes on darkness dare not gaze,
+It dazzles like the noonday blaze;
+But He who sees God's face may brook
+On the true face of Sin to look.
+
+What then shall wretched sinners do,
+ When in their last, their hopeless day,
+Sin, as it is, shall meet their view,
+ God turn His face for aye away?
+Lord, by Thy sad and earnest eye,
+When Thou didst look to Heaven and sigh:
+Thy voice, that with a word could chase
+The dumb, deaf spirit from his place;
+
+As Thou hast touched our ears, and taught
+ Our tongues to speak Thy praises plain,
+Quell Thou each thankless godless thought
+ That would make fast our bonds again.
+From worldly strife, from mirth unblest,
+Drowning Thy music in the breast,
+From foul reproach, from thrilling fears,
+Preserve, good Lord, Thy servants' ears.
+
+From idle words, that restless throng
+ And haunt our hearts when we would pray,
+From Pride's false chime, and jarring wrong,
+ Seal Thou my lips, and guard the way:
+For Thou hast sworn, that every ear,
+Willing or loth, Thy trump shall hear,
+And every tongue unchained be
+To own no hope, no God, but Thee.
+
+
+
+THIRTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+And He turned Him onto His disciples, and said privately, Blessed
+are the eyes which see the things that ye see: for I tell you,
+that many prophets and kings have desired to see those things which
+ye see, and have not seen them: and to hear those things which ye
+hear, and have not heard them. St. Luke x. 23, 24.
+
+On Sinai's top, in prayer and trance,
+ Full forty nights and forty days
+The Prophet watched for one dear glance
+ Of thee and of Thy ways:
+
+Fasting he watched and all alone,
+ Wrapt in a still, dark, solid cloud,
+The curtain of the Holy One
+ Drawn round him like a shroud:
+
+So, separate from the world, his breast
+ Might duly take and strongly keep
+The print of Heaven, to be expressed
+ Ere long on Sion's steep.
+
+There one by one his spirit saw
+ Of things divine the shadows bright,
+The pageant of God's perfect law;
+ Yet felt not full delight.
+
+Through gold and gems, a dazzling maze,
+ From veil to veil the vision led,
+And ended, where unearthly rays
+ From o'er the ark were shed.
+
+Yet not that gorgeous place, nor aught
+ Of human or angelic frame,
+Could half appease his craving thought;
+ The void was still the same.
+
+"Show me Thy glory, gracious Lord!
+ 'Tis Thee," he cries, "not Thine, I seek."
+Na, start not at so bold a word
+ From man, frail worm and weak:
+
+The spark of his first deathless fire
+ Yet buoys him up, and high above
+The holiest creature, dares aspire
+ To the Creator's love.
+
+The eye in smiles may wander round,
+ Caught by earth's shadows as they fleet;
+But for the soul no help is found,
+ Save Him who made it, meet.
+
+Spite of yourselves, ye witness this,
+ Who blindly self or sense adore;
+Else wherefore leaving your own bliss
+ Still restless ask ye more?
+
+This witness bore the saints of old
+ When highest rapt and favoured most,
+Still seeking precious things untold,
+ Not in fruition lost.
+
+Canaan was theirs; and in it all
+ The proudest hope of kings dare claim:
+Sion was theirs; and at their call
+ Fire from Jehovah came.
+
+Yet monarchs walked as pilgrims still
+ In their own land, earth's pride and grace:
+And seers would mourn on Sion's hill
+ Their Lord's averted face.
+
+Vainly they tried the deeps to sound
+ E'en of their own prophetic thought,
+When of Christ crucified and crowned
+ His Spirit in them taught:
+
+But He their aching gaze repressed,
+ Which sought behind the veil to see,
+For not without us fully blest
+ Or perfect might they be.
+
+The rays of the Almighty's face
+ No sinner's eye might then receive;
+Only the meekest man found grace
+ To see His skirts and live.
+
+But we as in a glass espy
+ The glory of His countenance,
+Not in a whirlwind hurrying by
+ The too presumptuous glance,
+
+But with mild radiance every hour,
+ From our dear Saviour's face benign
+Bent on us with transforming power,
+ Till we, too, faintly shine.
+
+Sprinkled with His atoning blood
+ Safely before our God we stand,
+As on the rock the Prophet stood,
+ Beneath His shadowing hand. -
+
+Blessed eyes, which see the things we see!
+ And yet this tree of life hath proved
+To many a soul a poison tree,
+ Beheld, and not beloved.
+
+So like an angel's is our bliss
+ (Oh! thought to comfort and appal)
+It needs must bring, if used amiss,
+ An angel's hopeless fall.
+
+
+
+FOURTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+And Jesus answering said, Were there not ten cleansed? but where
+are the nine? There are not found that returned to give glory to
+God, save this stranger. St. Luke xvii. 17, 18.
+
+Ten cleansed, and only one remain!
+Who would have thought our nature's stain
+Was dyed so foul, so deep in grain?
+ E'en He who reads the heart -
+Knows what He gave and what we lost,
+Sin's forfeit, and redemption's cost, -
+By a short pang of wonder crossed
+ Seems at the sight to start:
+
+Yet 'twas not wonder, but His love
+Our wavering spirits would reprove,
+That heavenward seem so free to move
+ When earth can yield no more
+Then from afar on God we cry,
+But should the mist of woe roll by,
+Not showers across an April sky
+ Drift, when the storm is o'er,
+
+Faster than those false drops and few
+Fleet from the heart, a worthless dew.
+What sadder scene can angels view
+ Than self-deceiving tears,
+Poured idly over some dark page
+Of earlier life, though pride or rage,
+The record of to-day engage,
+ A woe for future years?
+
+Spirits, that round the sick man's bed
+Watched, noting down each prayer he made,
+Were your unerring roll displayed,
+ His pride of health to abase;
+Or, when, soft showers in season fall
+Answering a famished nation's call,
+Should unseen fingers on the wall
+ Our vows forgotten trace:
+
+How should we gaze in trance of fear!
+Yet shines the light as thrilling clear
+From Heaven upon that scroll severe,
+ "Ten cleansed and one remain!"
+Nor surer would the blessing prove
+Of humbled hearts, that own Thy love,
+Should choral welcome from above
+ Visit our senses plain:
+
+Than by Thy placid voice and brow,
+With healing first, with comfort now,
+Turned upon him, who hastes to bow
+ Before Thee, heart and knee;
+"Oh! thou, who only wouldst be blest,
+On thee alone My blessing rest!
+Rise, go thy way in peace, possessed
+ For evermore of Me."
+
+
+
+FIFTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow. St. Matthew, vi.
+28.
+
+Sweet nurslings of the vernal skies,
+ Bathed in soft airs, and fed with dew,
+What more than magic in you lies,
+ To fill the heart's fond view?
+In childhood's sports, companions gay,
+In sorrow, on Life's downward way,
+How soothing! in our last decay
+ Memorials prompt and true.
+
+Relics ye are of Eden's bowers,
+ As pure, as fragrant, and as fair,
+As when ye crowned the sunshine hours
+ Of happy wanderers there.
+Fall'n all beside--the world of life,
+How is it stained with fear and strife!
+In Reason's world what storms are rife,
+ What passions range and glare!
+
+But cheerful and unchanged the while
+ Your first and perfect form ye show,
+The same that won Eve's matron smile
+ In the world's opening glow.
+The stars of heaven a course are taught
+Too high above our human thought:
+Ye may be found if ye are sought,
+ And as we gaze, we know.
+
+Ye dwell beside our paths and homes,
+ Our paths of sin, our homes of sorrow,
+And guilty man where'er he roams,
+ Your innocent mirth may borrow.
+The birds of air before us fleet,
+They cannot brook our shame to meet -
+But we may taste your solace sweet
+ And come again to-morrow.
+
+Ye fearless in your nests abide -
+ Nor may we scorn, too proudly wise,
+Your silent lessons, undescried
+ By all but lowly eyes:
+For ye could draw th' admiring gaze
+Of Him who worlds and hearts surveys:
+Your order wild, your fragrant maze,
+ He taught us how to prize.
+
+Ye felt your Maker's smile that hour,
+ As when He paused and owned you good;
+His blessing on earth's primal bower,
+ Ye felt it all renewed.
+What care ye now, if winter's storm
+Sweep ruthless o'er each silken form?
+Christ's blessing at your heart is warm,
+ Ye fear no vexing mood.
+
+Alas! of thousand bosoms kind,
+ That daily court you and caress,
+How few the happy secret find
+ Of your calm loveliness!
+"Live for to-day! to-morrow's light
+To-morrow's cares shall bring to sight,
+Go sleep like closing flowers at night,
+ And Heaven thy morn will bless."
+
+
+
+SIXTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you, which is
+your glory. Ephesians iii. 13.
+
+Wish not, dear friends, my pain away -
+ Wish me a wise and thankful heart,
+With GOD, in all my griefs, to stay,
+ Nor from His loved correction start.
+
+The dearest offering He can crave
+ His portion in our souls to prove,
+What is it to the gift He gave,
+ The only Son of His dear love?
+
+But we, like vexed unquiet sprights,
+ Will still be hovering o'er the tomb,
+Where buried lie our vain delights,
+ Nor sweetly take a sinner's doom.
+
+In Life's long sickness evermore
+ Our thoughts are tossing to and fro:
+We change our posture o'er and o'er,
+ But cannot rest, nor cheat our woe.
+
+Were it not better to lie still,
+ Let Him strike home and bless the rod,
+Never so safe as when our will
+ Yields undiscerned by all but God?
+
+Thy precious things, whate'er they be,
+ That haunt and vex thee, heart and brain,
+Look to the Cross and thou shalt see
+ How thou mayst turn them all to gain.
+
+Lovest thou praise? the Cross is shame:
+ Or ease? the Cross is bitter grief:
+More pangs than tongue or heart can frame
+ Were suffered there without relief.
+
+We of that Altar would partake,
+ But cannot quit the cost--no throne
+Is ours, to leave for Thy dear sake -
+ We cannot do as Thou hast done.
+
+We cannot part with Heaven for Thee -
+ Yet guide us in Thy track of love:
+Let us gaze on where light should be,
+ Though not a beam the clouds remove.
+
+So wanderers ever fond and true
+ Look homeward through the evening sky,
+Without a streak of heaven's soft blue
+ To aid Affection's dreaming eye.
+
+The wanderer seeks his native bower,
+ And we will look and long for Thee,
+And thank Thee for each trying hour,
+ Wishing, not struggling, to be free.
+
+
+
+SEVENTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Every man of the house of Israel that setteth up his idols in his
+heart, and putteth the stumbling-block of his iniquity before his
+face, and cometh to the prophet; I the Lord will answer him that
+cometh according to the multitude of his idols. Ezekiel xiv. 4.
+
+Stately thy walls, and holy are the prayers
+ Which day and night before thine altars rise:
+Not statelier, towering o'er her marble stairs,
+ Flashed Sion's gilded dome to summer skies,
+Not holier, while around him angels bowed,
+From Aaron's censer steamed the spicy cloud,
+
+Before the mercy-seat. O Mother dear,
+ Wilt thou forgive thy son one boding sigh?
+Forgive, if round thy towers he walk in fear,
+ And tell thy jewels o'er with jealous eye?
+Mindful of that sad vision, which in thought
+From Chebar's plains the captive prophet brought.
+
+To see lost Sion's shame. 'Twas morning prime,
+ And like a Queen new seated on her throne,
+GOD'S crowned mountain, as in happier time,
+ Seemed to rejoice in sunshine all her own:
+So bright, while all in shade around her lay,
+Her northern pinnacles had caught th' emerging ray.
+
+The dazzling lines of her majestic roof
+ Crossed with as free a span the vault of heaven,
+As when twelve tribes knelt silently aloof
+ Ere GOD His answer to their king had given,
+Ere yet upon the new-built altar fell
+The glory of the LORD, the Lord of Israel.
+
+All seems the same: but enter in and see
+ What idol shapes are on the wall portrayed:
+And watch their shameless and unholy glee,
+ Who worship there in Aaron's robes arrayed:
+Hear Judah's maids the dirge to Thammuz pour,
+And mark her chiefs yon orient sun adore.
+
+Yet turn thee, son of man--for worse than these
+ Thou must behold: thy loathing were but lost
+On dead men's crimes, and Jews' idolatries -
+ Come, learn to tell aright thine own sins' cost, -
+And sure their sin as far from equals thine,
+As earthly hopes abused are less than hopes divine.
+
+What if within His world, His Church, our LORD
+ Have entered thee, as in some temple gate,
+Where, looking round, each glance might thee afford
+ Some glorious earnest of thine high estate,
+And thou, false heart and frail, hast turned from all
+To worship pleasure's shadow on the wall?
+
+If, when the LORD of Glory was in sight,
+ Thou turn thy back upon that fountain clear,
+To bow before the "little drop of light,"
+ Which dim-eyed men call praise and glory here;
+What dost thou, but adore the sun, and scorn
+Him at whose only word both sun and stars were born?
+
+If, while around thee gales from Eden breathe,
+ Thou hide thine eyes, to make thy peevish moan
+Over some broken reed of earth beneath,
+ Some darling of blind fancy dead and gone,
+As wisely might'st thou in JEHOVAH'S fane
+Offer thy love and tears to Thammuz slain.
+
+Turn thee from these, or dare not to inquire
+ Of Him whose name is Jealous, lest in wrath
+He hear and answer thine unblest desire:
+ Far better we should cross His lightning's path
+Than be according to our idols beard,
+And God should take us at our own vain word.
+
+Thou who hast deigned the Christian's heart to call
+ Thy Church and Shrine; whene'er our rebel will
+Would in that chosen home of Thine instal
+ Belial or Mammon, grant us not the ill
+We blindly ask; in very love refuse
+Whate'er Thou knowest our weakness would abuse.
+
+Or rather help us, LORD, to choose the good,
+ To pray for nought, to seek to none, but Thee,
+Nor by "our daily bread" mean common food,
+ Nor say, "From this world's evil set us free;"
+Teach us to love, with CHRIST, our sole true bliss,
+Else, though in CHRIST'S own words, we surely pray amiss.
+
+
+
+EIGHTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+I will bring you into the wilderness of the people, and there will
+I plead with you face to face. Like as pleaded with your fathers
+in the wilderness of the land of Egypt, so will I plead with you,
+saith the Lord God. Ezekiel xx. 35, 36.
+
+It is so--ope thine eyes, and see -
+ What viewest thou all around?
+A desert, where iniquity
+ And knowledge both abound.
+
+In the waste howling wilderness
+ The Church is wandering still,
+Because we would not onward press
+ When close to Sion's hill.
+
+Back to the world we faithless turned,
+ And far along the wild,
+With labour lost and sorrow earned,
+ Our steps have been beguiled.
+
+Yet full before us, all the while,
+ The shadowing pillar stays,
+The living waters brightly smile,
+ The eternal turrets blaze,
+
+Yet Heaven is raining angels' bread
+ To be our daily food,
+And fresh, as when it first was shed,
+ Springs forth the SAVIOUR'S blood.
+
+From every region, race, and speech,
+ Believing myriads throng,
+Till, far as sin and sorrow reach,
+ Thy grace is spread along;
+
+Till sweetest nature, brightest art,
+ Their votive incense bring,
+And every voice and every heart
+ Own Thee their God and King.
+
+All own; but few, alas! will love;
+ Too like the recreant band
+That with Thy patient spirit strove
+ Upon the Red-sea strand.
+
+O Father of long-suffering grace,
+ Thou who hast sworn to stay
+Pleading with sinners face to face
+ Through all their devious way:
+
+How shall we speak to Thee, O LORD,
+ Or how in silence lie?
+Look on us, and we are abhorred,
+ Turn from us, and we die.
+
+Thy guardian fire, Thy guiding cloud,
+ Still let them gild our wall,
+Nor be our foes and Thine allowed
+ To see us faint and fall.
+
+Too oft, within this camp of Thine,
+ Rebellions murmurs rise;
+Sin cannot bear to see Thee shine
+ So awful to her eyes.
+
+Fain would our lawless hearts escape,
+ And with the heathen be,
+To worship every monstrous shape
+ In fancied darkness free.
+
+Vain thought, that shall not be at all!
+ Refuse we or obey,
+Our ears have heard the Almighty's call,
+ We cannot be as they.
+
+We cannot hope the heathen's doom
+ To whom GOD'S Son is given,
+Whose eyes have seen beyond the tomb,
+ Who have the key of Heaven.
+
+Weak tremblers on the edge of woe,
+ Yet shrinking from true bliss,
+Our rest must be "no rest below,"
+ And let our prayer be this:
+
+"LORD, wave again Thy chastening rod,
+ Till every idol throne
+Crumble to dust, and Thou, O GOD,
+ Reign in our hearts alone.
+
+"Bring all our wandering fancies home,
+ For Thou hast every spell,
+And 'mid the heathen where they roam,
+ Thou knowest, LORD, too well.
+
+"Thou know'st our service sad and hard,
+ Thou know'st us fond and frail;
+Win us to be loved and spared
+ When all the world shall fail.
+
+"So when at last our weary days
+ Are well-nigh wasted here,
+And we can trace Thy wondrous ways
+ In distance calm and clear,
+
+"When in Thy love and Israel's sin
+ We read our story true,
+We may not, all too late, begin
+ To wish our hopes were new.
+
+"Long loved, long tried, long spared as they,
+ Unlike in this alone,
+That, by Thy grace, our hearts shall stay
+ For evermore Thine own."
+
+
+
+NINETEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Then Nebuchadnezzar the king was astonished, and rose up in haste,
+and spake, and said unto his counsellors, Did not we cast three men
+bound into the midst of the fire? They answered and said unto the
+king, True, O king. He answered and said, Lo, I see four men
+loose, walking in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and
+the form of the fourth is like the Son of God. Daniel iii. 24, 25.
+
+When Persecution's torrent blaze
+ Wraps the unshrinking Martyr's head;
+When fade all earthly flowers and bays,
+ When summer friends are gone and fled,
+Is he alone in that dark hour
+Who owns the Lord of love and power?
+
+Or waves there not around his brow
+ A wand no human arm may wield,
+Fraught with a spell no angels know,
+ His steps to guide, his soul to shield?
+Thou, Saviour, art his Charmed Bower,
+His Magic Ring, his Rock, his Tower.
+
+And when the wicked ones behold
+ Thy favourites walking in Thy light,
+Just as, in fancy triumph bold,
+ They deemed them lost in deadly night,
+Amazed they cry, "What spell is this,
+Which turns their sufferings all to bliss?
+
+"How are they free whom we had bound?
+ Upright, whom in the gulf we cast?
+What wondrous helper have they found
+ To screen them from the scorching blast?
+Three were they--who hath made them four?
+And sure a form divine he wore,
+
+"E'en like the Son of God." So cried
+ The Tyrant, when in one fierce flame
+The Martyrs lived, the murderers died:
+ Yet knew he not what angel came
+To make the rushing fire-flood seem
+Like summer breeze by woodland stream.
+
+He knew not, but there are who know:
+ The Matron, who alone hath stood,
+When not a prop seemed left below,
+ The first lorn hour of widowhood,
+Yet cheered and cheering all, the while,
+With sad but unaffected smile; -
+
+The Father, who his vigil keeps
+ By the sad couch whence hope hath flown,
+Watching the eye where reason sleeps,
+ Yet in his heart can mercy own,
+Still sweetly yielding to the rod,
+Still loving man, still thanking GOD; -
+
+The Christian Pastor, bowed to earth
+ With thankless toil, and vile esteemed,
+Still travailing in second birth
+ Of souls that will not be redeemed:
+Yet stedfast set to do his part,
+And fearing most his own vain heart; -
+
+These know: on these look long and well,
+ Cleansing thy sight by prayer and faith,
+And thou shalt know what secret spell
+ Preserves them in their living death:
+Through sevenfold flames thine eye shall see
+The Saviour walking with His faithful Three.
+
+
+
+TWENTIETH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Hear ye, O mountains, the Lord's controversy, and ye strong
+foundations of the earth. Micah vi. 2.
+
+Where is Thy favoured haunt, eternal Voice,
+ The region of Thy choice,
+Where, undisturbed by sin and earth, the soul
+ Owns Thy entire control? -
+'Tis on the mountain's summit dark and high,
+ When storms are hurrying by:
+'Tis 'mid the strong foundations of the earth,
+ Where torrents have their birth.
+
+No sounds of worldly toil ascending there,
+ Mar the full burst of prayer;
+Lone Nature feels that she may freely breathe,
+ And round us and beneath
+Are heard her sacred tones: the fitful sweep
+ Of winds across the steep
+Through withered bents--romantic note and clear,
+ Meet for a hermit's ear, -
+
+The wheeling kite's wild solitary cry,
+ And, scarcely heard so high,
+The dashing waters when the air is still
+ From many a torrent rill
+That winds unseen beneath the shaggy fell,
+ Tracked by the blue mist well:
+Such sounds as make deep silence in the heart
+ For Thought to do her part.
+
+'Tis then we hear the voice of GOD within,
+ Pleading with care and sin:
+"Child of My love! how have I wearied thee?
+ Why wilt thou err from Me?
+Have I not brought thee from the house of slaves,
+ Parted the drowning waves,
+And set My saints before thee in the way,
+ Lest thou shouldst faint or stray?
+
+"What! was the promise made to thee alone?
+ Art thou the excepted one?
+An heir of glory without grief or pain?
+ O vision false and vain!
+There lies thy cross; beneath it meekly bow;
+ It fits thy stature now:
+Who scornful pass it with averted eye,
+ 'Twill crush them by-and-by.
+
+"Raise thy repining eyes, and take true measure
+ Of thine eternal treasure;
+The Father of thy Lord can grudge thee nought,
+ The world for thee was bought;
+And as this landscape broad--earth, sea, and sky, -
+ All centres in thine eye,
+So all God does, if rightly understood,
+ Shall work thy final good."
+
+
+
+TWENTY-FIRST SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+The vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it shall
+speak, and not lie: though it tarry, wait for it, because it will
+surely come, it will not tarry. Habakkuk ii. 3.
+
+ The morning mist is cleared away,
+ Yet still the face of Heaven is grey,
+Nor yet this autumnal breeze has stirred the grove,
+ Faded yet full, a paler green
+ Skirts soberly the tranquil scene,
+The red-breast warbles round this leafy cove.
+
+ Sweet messenger of "calm decay,"
+ Saluting sorrow as you may,
+As one still bent to find or make the best,
+ In thee, and in this quiet mead,
+ The lesson of sweet peace I read,
+Rather in all to be resigned than blest.
+
+ 'Tis a low chant, according well
+ With the soft solitary knell,
+As homeward from some grave beloved we turn,
+ Or by some holy death-bed dear,
+ Most welcome to the chastened ear
+Of her whom Heaven is teaching how to mourn.
+
+ O cheerful tender strain! the heart
+ That duly bears with you its part,
+Singing so thankful to the dreary blast,
+ Though gone and spent its joyous prime,
+ And on the world's autumnal time,
+'Mid withered hues and sere, its lot be cast:
+
+ That is the heart for thoughtful seer,
+ Watching, in trance nor dark nor clear,
+Th' appalling Future as it nearer draws:
+ His spirit calmed the storm to meet,
+ Feeling the rock beneath his feet,
+And tracing through the cloud th' eternal Cause.
+
+ That is the heart for watchman true
+ Waiting to see what GOD will do,
+As o'er the Church the gathering twilight falls
+ No more he strains his wistful eye,
+ If chance the golden hours be nigh,
+By youthful Hope seen beaming round her walls.
+
+ Forced from his shadowy paradise,
+ His thoughts to Heaven the steadier rise:
+There seek his answer when the world reproves:
+ Contented in his darkling round,
+ If only he be faithful found,
+When from the east the eternal morning moves.
+
+Note: The expression, "calm delay," is borrowed from a friend, by
+whose kind permission the following stanzas are here inserted.
+
+TO THE RED-BREAST.
+
+Unheard in summer's flaring ray,
+ Pour forth thy notes, sweet singer,
+Wooing the stillness of the autumn day:
+ Bid it a moment linger,
+ Nor fly
+Too soon from winter's scowling eye.
+
+The blackbird's song at even-tide,
+ And hers, who gay ascends,
+Filling the heavens far and wide,
+ Are sweet. But none so blends,
+ As thine,
+With calm decay, and peace divine.
+
+
+
+TWENTY-SECOND SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him?
+Matthew xviii. 21.
+
+What liberty so glad and gay,
+ As where the mountain boy,
+Reckless of regions far away,
+ A prisoner lives in joy?
+
+The dreary sounds of crowded earth,
+ The cries of camp or town,
+Never untuned his lonely mirth,
+ Nor drew his visions down.
+
+The snow-clad peaks of rosy light
+ That meet his morning view,
+The thwarting cliffs that bound his sight,
+ They bound his fancy too.
+
+Two ways alone his roving eye
+ For aye may onward go,
+Or in the azure deep on high,
+ Or darksome mere below.
+
+O blest restraint! more blessed range!
+ Too soon the happy child
+His nook of homely thought will change
+ For life's seducing wild:
+
+Too soon his altered day-dreams show
+ This earth a boundless space,
+With sun-bright pleasures to and fro
+ Sporting in joyous race:
+
+While of his narrowing heart each year,
+ Heaven less and less will fill,
+Less keenly, thorough his grosser ear,
+ The tones of mercy thrill.
+
+It must be so: else wherefore falls
+ The Saviour's voice unheard,
+While from His pard'ning Cross He calls,
+ "O spare as I have spared?"
+
+By our own niggard rule we try
+ The hope to suppliants given!
+We mete out love, as if our eye
+ Saw to the end of Heaven.
+
+Yes, ransomed sinner! wouldst thou know
+ How often to forgive,
+How dearly to embrace thy foe,
+ Look where thou hop'st to live; -
+
+When thou hast told those isles of light,
+ And fancied all beyond,
+Whatever owns, in depth or height,
+ Creation's wondrous bond;
+
+Then in their solemn pageant learn
+ Sweet mercy's praise to see:
+Their Lord resigned them all, to earn
+ The bliss of pardoning thee.
+
+
+
+TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+Who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto
+His glorious body, according to the working whereby He is able even
+to subdue all things onto Himself. Philippians iii. 21.
+
+Red o'er the forest peers the setting sun,
+ The line of yellow light dies fast away
+That crowned the eastern copse: and chill and dun
+ Falls on the moor the brief November day.
+
+Now the tired hunter winds a parting note,
+ And Echo hide good-night from every glade;
+Yet wait awhile, and see the calm heaves float
+ Each to his rest beneath their parent shade.
+
+How like decaying life they seem to glide!
+ And yet no second spring have they in store,
+But where they fall, forgotten to abide
+ Is all their portion, and they ask no more.
+
+Soon o'er their heads blithe April airs shall sing,
+ A thousand wild-flowers round them shall unfold,
+The green buds glisten in the dews of Spring,
+ And all be vernal rapture as of old.
+
+Unconscious they in waste oblivion lie,
+ In all the world of busy life around
+No thought of them; in all the bounteous sky,
+ No drop, for them, of kindly influence found.
+
+Man's portion is to die and rise again -
+ Yet he complains, while these unmurmuring part
+With their sweet lives, as pure from sin and stain,
+ As his when Eden held his virgin heart.
+
+And haply half unblamed his murmuring voice
+ Might sound in Heaven, were all his second life
+Only the first renewed--the heathen's choice,
+ A round of listless joy and weary strife.
+
+For dreary were this earth, if earth were all,
+ Tho' brightened oft by dear Affection's kiss; -
+Who for the spangles wears the funeral pall?
+ But catch a gleam beyond it, and 'tis bliss.
+
+Heavy and dull this frame of limbs and heart,
+ Whether slow creeping on cold earth, or borne
+On lofty steed, or loftier prow, we dart
+ O'er wave or field: yet breezes laugh to scorn
+
+Our puny speed, and birds, and clouds in heaven,
+ And fish, living shafts that pierce the main,
+And stars that shoot through freezing air at even -
+ Who but would follow, might he break his chain?
+
+And thou shalt break it soon; the grovelling worm
+ Shall find his wings, and soar as fast and free
+As his transfigured Lord with lightning form
+ And snowy vest--such grace He won for thee,
+
+When from the grave He sprang at dawn of morn,
+ And led through boundless air thy conquering road,
+Leaving a glorious track, where saints, new-born,
+ Might fearless follow to their blest abode.
+
+But first, by many a stern and fiery blast
+ The world's rude furnace must thy blood refine,
+And many a gale of keenest woe be passed,
+ Till every pulse beat true to airs divine,
+
+Till every limb obey the mounting soul,
+ The mounting soul, the call by Jesus given.
+He who the stormy heart can so control,
+ The laggard body soon will waft to Heaven.
+
+
+
+TWENTY-FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+The heart knoweth his own bitterness: and a stranger doth not
+intermeddle with his joy. Proverbs xiv. 10.
+
+Why should we faint and fear to live alone,
+ Since all alone, so Heaven has willed, we die,
+Nor e'en the tenderest heart, and next our own,
+ Knows half the reasons why we smile and sigh?
+
+Each in his hidden sphere of joy or woe
+ Our hermit spirits dwell, and range apart,
+Our eyes see all around in gloom or glow -
+ Hues of their own, fresh borrowed from the heart.
+
+And well it is for us our GOD should feel
+ Alone our secret throbbings: so our prayer
+May readier spring to Heaven, nor spend its zeal
+ On cloud-born idols of this lower air.
+
+For if one heart in perfect sympathy
+ Beat with another, answering love for love,
+Weak mortals, all entranced, on earth would lie,
+ Nor listen for those purer strains above.
+
+Or what if Heaven for once its searching light
+ Lent to some partial eye, disclosing all
+The rude bad thoughts, that in our bosom's night
+ Wander at large, nor heed Love's gentle thrall?
+
+Who would not shun the dreary uncouth place?
+ As if, fond leaning where her infant slept,
+A mother's arm a serpent should embrace:
+ So might we friendless live, and die unwept.
+
+Then keep the softening veil in mercy drawn,
+ Thou who canst love us, thro' Thou read us true;
+As on the bosom of th' aerial lawn
+ Melts in dim haze each coarse ungentle hue.
+
+So too may soothing Hope Thy heave enjoy
+ Sweet visions of long-severed hearts to frame:
+Though absence may impair, or cares annoy,
+ Some constant mind may draw us still the same.
+
+We in dark dreams are tossing to and fro,
+ Pine with regret, or sicken with despair,
+The while she bathes us in her own chaste glow,
+ And with our memory wings her own fond prayer.
+
+O bliss of child-like innocence, and love
+ Tried to old age! creative power to win,
+And raise new worlds, where happy fancies rove,
+ Forgetting quite this grosser world of sin.
+
+Bright are their dreams, because their thoughts are clear,
+ Their memory cheering: but th' earth-stained spright,
+Whose wakeful musings are of guilt and fear,
+ Must hover nearer earth, and less in light.
+
+Farewell, for her, th' ideal scenes so fair -
+ Yet not farewell her hope, since thou hast deigned,
+Creator of all hearts! to own and share
+ The woe of what Thou mad'st, and we have stained.
+
+Thou knowst our bitterness--our joys are Thine -
+ No stranger Thou to all our wanderings wild:
+Nor could we bear to think, how every line
+ Of us, Thy darkened likeness and defiled,
+
+Stands in full sunshine of Thy piercing eye,
+ But that Thou call'st us Brethren: sweet repose
+Is in that word--the LORD who dwells on high
+ Knows all, yet loves us better than He knows.
+
+
+
+TWENTY-FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
+
+
+
+The hoary head is a crown of glory, if it be found in the way of
+righteousness. Proverbs xvi. 31.
+
+The bright-haired morn is glowing
+ O'er emerald meadows gay,
+With many a clear gem strewing
+ The early shepherd's way.
+Ye gentle elves, by Fancy seen
+ Stealing away with night
+To slumber in your leafy screen,
+ Tread more than airy light.
+
+And see what joyous greeting
+ The sun through heaven has shed,
+Though fast yon shower be fleeting,
+ His beams have faster sped.
+For lo! above the western haze
+ High towers the rainbow arch
+In solid span of purest rays:
+ How stately is its march!
+
+Pride of the dewy morning!
+ The swain's experienced eye
+From thee takes timely warning,
+ Nor trusts the gorgeous sky.
+For well he knows, such dawnings gay
+ Bring noons of storm and shower,
+And travellers linger on the way
+ Beside the sheltering bower.
+
+E'en so, in hope and trembling
+ Should watchful shepherd view
+His little lambs assembling,
+ With glance both kind and true;
+'Tis not the eye of keenest blaze,
+ Nor the quick-swelling breast,
+That soonest thrills at touch of praise -
+ These do not please him best.
+
+But voices low and gentle,
+ And timid glances shy,
+That seem for aid parental
+ To sue all wistfully,
+Still pressing, longing to be right,
+ Yet fearing to be wrong, -
+In these the Pastor dares delight,
+ A lamb-like, Christ-like throng.
+
+These in Life's distant even
+ Shall shine serenely bright,
+As in th' autumnal heaven
+ Mild rainbow tints at night,
+When the last shower is stealing down,
+ And ere they sink to rest,
+The sun-beams weave a parting crown
+ For some sweet woodland nest.
+
+The promise of the morrow
+ Is glorious on that eve,
+Dear as the holy sorrow
+ When good men cease to live.
+When brightening ere it die away
+ Mounts up their altar flame,
+Still tending with intenser ray
+ To Heaven whence first it came.
+
+Say not it dies, that glory,
+ 'Tis caught unquenched on high,
+Those saintlike brows so hoary
+ Shall wear it in the sky.
+No smile is like the smile of death,
+ When all good musings past
+Rise wafted with the parting breath,
+ The sweetest thought the last.
+
+
+
+SUNDAY NEXT BEFORE ADVENT
+
+
+
+Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost. St.
+John vi. 12.
+
+ Will God indeed with fragments bear,
+ Snatched late from the decaying year?
+ Or can the Saviour's blood endear
+ The dregs of a polluted life?
+ When down th' o'erwhelming current tossed
+ Just ere he sink for ever lost,
+ The sailor's untried arms are crossed
+In agonizing prayer, will Ocean cease her strife?
+
+ Sighs that exhaust but not relieve
+ Heart-rending sighs, O spare to heave
+ A bosom freshly taught to grieve
+ For lavished hours and love misspent!
+ Now through her round of holy thought
+ The Church our annual steps has brought,
+ But we no holy fire have caught -
+Back on the gaudy world our wilful eyes were bent.
+
+ Too soon th' ennobling carols, poured
+ To hymn the birth-night of the LORD,
+ Which duteous Memory should have stored
+ For thankful echoing all the year -
+ Too soon those airs have passed away;
+ Nor long within the heart would stay
+ The silence of CHRIST'S dying day,
+Profaned by worldly mirth, or scared by worldly fear.
+
+ Some strain of hope and victory
+ On Easter wings might lift us high
+ A little while we sought the sky:
+ And when the SPIRIT'S beacon fires
+ On every hill began to blare,
+ Lightening the world with glad amaze,
+ Who but must kindle while they gaze?
+But faster than she soars, our earth-bound Fancy tires.
+
+ Nor yet for these, nor all the rites,
+ By which our Mother's voice invites
+ Our GOD to bless our home delights,
+ And sweeten every secret tear:-
+ The funeral dirge, the marriage vow,
+ The hollowed font where parents bow,
+ And now elate and trembling now
+To the Redeemer's feet their new-found treasures bear:-
+
+ Not for this Pastor's gracious arm
+ Stretched out to bless--a Christian charm
+ To dull the shafts of worldly harm:-
+ Nor, sweetest, holiest, best of all
+ For the dear feast of JESUS dying,
+ Upon that altar ever lying,
+ Where souls with sacred hunger sighing
+Are called to sit and eat, while angels prostrate fall:-
+
+ No, not for each and all of these,
+ Have our frail spirits found their ease.
+ The gale that stirs the autumnal trees
+ Seems tuned as truly to our hearts
+ As when, twelve weary months ago,
+ 'Twas moaning bleak, so high and low,
+ You would have thought Remorse and Woe
+Had taught the innocent air their sadly thrilling parts.
+
+ Is it, CHRIST'S light is too divine,
+ We dare not hope like Him to shine?
+ But see, around His dazzling shrine
+ Earths gems the fire of Heaven have caught;
+ Martyrs and saints--each glorious day
+ Dawning in order on our way -
+ Remind us, how our darksome clay
+May keep th' ethereal warmth our new Creator brought.
+
+ These we have scorned, O false and frail!
+ And now once more th' appalling tale,
+ How love divine may woo and fail,
+ Of our lost year in Heaven is told -
+ What if as far our life were past,
+ Our weeks all numbered to the last,
+ With time and hope behind us cast,
+And all our work to do with palsied hands and cold?
+
+ O watch and pray ere Advent dawn!
+ For thinner than the subtlest lawn
+ 'Twixt thee and death the veil is drawn.
+ But Love too late can never glow:
+ The scattered fragments Love can glean
+ Refine the dregs, and yield us clean
+ To regions where one thought serene
+Breathes sweeter than whole years of sacrifice below.
+
+
+
+ST. ANDREW'S DAY
+
+
+
+He first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have
+found the Messias . . . And he brought him to Jesus. St. John i.
+41, 42.
+
+When brothers part for manhood's race,
+ What gift may most endearing prove
+To keep fond memory its her place,
+ And certify a brother's love?
+
+'Tis true, bright hours together told,
+ And blissful dreams in secret shared,
+Serene or solemn, gay or bold,
+ Shall last in fancy unimpaired.
+
+E'en round the death-bed of the good
+ Such dear remembrances will hover,
+And haunt us with no vexing mood
+ When all the cares of earth are over.
+
+But yet our craving spirits feel,
+ We shall live on, though Fancy die,
+And seek a surer pledge--a seal
+ Of love to last eternally.
+
+Who art thou, that wouldst grave thy name
+ Thus deeply in a brother's heart?
+Look on this saint, and learn to frame
+ Thy love-charm with true Christian art.
+
+First seek thy Saviour out, and dwell
+ Beneath this shadow of His roof,
+Till thou have scanned His features well,
+ And known Him for the Christ by proof;
+
+Such proof as they are sure to find
+ Who spend with Him their happy days,
+Clean hands, and a self-ruling mind
+ Ever in tune for love and praise.
+
+Then, potent with the spell of Heaven,
+ Go, and thine erring brother gain,
+Entice him home to be forgiven,
+ Till he, too, see his Saviour plain.
+
+Or, if before thee in the race,
+ Urge him with thine advancing tread,
+Till, like twin stars, with even pace,
+ Each lucid course be duly aped.
+
+No fading frail memorial give
+ To soothe his soul when thou art gone,
+But wreaths of hope for aye to live,
+ And thoughts of good together done.
+
+That so, before the judgment-seat,
+ Though changed and glorified each face,
+Not unremembered ye may meet
+ For endless ages to embrace.
+
+
+
+ST. THOMAS' DAY
+
+
+
+Thomas, because thou hast seen Me, thou hast believed; blessed are
+they that have not seen, and yet have believed. St. John xx. 29.
+
+ We were not by when Jesus came,
+ But round us, far and near,
+ We see His trophies, and His name
+ In choral echoes hear.
+ In a fair ground our lot is cast,
+ As in the solemn week that past,
+ While some might doubt, but all adored,
+Ere the whole widowed Church had seen her risen Lord.
+
+ Slowly, as then, His bounteous hand
+ The golden chain unwinds,
+ Drawing to Heaven with gentlest band
+ Wise hearts and loving minds.
+ Love sought Him first--at dawn of morn
+ From her sad couch she sprang forlorn,
+ She sought to weep with Thee alone,
+And saw Thine open grave, and knew that thou wert gone.
+
+ Reason and Faith at once set out
+ To search the SAVIOUR'S tomb;
+ Faith faster runs, but waits without,
+ As fearing to presume,
+ Till Reason enter in, and trace
+ Christ's relics round the holy place -
+ "Here lay His limbs, and here His sacred head,
+And who was by, to make His new-forsaken bed?"
+
+ Both wonder, one believes--but while
+ They muse on all at home,
+ No thought can tender Love beguile
+ From Jesus' grave to roam.
+ Weeping she stays till He appear -
+ Her witness first the Church must hear -
+ All joy to souls that can rejoice
+With her at earliest call of His dear gracious voice.
+
+ Joy too to those, who love to talk
+ In secret how He died,
+ Though with sealed eyes awhile they walk,
+ Nor see him at their side:
+ Most like the faithful pair are they,
+ Who once to Emmaus took their way,
+ Half darkling, till their Master shied
+His glory on their souls, made known in breaking bread.
+
+ Thus, ever brighter and more bright,
+ On those He came to save
+ The Lord of new-created light
+ Dawned gradual from the grave;
+ Till passed th' enquiring day-light hour,
+ And with closed door in silent bower
+ The Church in anxious musing sate,
+As one who for redemption still had long to wait.
+
+ Then, gliding through th' unopening door,
+ Smooth without step or sound,
+ "Peace to your souls," He said--no more -
+ They own Him, kneeling round.
+ Eye, ear, and hand, and loving heart,
+ Body and soul in every part,
+ Successive made His witnesses that hour,
+Cease not in all the world to show His saving power.
+
+ Is there, on earth, a spirit frail,
+ Who fears to take their word,
+ Scarce daring, through the twilight pale,
+ To think he sees the Lord?
+ With eyes too tremblingly awake
+ To bear with dimness for His sake?
+ Read and confess the Hand Divine
+That drew thy likeness here so true in every line.
+
+ For all thy rankling doubts so sore,
+ Love thou thy Saviour still,
+ Him for thy Lord and God adore,
+ And ever do His will.
+ Though vexing thoughts may seem to last,
+ Let not thy soul be quite o'ercast; -
+ Soon will He show thee all His wounds, and say,
+"Long have I known Thy name--know thou My face alway."
+
+
+
+THE CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL
+
+
+
+And he fell to the earth, and heard a voice saying unto him, Saul,
+Saul, why persecutest thou Me? And he said, Who art Thou, Lord?
+And the Lord said, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest. Acts ix. 4,
+5.
+
+The mid-day sun, with fiercest glare,
+Broods o'er the hazy twinkling air:
+ Along the level sand
+The palm-tree's shade unwavering lies,
+Just as thy towers, Damascus, rise
+ To greet you wearied band.
+
+The leader of that martial crew
+Seems bent some mighty deed to do,
+ So steadily he speeds,
+With lips firm closed and fixed eye,
+Like warrior when the fight is night,
+ Nor talk nor landscape heeds.
+
+What sudden blaze is round him poured,
+As though all Heaven's refulgent hoard
+ In one rich glory shone?
+One moment--and to earth he falls:
+What voice his inmost heart appalls? -
+ Voice heard by him alone.
+
+For to the rest both words and form
+Seem lost in lightning and in storm,
+ While Saul, in wakeful trance,
+Sees deep within that dazzling field
+His persecuted Lord revealed,
+ With keen yet pitying glance:
+
+And hears time meek upbraiding call
+As gently on his spirit fall,
+ As if th' Almighty Son
+Were prisoner yet in this dark earth,
+Nor had proclaimed His royal birth,
+ Nor His great power begun.
+
+"Ah! wherefore persecut'st thou Me?"
+He heard and saw, and sought to free
+ His strained eyes from the sight:
+But Heaven's high magic bound it there,
+Still gazing, though untaught to bear
+ Th' insufferable light.
+
+"Who art Thou, Lord?" he falters forth:-
+So shall Sin ask of heaven and earth
+ At the last awful day.
+"When did we see Thee suffering nigh,
+And passed Thee with unheeding eye?
+ Great God of judgment, say!"
+
+Ah! little dream our listless eyes
+What glorious presence they despise,
+ While, in our noon of life,
+To power or fame we rudely press. -
+Christ is at hand, to scorn or bless,
+ Christ suffers in our strife.
+
+And though heaven's gate long since have closed,
+And our dear Lord in bliss reposed,
+ High above mortal ken,
+To every ear in every land
+(Thought meek ears only understand)
+ He speaks as he did then.
+
+"Ah! wherefore persecute ye Me?
+'Tis hard, ye so in love should be
+ With your own endless woe.
+Know, though at God's right hand I live,
+I feel each wound ye reckless give
+ To the least saint below.
+
+"I in your care My brethren left,
+Not willing ye should be bereft
+ Of waiting on your Lord.
+The meanest offering ye can make -
+A drop of water--for love's sake,
+ In Heaven, be sure, is stored."
+
+O by those gentle tones and dear,
+When thou hast stayed our wild career,
+ Thou only hope of souls,
+Ne'er let us cast one look behind,
+But in the thought of Jesus find
+ What every thought controls.
+
+As to Thy last Apostle's heart
+Thy lightning glance did then impart
+ Zeal's never-dying fire,
+So teach us on Thy shrine to lay
+Our hearts, and let them day by day
+ Intenser blaze and higher.
+
+And as each mild and winning note
+(Like pulses that round harp-strings float
+ When the full strain is o'er)
+Left lingering on his inward ear
+Music, that taught, as death drew near,
+ Love's lesson more and more:
+
+So, as we walk our earthly round,
+Still may the echo of that sound
+ Be in our memory stored
+"Christians! behold your happy state:
+Christ is in these, who round you wait;
+ Make much of your dear Lord!"
+
+
+
+THE PURIFICATION
+
+
+
+Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God. St.
+Matthew v. 8.
+
+ Bless'd are the pure in heart,
+ For they shall see our God,
+The secret of the Lord is theirs,
+ Their soul is Christ's abode.
+
+ Might mortal thought presume
+ To guess an angel's lay,
+Such are the notes that echo through
+ The courts of Heaven to-day.
+
+ Such the triumphal hymns
+ On Sion's Prince that wait,
+In high procession passing on
+ Towards His temple-gate.
+
+ Give ear, ye kings--bow down,
+ Ye rulers of the earth -
+This, this is He: your Priest by grace,
+ Your God and King by birth.
+
+ No pomp of earthly guards
+ Attends with sword and spear,
+And all-defying, dauntless look,
+ Their monarch's way to clear;
+
+ Yet are there more with Him
+ Than all that are with you -
+The armies of the highest Heaven,
+ All righteous, good, and true.
+
+ Spotless their robes and pure,
+ Dipped in the sea of light,
+That hides the unapproached shrine
+ From men's and angels' sight.
+
+ His throne, thy bosom blest,
+ O mother undefiled -
+That throne, if aught beneath the skies,
+ Beseems the sinless child.
+
+ Lost in high thoughts, "whose son
+ The wondrous Babe might prove,"
+Her guileless husband walks beside,
+ Bearing the hallowed dove;
+
+ Meet emblem of His vow,
+ Who, on this happy day,
+His dove-like soul--best sacrifice -
+ Did on God's altar lay.
+
+ But who is he, by years
+ Bowed, but erect in heart,
+Whose prayers are struggling with his tears?
+ "Lord, let me now depart.
+
+ "Now hath Thy servant seen
+ Thy saving health, O Lord;
+'Tis time that I depart in peace,
+ According to Thy word."
+
+ Yet swells this pomp: one more
+ Comes forth to bless her God;
+Full fourscore years, meek widow, she
+ Her heaven-ward way hath troth.
+
+ She who to earthly joys
+ So long had given farewell,
+Now sees, unlooked for, Heaven on earth,
+ Christ in His Israel.
+
+ Wide open from that hour
+ The temple-gates are set,
+And still the saints rejoicing there
+ The holy Child have met.
+
+ Now count His train to-day,
+ Auth who may meet Him, learn:
+Him child-like sires, meek maidens find,
+ Where pride can nought discern.
+
+ Still to the lowly soul
+ He doth Himself impart,
+And for His cradle and His throne
+ Chooseth the pure in heart.
+
+
+
+ST. MATTHIAS' DAY
+
+
+
+Wherefore of these men which have companied with us all the time
+that the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, beginning from the
+baptism of John, unto the same day that He was taken up from us,
+must one be ordained to be a witness with us of His resurrection.
+Acts i. 21, 22.
+
+ Who is God's chosen priest?
+He, who on Christ stands waiting day and night,
+Who traceth His holy steps, nor ever ceased,
+ From Jordan banks to Bethphage height:
+
+ Who hath learned lowliness
+From his Lord's cradle, patience from His Cross;
+Whom poor men's eyes and hearts consent to bless;
+ To whom, for Christ, the world is loss;
+
+ Who both in agony
+Hath seen Him and in glory; and in both
+Owned Him divine, and yielded, nothing loth,
+ Body and soul, to live and die,
+
+ In witness of his Lord,
+In humble following of his Saviour dear:
+This is the man to wield th' unearthly sword,
+ Warring unharmed with sin and fear.
+
+ But who can o'er suffice -
+What mortal--for this more than angels' task,
+Winning or losing souls, Thy life-blood's price?
+ The gift were too divine to ask.
+
+ But Thou hast made it sure
+By Thy dear promise to thy Church and Bride,
+That Thou, on earth, wouldst aye with her endure,
+ Till earth to Heaven be purified.
+
+ Thou art her only spouse,
+Whose arm supports her, on Whose faithful breast
+Her persecuted head she meekly bows,
+ Sure pledge of her eternal rest.
+
+ Thou, her unerring guide,
+Stayest her fainting steps along the wild;
+Thy merit is on the bowers of lust and pride,
+ That she may pass them undefiled.
+
+ Who then, uncalled by Thee,
+Dare touch Thy spouse, Thy very self below?
+Or who dare count him summoned worthily,
+ Except Thine hand and seal he show?
+
+ Where can Thy seal be found,
+But on thou chosen seed, from age to age
+By thine anointed heralds duly crowned,
+ As kings and priests Thy war to wage?
+
+ Then fearless walk we forth,
+Yet full of trembling, Messengers of God:
+Our warrant sure, but doubting of our worth,
+ By our own shame alike and glory awed.
+
+ Dread Searcher of the hearts,
+Thou who didst seal by Thy descending Dove
+Thy servant's choice, O help us in our parts,
+ Else helpless found, to learn and teach Thy love.
+
+
+
+THE ANNUNCIATION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
+
+
+
+And the Angel came in unto her, and said, Hail, thou that art
+highly favoured, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among
+women. St. Luke i. 28.
+
+Oh! Thou who deign'st to sympathise
+With all our frail and fleshly ties,
+ Maker yet Brother dear,
+Forgive the too presumptuous thought,
+If, calming wayward grief, I sought
+ To gaze on Thee too near.
+
+Yet sure 'twas not presumption, Lord,
+'Twas Thine own comfortable word
+ That made the lesson known:
+Of all the dearest bonds we prove,
+Thou countest sons and mothers' love
+ Most sacred, most Thine own.
+
+When wandering here a little span,
+Thou took'st on Thee to rescue man,
+ Thou had'st no earthly sire:
+That wedded love we prize so dear,
+As if our heaven and home were here,
+ It lit in Thee no fire.
+
+On no sweet sister's faithful breast
+Wouldst Thou Thine aching forehead rest,
+ On no kind brother lean:
+But who, O perfect filial heart,
+E'er did like Thee a true son's part,
+ Endearing, firm, serene?
+
+Thou wept'st, meek maiden, mother mild,
+Thou wept'st upon thy sinless Child,
+ Thy very heart was riven:
+And yet, what mourning matron here
+Would deem thy sorrows bought too dear
+ By all on this side Heaven?
+
+A Son that never did amiss,
+That never shamed His Mother's kiss,
+ Nor crossed her fondest prayer:
+E'en from the tree He deigned to bow,
+For her His agonised brow,
+ Her, His sole earthly care.
+
+Ave Maria! blessed Maid!
+Lily of Eden's fragrant shade,
+ Who can express the love
+That nurtured thee so pure and sweet,
+Making thy heart a shelter meet
+ For Jesus' holy dove?
+
+Ave Maria! Mother blest,
+To whom, caressing and caressed,
+ Clings the eternal Child;
+Favoured beyond Archangels' dream,
+When first on Thee with tenderest gleam
+ Thy new-born Saviour smiled:-
+
+Ave Maria! thou whose name
+All but adoring love may claim,
+ Yet may we reach thy shrine;
+For He, thy Son and Saviour, vows
+To crown all lowly lofty brows
+ With love and joy like thine.
+
+Blessed is the womb that bare Him--blessed
+The bosom where His lips were pressed,
+ But rather blessed are they
+Who hear His word and keep it well,
+The living homes where Christ shall dwell,
+ And never pass away.
+
+
+
+ST. MARK'S DAY
+
+
+
+And the contention was so sharp between them, that they departed
+asunder one from the other. Acts xv. 30.
+Compare 2 Tim. iv. 11. Take Mark, and bring him with thee: for he
+is profitable to me for the ministry.
+
+Oh! who shall dare in this frail scene
+On holiest happiest thoughts to lean,
+ On Friendship, Kindred, or on Love?
+Since not Apostles' hands can clasp
+Each other in so firm a grasp
+ But they shall change and variance prove.
+
+Yet deem not, on such parting sad
+Shall dawn no welcome dear and glad:
+ Divided in their earthly race,
+Together at the glorious goal,
+Each leading many a rescued soul,
+ The faithful champions shall embrace.
+
+For e'en as those mysterious Four,
+Who the bright whirling wheels upbore
+ By Chebar in the fiery blast.
+So, on their tasks of love and praise
+This saints of God their several ways
+ Right onward speed, yet join at last.
+
+And sometimes e'en beneath the moon
+The Saviour gives a gracious boon,
+ When reconciled Christians meet,
+And face to face, and heart to heart,
+High thoughts of holy love impart
+ In silence meek, or converse sweet.
+
+Companion of the Saints! 'twas thine
+To taste that drop of peace divine,
+ When the great soldier of thy Lord
+Called thee to take his last farewell,
+Teaching the Church with joy to tell
+ The story of your love restored.
+
+O then the glory and the bliss,
+When all that pained or seemed amiss
+ Shall melt with earth and sin away!
+When saints beneath their Saviour's eye,
+Filled with each other's company,
+ Shall spend in love th' eternal day!
+
+
+
+ST. PHILIP AND ST. JAMES.
+
+
+
+Let the brother of low degree rejoice in that he is exalted: but
+the rich in that he is made low. St. James i. 9. 10.
+
+Dear is the morning gale of spring,
+ And dear th' autumnal eve;
+But few delights can summer bring
+ A Poet's crown to weave.
+
+Her bowers are mute, her fountains dry,
+ And ever Fancy's wing
+Speed's from beneath her cloudless sky
+ To autumn or to spring.
+
+Sweet is the infant's waking smile,
+ And sweet the old man's rest -
+But middle age by no fond wile,
+ No soothing calm is blest.
+
+Still in the world's hot restless gleam
+ She plies her weary task,
+While vainly for some pleasant dream
+ Her wandering glances ask. -
+
+O shame upon thee, listless heart,
+ So sad a sigh to heave,
+As if thy SAVIOUR had no part
+ In thoughts, that make thee grieve.
+
+As if along His lonesome way
+ He had not borne for thee
+Sad languors through the summer day,
+ Storms on the wintry sea.
+
+Youth's lightning flash of joy secure
+ Passed seldom o'er His spright, -
+A well of serious thought and pure.
+ Too deep for earthly light.
+
+No spring was His--no fairy gleam -
+ For He by trial knew
+How cold and bare what mortals dream,
+ To worlds where all is true.
+
+Then grudge not thou the anguish keen
+ Which makes thee like thy LORD,
+And learn to quit with eye serene
+ Thy youth's ideal hoard.
+
+Thy treasured hopes and raptures high -
+ Unmurmuring let them go,
+Nor grieve the bliss should quickly fly
+ Which CHRIST disdained to know.
+
+Thou shalt have joy in sadness soon;
+ The pure, calm hope be thine,
+Which brightens, like the eastern moon,
+ As day's wild lights decline.
+
+Thus souls, by nature pitched too high,
+ By sufferings plunged too low,
+Meet in the Church's middle sky,
+ Half way 'twixt joy and woe,
+
+To practise there the soothing lay
+ That sorrow best relieves;
+Thankful for all God takes away,
+ Humbled by all He glass.
+
+
+
+ST. BARNABAS.
+
+
+
+The sea of consolation, a Levite. Acts iv. 36.
+
+ The world's a room of sickness, where each heart
+ Knows its own anguish and unrest;
+ The truest wisdom there, and noblest art,
+ Is his, who skills of comfort best;
+ Whom by the softest step and gentlest tone
+ Enfeebled spirits own,
+ And love to raise the languid eye,
+When, like an angel's wing, they feel him fleeting by:-
+
+ FEEL only--for in silence gently gliding
+ Fain would he shun both ear and sight,
+ 'Twixt Prayer and watchful Love his heart dividing,
+ A nursing-father day and night.
+ Such were the tender arms, where cradled lay,
+ In her sweet natal day,
+ The Church of JESUS; such the love
+He to His chosen taught for His dear widowed Dove.
+
+ Warmed underneath the Comforter's safe wing
+ They spread th' endearing warmth around:
+ Mourners, speed here your broken hearts to bring,
+ Here healing dews and balms abound:
+ Here are soft hands that cannot bless in vain,
+ By trial taught your pain:
+ Here loving hearts, that daily know
+The heavenly consolations they on you bestow.
+
+ Sweet thoughts are theirs, that breathe serenest calms,
+ Of holy offerings timely paid,
+ Of fire from heaven to bless their votive alms
+ And passions on GOD'S altar laid.
+ The world to them is closed, and now they shine
+ With rays of love divine,
+ Through darkest nooks of this dull earth
+Pouring, in showery times, their glow of "quiet mirth."
+
+ New hearts before their Saviour's feet to lay,
+ This is their first, their dearest joy:
+ Their next from heart to heart to clear the way
+ For mutual love without alloy:
+ Never so blest as when in JESUS' roll
+ They write some hero-soul,
+ More pleased upon his brightening road
+To wait, than if their own with all his radiance glowed.
+
+ O happy spirits, marked by God and man
+ Their messages of love to bear,
+ What though long since in Heaven your brows began,
+ The genial amarant wreath to wear,
+ And in th' eternal leisure of calm love
+ Ye banquet there above;
+ Yet in your sympathetic heart
+We and our earthly griefs may ask and hope a part.
+
+ Comfort's true sons! amid the thoughts of down
+ That strew your pillow of repose,
+ Sure 'tis one joy to muse, how ye unknown
+ By sweet remembrance soothe our woes;
+ And how the spark ye lit, of heavenly cheer,
+ Lives in our embers here,
+ Where'er the cross is borne with smiles,
+Or lightened secretly by Love's endearing wiles:
+
+ Where'er one Levite in the temple keeps
+ The watch-fire of his midnight prayer,
+ Or issuing thence, the eyes of mourners steeps
+ In heavenly balm, fresh gathered there;
+ Thus saints, that seem to die in earth's rude strife,
+ Only win double life:
+ They have but left our weary ways
+To live in memory here, in Heaven by love and praise.
+
+
+
+ST. JOHN BAPTIST'S DAY
+
+
+
+Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the
+great and dreadful day of the Lord: and he shall turn the heart of
+the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their
+fathers. Malachi iv. 5, 6.
+
+ Twice in her season of decay
+The fallen Church hath felt Elijah's eye
+ Dart from the wild its piercing ray:
+Not keener burns, in the chill morning sky,
+ The herald star,
+ Whose torch afar
+ Shadows and boding night-birds fly.
+
+ Methinks we need him once again,
+That favoured seer--but where shall he be found?
+ By Cherith's side we seek in vain,
+In vain on Carmel's green and lonely mound:
+ Angels no more
+ From Sinai soar,
+ On his celestial errands bound.
+
+ But wafted to her glorious place
+By harmless fire, among the ethereal thrones,
+ His spirit with a dear embrace
+Thee the loved harbinger of Jesus owns,
+ Well-pleased to view
+ Her likeness true,
+ And trace, in thine, her own deep tones.
+
+ Deathless himself, he joys with thee
+To commune how a faithful martyr dies,
+ And in the blest could envy be,
+He would behold thy wounds with envious eyes,
+ Star of our morn,
+ Who yet unborn
+ Didst guide our hope, where Christ should rise.
+
+ Now resting from your jealous care
+For sinners, such as Eden cannot know,
+ Ye pour for us your mingled prayer,
+No anxious fear to damp Affection's glow,
+ Love draws a cloud
+ From you to shroud
+ Rebellion's mystery here below.
+
+ And since we see, and not afar,
+The twilight of the great and dreadful day,
+ Why linger, till Elijah's car
+Stoop from the clouds? Why sheep ye? Rise and pray,
+ Ye heralds sealed
+ In camp or field
+ Your Saviour's banner to display.
+
+ Where is the lore the Baptist taught,
+The soul unswerving and the fearless tongue?
+ The much-enduring wisdom, sought
+By lonely prayer the haunted rocks among?
+ Who counts it gain
+ His light should wane,
+ So the whole world to Jesus throng?
+
+ Thou Spirit, who the Church didst lend
+Her eagle wings, to shelter in the wild,
+ We pray Thee, ere the Judge descend,
+With flames like these, all bright and undefiled,
+ Her watch-fires light,
+ To guide aright
+ Our weary souls by earth beguiled.
+
+ So glorious let thy Pastors shine,
+That by their speaking lives the world may learn
+ First filial duty, then divine,
+That sons to parents, all to Thee may turn;
+ And ready prove
+ In fires of love,
+ At sight of Thee, for aye to burn.
+
+
+
+ST. PETER'S DAY
+
+
+
+When Herod would have brought him forth, the same night Peter was
+sleeping. Acts xii. 26.
+
+Thou thrice denied, yet thrice beloved,
+ Watch by Thine own forgiven friend;
+In sharpest perils faithful proved,
+ Let his soul love Thee to the end.
+
+The prayer is heard--else why so deep
+ His slumber on the eve of death?
+And wherefore smiles he in his sleep
+ As one who drew celestial breath?
+
+He loves and is beloved again -
+ Can his soul choose but be at rest?
+Sorrow hath fled away, and Pain
+ Dares not invade the guarded nest.
+
+He dearly loves, and not alone:
+ For his winged thoughts are soaring high
+Where never yet frail heart was known
+ To breathe its vain Affection's sigh.
+
+He loves and weeps--but more than tears
+ Have sealed Thy welcome and his love -
+One look lives in him, and endears
+ Crosses and wrongs where'er he rove:
+
+That gracious chiding look, Thy call
+ To win him to himself and Thee,
+Sweetening the sorrow of his fall
+ Which else were rued too bitterly.
+
+E'en through the veil of sheep it shines,
+ The memory of that kindly glance; -
+The Angel watching by, divines
+ And spares awhile his blissful trance.
+
+Or haply to his native lake
+ His vision wafts him back, to talk
+With JESUS, ere His flight He take,
+ As in that solemn evening walk,
+
+When to the bosom of His friend,
+ The Shepherd, He whose name is Good.
+Did His dear lambs and sheep commend,
+ Both bought and nourished with His blood:
+
+Then laid on him th' inverted tree,
+ Which firm embraced with heart and arm,
+Might cast o'er hope and memory,
+ O'er life and death, its awful charm.
+
+With brightening heart he bears it on,
+ His passport through this eternal gates,
+To his sweet home--so nearly won,
+ He seems, as by the door he waits,
+
+The unexpressive notes to hear
+ Of angel song and angel motion,
+Rising and falling on the ear
+ Like waves in Joy's unbounded ocean. -
+
+His dream is changed--the Tyrant's voice
+ Calls to that last of glorious deeds -
+But as he rises to rejoice,
+ Not Herod but an Angel leads.
+
+He dreams he sees a lamp flash bright,
+ Glancing around his prison room -
+But 'tis a gleam of heavenly light
+ That fills up all the ample gloom.
+
+The flame, that in a few short years
+ Deep through the chambers of the dead
+Shall pierce, and dry the fount of tears,
+ Is waving o'er his dungeon-bed.
+
+Touched he upstarts--his chains unbind -
+ Through darksome vault, up massy stair,
+His dizzy, doubting footsteps wind
+ To freedom and cool moonlight air.
+
+Then all himself, all joy and calm,
+ Though for a while his hand forego,
+Just as it touched, the martyr's palm,
+ He turns him to his task below;
+
+The pastoral staff, the keys of Heaven,
+ To wield a while in grey-haired might,
+Then from his cross to spring forgiven,
+ And follow JESUS out of sight.
+
+
+
+ST. JAMES'S DAY
+
+
+
+Ye shall drink indeed of My cup, and be baptised with the baptism
+that I am baptised with: but to sit on My right hand, and on My
+left, is not Mine to give, but it shall be given to them for whom
+it is prepared of My Father. St. Matthew xx. 23.
+
+Sit down and take thy fill of joy
+ At God's right hand, a bidden guest,
+Drink of the cup that cannot cloy,
+ Eat of the bread that cannot waste.
+O great Apostle! rightly now
+ Thou readest all thy Saviour meant,
+What time His grave yet gentle brow
+ In sweet reproof on thee was bent.
+
+"Seek ye to sit enthroned by me?
+ Alas! ye know not what ye ask,
+The first in shame and agony,
+ The lowest in the meanest task -
+This can ye be? and came ye drink
+ The cup that I in tears must steep,
+Nor from the 'whelming waters shrink
+ That o'er Me roll so dark and deep?"
+
+"We can--Thine are we, dearest Lord,
+ In glory and in agony,
+To do and suffer all Thy word;
+ Only be Thou for ever nigh." -
+"Then be it so--My cup receive,
+ And of My woes baptismal taste:
+But for the crown, that angels weave
+ For those next Me in glory placed,
+
+"I give it not by partial love;
+ But in My Father's book are writ
+What names on earth shall lowliest prove,
+ That they in Heaven may highest sit."
+Take up the lesson, O my heart;
+ Thou Lord of meekness, write it there,
+Thine own meek self to me impart,
+ Thy lofty hope, thy lowly prayer.
+
+If ever on the mount with Thee
+ I seem to soar in vision bright,
+With thoughts of coming agony,
+ Stay Thou the too presumptuous flight:
+Gently along the vale of tears
+ Lead me from Tabor's sunbright steep,
+Let me not grudge a few short years
+ With thee t'ward Heaven to walk and weep:
+
+Too happy, on my silent path,
+ If now and then allowed, with Thee
+Watching some placid holy death,
+ Thy secret work of love to see;
+But, oh! most happy, should Thy call,
+ Thy welcome call, at last be given -
+"Come where thou long hast storeth thy all
+ Come see thy place prepared in Heaven."
+
+
+
+ST. BARTHOLOMEW
+
+
+
+Jesus answered and said unto him, Because I said unto thee, I saw
+the under the fig-tree, believest thou? Thou shalt see greater
+things than these. St. John i. 50.
+
+Hold up thy mirror to the sun,
+ And thou shalt need an eagle's gaze,
+So perfectly the polished stone
+ Gives back the glory of his rays:
+
+Turn it, and it shall paint as true
+ The soft green of the vernal earth,
+And each small flower of bashful hue,
+ That closest hides its lowly birth.
+
+Our mirror is a blessed book,
+ Where out from each illumined page
+We see one glorious Image look
+ All eyes to dazzle and engage,
+
+The Son of God: and that indeed
+ We see Him as He is, we know,
+Since in the same bright glass we read
+ The very life of things below. -
+
+Eye of God's word! where'er we turn
+ Ever upon us! thy keen gaze
+Can all the depths of sin discern,
+ Unravel every bosom's maze:
+
+Who that has felt thy glance of dread
+ Thrill through his heart's remotest cells,
+About his path, about his bed,
+ Can doubt what spirit in thee dwells?
+
+"What word is this? Whence know'st thou me?"
+ All wondering cries the humbled heart,
+To hear thee that deep mystery,
+ The knowledge of itself, impart.
+
+The veil is raised; who runs may read,
+ By its own light the truth is seen,
+And soon the Israelite indeed
+ Bows down t' adore the Nazarene.
+
+So did Nathanael, guileless man,
+ At once, not shame-faced or afraid,
+Owning Him God, who so could scan
+ His musings in the lonely shade;
+
+In his own pleasant fig-tree's shade,
+ Which by his household fountain grew,
+Where at noon-day his prayer he made
+ To know God better than he knew.
+
+Oh! happy hours of heavenward thought!
+ How richly crowned! how well improved!
+In musing o'er the Law he taught,
+ In waiting for the Lord he loved.
+
+We must not mar with earthly praise
+ What God's approving word hath sealed:
+Enough, if might our feeble lays
+ Take up the promise He revealed;
+
+"The child-like faith, that asks not sight,
+ Waits not for wonder or for sign,
+Believes, because it loves, aright -
+ Shall see things greater, things divine.
+
+"Heaven to that gaze shall open wide,
+ And brightest angels to and fro
+On messages of love shall glide
+ 'Twixt God above and Christ below."
+
+So still the guileless man is blest,
+ To him all crooked paths are straight,
+Him on his way to endless rest
+ Fresh, ever-growing strengths await.
+
+God's witnesses, a glorious host,
+ Compass him daily like a cloud;
+Martyrs and seers, the saved and lost,
+ Mercies and judgments cry aloud.
+
+Yet shall to him the still small voice,
+ That first into his bosom found
+A way, and fixed his wavering choice,
+ Nearest and dearest ever sound.
+
+
+
+ST. MATTHEW
+
+
+
+And after these things He went forth, and saw a publican, named
+Levi, sitting at the receipt of custom: and He said unto him,
+Follow Me. And he left all, rose up, and followed Him. St. Luke
+v. 27, 28.
+
+ Ye hermits blest, ye holy maids,
+ The nearest Heaven on earth,
+ Who talk with God in shadowy glades,
+ Free from rude care and mirth;
+ To whom some viewless teacher brings
+ The secret lore of rural things,
+ The moral of each fleeting cloud and gale,
+The whispers from above, that haunt the twilight vale:
+
+ Say, when in pity ye have gazed
+ On the wreathed smoke afar,
+ That o'er some town, like mist upraised,
+ Hung hiding sun and star,
+ Then as ye turned your weary eye
+ To the green earth and open sky,
+ Were ye not fain to doubt how Faith could dwell
+Amid that dreary glare, in this world's citadel?
+
+ But Love's a flower that will not die
+ For lack of leafy screen,
+ And Christian Hope can cheer the eye
+ That ne'er saw vernal green;
+ Then be ye sure that Love can bless
+ E'en in this crowded loneliness,
+ Where ever-moving myriads seem to say,
+Go--thou art naught to us, nor we to thee--away!
+
+ There are in this loud stunning tide
+ Of human care and crime,
+ With whom the melodies abide
+ Of th' everlasting chime;
+ Who carry music in their heart
+ Through dusky lane and wrangling mart,
+ Plying their daily task with busier feet,
+Because their secret souls a holy strain repeat.
+
+ How sweet to them, in such brief rest
+ As thronging cares afford,
+ In thought to wander, fancy-blest,
+ To where their gracious Lord,
+ In vain, to win proud Pharisees,
+ Spake, and was heard by fell disease -
+ But not in vain, beside yon breezy lake,
+Bade the meek Publican his gainful seat forsake:
+
+ At once he rose, and left his gold;
+ His treasure and his heart
+ Transferred, where he shall safe behold
+ Earth and her idols part;
+ While he beside his endless store
+ Shall sit, and floods unceasing pour
+ Of Christ's true riches o'er all time and space,
+First angel of His Church, first steward of His Grace.
+
+ Nor can ye not delight to think
+ Where He vouchsafed to eat,
+ How the Most Holy did not shrink
+ From touch of sinner's meat;
+ What worldly hearts and hearts impure
+ Went with Him through the rich man's door,
+ That we might learn of Him lost souls to love,
+And view His least and worst with hope to meet above.
+
+ These gracious lines shed Gospel light
+ On Mammon's gloomiest cells,
+ As on some city's cheerless night
+ The tide of sunrise swells,
+ Till tower, and dome, and bridge-way proud
+ Are mantled with a golden cloud,
+ And to wise hearts this certain hope us given;
+"No mist that man may raise, shall hide the eye of Heaven."
+
+ And oh! if e'en on Babel shine
+ Such gleams of Paradise,
+ Should not their peace be peace divine,
+ Who day by day arise
+ To look on clearer heavens, and scan
+ The work of God untouch'd by man?
+ Shame on us, who about us Babel bear,
+And live in Paradise, as if God was not there!
+
+
+
+ST. MICHAEL AND ALL ANGELS.
+
+
+
+Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for
+them who shall be heirs of salvation? Hebrews i. 14.
+
+Ye stars that round the Sun of righteousness
+ In glorious order roll,
+With harps for ever strung, ready to bless
+ God for each rescued soul,
+Ye eagle spirits, that build in light divine,
+ Oh! think of us to-day,
+Faint warblers of this earth, that would combine
+Our trembling notes with your accepted lay.
+
+Your amarant wreaths were earned; and homeward all,
+ Flush'd with victorious might,
+Ye might have sped to keep high festival,
+ And revel in the light;
+But meeting us, weak worldlings, on our way,
+ Tired ere the fight begun,
+Ye turned to help us in th' unequal fray,
+Remembering Whose we were, how dearly won:
+
+Remembering Bethlehem, and that glorious night
+ When ye, who used to soar
+Diverse along all space in fiery flight,
+ Came thronging to adore
+Your God new-born, and made a sinner's child;
+ As if the stars should leave
+Their stations in the far ethereal wild,
+And round the sun a radiant circle weave.
+
+Nor less your lay of triumph greeted fair
+ Our Champion and your King,
+In that first strife, whence Satan in despair
+ Sunk down on scathed wing:
+Abuse He fasted, and alone He fought;
+ But when His toils were o'er,
+Ye to the sacred Hermit duteous brought
+Banquet and hymn, your Eden's festal store.
+
+Ye too, when lowest in th' abyss of woe
+ He plunged to save His sheep,
+Were leaning from your golden thrones to know
+ The secrets of that deep:
+But clouds were on His sorrow: one alone
+ His agonising call
+Summoned from Heaven, to still that bitterest groan,
+And comfort Him, the Comforter of all.
+
+Oh! highest favoured of all Spirits create
+ (If right of thee we deem),
+How didst thou glide on brightening wing elate
+ To meet th' unclouded beam
+Of Jesus from the couch of darkness rising!
+ How swelled thine anthem's sound,
+With fear and mightier joy weak hearts surprising,
+"Your God is risen, and may not here be found!"
+
+Pass a few days, and this dull darkling globe
+ Must yield Him from her sight; -
+Brighter and brighter streams His glory-robe,
+ And He is lost in light.
+Then, when through yonder everlasting arch,
+ Ye in innumerous choir
+Poured, heralding Messiah's conquering march,
+Lingered around His skirts two forms of fire:
+
+With us they stayed, high warning to impart;
+ "The Christ shall come again
+E'en as He goes; with the same human heart,
+ With the same godlike train." -
+Oh! jealous God! how could a sinner dare
+ Think on that dreadful day,
+But that with all Thy wounds Thou wilt be there,
+And all our angel friends to bring Thee on Thy way?
+
+Since to Thy little ones is given such grace,
+ That they who nearest stand
+Alway to God in Heaven, and see His face,
+ Go forth at His command,
+To wait around our path in weal or woe,
+ As erst upon our King,
+Set Thy baptismal seal upon our brow,
+And waft us heavenward with enfolding wing:
+
+Grant. Lord, that when around th' expiring world
+ Our seraph guardians wait,
+While on her death-bed, ere to ruin hurled,
+ She owns Thee, all too late,
+They to their charge may turn, and thankful see
+ Thy mark upon us still;
+Then all together rise, and reign with Thee,
+And all their holy joy o'er contrite hearts fulfil!
+
+
+
+ST. LUKE
+
+
+
+Luke, the beloved physician, and Demas, greet you. Colossians iv.
+14.
+Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world . . . Only
+Luke is with me. 2 Timothy iv. 10, 11.
+
+Two clouds before the summer gale
+ In equal race fleet o'er the sky:
+Two flowers, when wintry blasts assail,
+ Together pins, together die.
+
+But two capricious human hearts -
+ No sage's rod may track their ways.
+No eye pursue their lawless starts
+ Along their wild self-chosen maze.
+
+He only, by whose sovereign hand
+ E'en sinners for the evil day
+Were made--who rules the world He planned,
+ Turning our worst His own good way;
+
+He only can the cause reveal,
+ Why, at the same fond bosom fed,
+Taught in the self-same lap to kneel
+ Till the same prayer were duly said,
+
+Brothers in blood and nurture too,
+ Aliens in heart so oft should prove;
+One lose, the other keep, Heaven's clue;
+ One dwell in wrath, and one in love.
+
+He only knows--for He can read
+ The mystery of the wicked heart -
+Why vainly oft our arrows speed
+ When aimed with most unerring art;
+
+While from some rude and powerless arm
+ A random shaft in season sent
+Shall light upon some lurking harm,
+ And work some wonder little meant.
+
+Doubt we, how souls so wanton change,
+ Leaving their own experienced rest?
+Need not around the world to range;
+ One narrow cell may teach us best.
+
+Look in, and see Christ's chosen saint
+ In triumph wear his Christ-like chain;
+No fear lest he should swerve or faint;
+ "His life is Christ, his death is gain."
+
+Two converts, watching by his side,
+ Alike his love and greetings share;
+Luke the beloved, the sick soul's guide,
+ And Demas, named in faltering prayer.
+
+Pass a few years--look in once more -
+ The saint is in his bonds again;
+Save that his hopes more boldly soar,
+ He and his lot unchanged remain.
+
+But only Luke is with him now:
+ Alas! that e'en the martyr's cell,
+Heaven's very gate, should scope allow
+ For the false world's seducing spell.
+
+'Tis sad--but yet 'tis well, be sure,
+ We on the sight should muse awhile,
+Nor deem our shelter all secure
+ E'en in the Church's holiest aisle.
+
+Vainly before the shrine he bends,
+ Who knows not the true pilgrim's part:
+The martyr's cell no safety lends
+ To him who wants the martyr's heart.
+
+But if there be, who follows Paul
+ As Paul his Lord, in life and death,
+Where'er an aching heart may call,
+ Ready to speed and take no breath;
+
+Whose joy is, to the wandering sheep
+ To tell of the great Shepherd's love;
+To learn of mourners while they weep
+ The music that makes mirth above;
+
+Who makes the Saviour all his theme,
+ The Gospel all his pride and praise -
+Approach: for thou canst feel the gleam
+ That round the martyr's death-bed plays:
+
+Thou hast an ear for angels' songs,
+ A breath the gospel trump to fill,
+And taught by thee the Church prolongs
+ Her hymns of high thanksgiving still.
+
+Ah! dearest mother, since too oft
+ The world yet wins some Demas frail
+E'en from thine arms, so kind and soft,
+ May thy tried comforts never fail!
+
+When faithless ones forsake thy wing,
+ Be it vouchsafed thee still to see
+Thy true, fond nurslings closer cling,
+ Cling closer to their Lord and thee.
+
+
+
+ST. SIMON AND ST. JUDE
+
+
+
+That ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once
+delivered unto the saints. St. Jude 3.
+
+Seest thou, how tearful and alone,
+ And drooping like a wounded dove,
+The Cross in sight, but Jesus gone,
+ The widowed Church is fain to rove?
+
+Who is at hand that loves the Lord?
+ Make haste, and take her home, and bring
+Thine household choir, in true accord
+ Their soothing hymns for her to sing.
+
+Soft on her fluttering heart shall breathe
+ The fragrance of that genial isle,
+There she may weave her funeral wreath,
+ And to her own sad music smile.
+
+The Spirit of the dying Son
+ Is there, and fills the holy place
+With records sweet of duties done,
+ Of pardoned foes, and cherished grace.
+
+And as of old by two and two
+ His herald saints the Saviour sent
+To soften hearts like morning dew,
+ Where he to shine in mercy meant;
+
+So evermore He deems His name
+ Best honoured and his way prepared,
+When watching by his altar-flame
+ He sees His servants duly paired.
+
+He loves when age and youth are met,
+ Fervent old age and youth serene,
+Their high and low in concord set
+ For sacred song, Joy's golden mean.
+
+He loves when some clear soaring mind
+ Is drawn by mutual piety
+To simple souls and unrefined,
+ Who in life's shadiest covert lie.
+
+Or if perchance a saddened heart
+ That once was gay and felt the spring,
+Cons slowly o'er its altered part,
+ In sorrow and remorse to sing,
+
+Thy gracious care will send that way
+ Some spirit full of glee, yet taught
+To bear the sight of dull decay,
+ And nurse it with all-pitying thought;
+
+Cheerful as soaring lark, and mild
+ As evening blackbird's full-toned lay,
+When the relenting sun has smiled
+ Bright through a whole December day.
+
+These are the tones to brace and cheer
+ The lonely watcher of the fold,
+When nights are dark, and foeman near,
+ When visions fade and hearts grow cold.
+
+How timely then a comrade's song
+ Comes floating on the mountain air,
+And bids thee yet be bold and strong -
+ Fancy may die, but Faith is there.
+
+
+
+ALL SAINTS' DAY.
+
+
+
+Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees, till we have
+sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads. Revelation vii.
+3.
+
+ Why blow'st thou not, thou wintry wind,
+ Now every leaf is brown and sere,
+ And idly droops, to thee resigned,
+ The fading chaplet of the year?
+ Yet wears the pure aerial sky
+ Her summer veil, half drawn on high,
+ Of silvery haze, and dark and still
+The shadows sleep on every slanting hill.
+
+ How quiet shows the woodland scene!
+ Each flower and tree, its duty done,
+ Reposing in decay serene,
+ Like weary men when age is won,
+ Such calm old age as conscience pure
+ And self-commanding hearts ensure,
+ Waiting their summons to the sky,
+Content to live, but not afraid to die.
+
+ Sure if our eyes were purged to trace
+ God's unseen armies hovering round,
+ We should behold by angels' grace
+ The four strong winds of Heaven fast bound,
+ Their downward sweep a moment stayed
+ On ocean cove and forest glade,
+ Till the last flower of autumn shed
+Her funeral odours on her dying bed.
+
+ So in Thine awful armoury, Lord,
+ The lightnings of the judgment-day
+ Pause yet awhile, in mercy stored,
+ Till willing hearts wear quite away
+ Their earthly stains; and spotless shine
+ On every brow in light divine
+ The Cross by angel hands impressed,
+The seal of glory won and pledge of promised
+
+ Little they dream, those haughty souls
+ Whom empires own with bended knee,
+ What lowly fate their own controls,
+ Together linked by Heaven's decree; -
+ As bloodhounds hush their baying wild
+ To wanton with some fearless child,
+ So Famine waits, and War with greedy eyes,
+Till some repenting heart be ready for the skies.
+
+ Think ye the spires that glow so bright
+ In front of yonder setting sun,
+ Stand by their own unshaken might?
+ No--where th' upholding grace is won,
+ We dare not ask, nor Heaven would tell,
+ But sure from many a hidden dell,
+ From many a rural nook unthought of there,
+Rises for that proud world the saints' prevailing prayer.
+
+ On, Champions blest, in Jesus' name,
+ Short be your strife, your triumph full,
+ Till every heart have caught your flame,
+ And, lightened of the world's misrule,
+ Ye soar those elder saints to meet
+ Gathered long since at Jesus' feet,
+ No world of passions to destroy,
+Your prayers and struggles o'er, your task all praise and joy.
+
+
+
+HOLY COMMUNION
+
+
+
+O God of Mercy, God of Might,
+How should pale sinners bear the sight,
+If, as Thy power in surely here,
+Thine open glory should appear?
+
+For now Thy people are allowed
+To scale the mount and pierce the cloud,
+And Faith may feed her eager view
+With wonders Sinai never knew.
+
+Fresh from th' atoning sacrifice
+The world's Creator bleeding lies.
+That man, His foe, by whom He bled,
+May take Him for his daily bread.
+
+O agony of wavering thought
+When sinners first so near are brought!
+"It is my Maker--dare I stay?
+My Saviour--dare I turn away?"
+
+Thus while the storm is high within
+'Twixt love of Christ and fear of sin,
+Who can express the soothing charm,
+To feel Thy kind upholding arm,
+
+My mother Church? and hear thee tell
+Of a world lost, yet loved so well,
+That He, by whom the angels live,
+His only Son for her would give?
+
+And doubt we yet? Thou call'st again;
+A lower still, a sweeter strain;
+A voice from Mercy's inmost shrine,
+This very breath of Love divine.
+
+Whispering it says to each apart,
+"Come unto Me, thou trembling heart;"
+And we must hope, so sweet the tone,
+The precious words are all our own.
+
+Hear them, kind Saviour--hear Thy Spouse
+Low at Thy feet renew her vows;
+Thine own dear promise she would plead
+For us her true though fallen seed.
+
+She pleads by all Thy mercies, told
+Thy chosen witnesses of old,
+Love's heralds sent to man forgiven,
+One from the Cross, and one from Heaven.
+
+This, of true penitents the chief,
+To the lost spirit brings relief,
+Lifting on high th' adored Name:-
+"Sinners to save, Christ, Jesus came."
+
+That, dearest of Thy bosom Friends,
+Into the wavering heart descends:-
+"What? fallen again? yet cheerful rise.
+Thine Intercessor never dies."
+
+The eye of Faith, that waxes bright
+Each moment by thine altar's light,
+Sees them e'en now: they still abide
+In mystery kneeling at our side:
+
+And with them every spirit blest,
+From realms of triumph or of rest,
+From Him who saw creation's morn,
+Of all Thine angels eldest born,
+
+To the poor babe, who died to-day,
+Take part in our thanksgiving lay,
+Watching the tearful joy and calm,
+While sinners taste Thine heavenly balm.
+
+Sweet awful hour! the only sound
+One gentle footstep gliding round,
+Offering by turns on Jesus' part
+The Cross to every hand and heart.
+
+Refresh us, Lord, to hold it fast;
+And when Thy veil is drawn at last,
+Let us depart where shadows cease,
+With words of blessing and of peace.
+
+
+
+HOLY BAPTISM
+
+
+
+Where is it mothers learn their love? -
+ In every Church a fountain springs
+ O'er which th' Eternal Dove
+ Hovers out softest wings.
+
+What sparkles in that lucid flood
+ Is water, by gross mortals eyed:
+ But seen by Faith, 'tis blood
+ Out of a dear Friend's side.
+
+A few calm words of faith and prayer,
+ A few bright drops of holy dew,
+ Shall work a wonder there
+ Earth's charmers never knew.
+
+O happy arms, where cradled lies,
+ And ready for the Lord's embrace,
+ That precious sacrifice,
+ The darling of His grace!
+
+Blest eyes, that see the smiling gleam
+ Upon the slumbering features glow,
+ When the life-giving stream
+ Touches the tender brow!
+
+Or when the holy cross is signed,
+ And the young soldier duly sworn,
+ With true and fearless mind
+ To serve the Virgin-born.
+
+But happiest ye, who sealed and blest
+ Back to your arms your treasure take,
+ With Jesus' mark impressed
+ To nurse for Jesus' sake:
+
+To whom--as if in hallowed air
+ Ye knelt before some awful shrine -
+ His innocent gestures wear
+ A meaning half divine:
+
+By whom Love's daily touch is seen
+ In strengthening form and freshening hue,
+ In the fixed brow serene,
+ The deep yet eager view. -
+
+Who taught thy pure and even breath
+ To come and go with such sweet grace?
+ Whence thy reposing Faith,
+ Though in our frail embrace?
+
+O tender gem, and full of Heaven!
+ Not in the twilight stars on high,
+ Not in moist flowers at even
+ See we our God so nigh.
+
+Sweet one, make haste and know Him too,
+ Thine own adopting Father love,
+ That like thine earliest dew
+ Thy dying sweets may prove.
+
+
+
+CATECHISM.
+
+
+
+Oh! say not, dream not, heavenly notes
+ To childish ears are vain,
+That the young mind at random floats,
+ And cannot reach the strain.
+
+Dim or unheard, the words may fall,
+ And yet the heaven-taught mind
+May learn the sacred air, and all
+ The harmony unwind.
+
+Was not our Lord a little child,
+ Taught by degrees to pray,
+By father dear and mother mild
+ Instructed day by day?
+
+And loved He not of Heaven to talk
+ With children in His sight,
+To meet them in His daily walk,
+ And to His arms invite?
+
+What though around His throne of fire
+ The everlasting chant
+Be wafted from the seraph choir
+ In glory jubilant?
+
+Yet stoops He, ever pleased to mark
+ Our rude essays of love,
+Faint as the pipe of wakening lark,
+ Heard by some twilight grove:
+
+Yet is He near us, to survey
+ These bright and ordered files,
+Like spring-flowers in their best array,
+ All silence and all smiles.
+
+Save that each little voice in turn
+ Some glorious truth proclaims,
+What sages would have died to learn,
+ Now taught by cottage dames.
+
+And if some tones be false or low,
+ What are all prayers beneath
+But cries of babes, that cannot know
+ Half the deep thought they breathe?
+
+In His own words we Christ adore,
+ But angels, as we speak,
+Higher above our meaning soar
+ Than we o'er children weak:
+
+And yet His words mean more than they,
+ And yet He owns their praise:
+Why should we think, He turns away
+ From infants' simple lays?
+
+
+
+CONFIRMATION
+
+
+
+The shadow of th' Almighty's cloud
+ Calm on this tents of Israel lay,
+While drooping paused twelve banners proud,
+ Till He arise and lead this way.
+
+Then to the desert breeze unrolled,
+ Cheerly the waving pennons fly,
+Lion or eagle--each bright fold
+ A lodestar to a warrior's eye.
+
+So should Thy champions, ere this strife
+ By holy hands o'ershadowed kneel,
+So, fearless for their charmed life,
+ Bear, to this end, Thy Spirit's seal.
+
+Steady and pure as stars that beam
+ In middle heaven, all mist above,
+Seen deepest in this frozen stream:-
+ Such is their high courageous love.
+
+And soft as pure, and warm as bright,
+ They brood upon life's peaceful hour,
+As if the Dove that guides their flight
+ Shook from her plumes a downy shower.
+
+Spirit of might and sweetness too!
+ Now leading on the wars of God,
+Now to green isles of shade and dew
+ Turning the waste Thy people trod;
+
+Draw, Holy Ghost, Thy seven-fold veil
+ Between us and the fires of youth;
+Breathe, Holy Ghost, Thy freshening gale,
+ Our fevered brow in age to soothe.
+
+And oft as sin and sorrow tire,
+ This hallowed hour do Thou renew,
+When beckoned up the awful choir
+ By pastoral hands, toward Thee we drew;
+
+When trembling at this sacred rail
+ We hid our eyes and held our breath,
+Felt Thee how strong, our hearts how frail,
+ And longed to own Thee to the death.
+
+For ever on our souls be traced
+ That blessing dear, that dove-like hand,
+A sheltering rock in Memory's waste,
+ O'er-shadowing all the weary land.
+
+
+
+MATRIMONY
+
+
+
+There is an awe in mortals' joy,
+ A deep mysterious fear
+Half of the heart will still employ,
+ As if we drew too near
+To Eden's portal, and those fires
+That bicker round in wavy spires,
+Forbidding, to our frail desires,
+ What cost us once so dear.
+
+We cower before th' heart-searching eye
+ In rapture as its pain;
+E'en wedded Love, till Thou be nigh,
+ Dares not believe her gain:
+Then in the air she fearless springs,
+The breath of Heaven beneath her wings,
+And leaves her woodnote wild, and sings
+ A tuned and measured strain.
+
+Ill fare the lay, though soft as dew
+ And free as air it fall,
+That, with Thine altar full in view,
+ Thy votaries would enthrall
+To a foul dream, of heathen night,
+Lifting her torch in Love's despite,
+And scaring with base wild-fire light
+ The sacred nuptial hall.
+
+Far other strains, far other fires,
+ Our marriage-offering grace;
+Welcome, all chaste and kind desires,
+ With even matron pace
+Approaching down this hallowed aisle!
+Where should ye seek Love's perfect smile,
+But where your prayers were learned erewhile,
+ In her own native place?
+
+Where, but on His benignest brow,
+ Who waits to bless you here?
+Living, he owned no nuptial vow,
+ No bower to Fancy dear:
+Love's very self--for Him no need
+To nurse, on earth, the heavenly seed:
+Yet comfort in His eye we read
+ For bridal joy and fear.
+
+'Tis He who clasps the marriage band,
+ And fits the spousal ring,
+Then leaves ye kneeling, hand in hand,
+ Out of His stores to bring
+His Father's dearest blessing, shed
+Of old on Isaac's nuptial bed,
+Now on the board before ye spread
+ Of our all-bounteous King.
+
+All blessings of the breast and womb,
+ Of Heaven and earth beneath,
+Of converse high, and sacred home,
+ Are yours, in life and death.
+Only kneel on, nor turn away
+From the pure shrine, where Christ to-day
+Will store each flower, ye duteous lay,
+ For an eternal wreath.
+
+
+
+VISITATION AND COMMUNION OF THE SICK
+
+
+
+O Youth and Joy, your airy tread
+Too lightly springs by Sorrow's bed,
+Your keen eye-glances are too bright,
+Too restless for a sick man's sight.
+Farewell; for one short life we part:
+I rather woo the soothing art,
+Which only souls in sufferings tried
+Bear to their suffering brethren's side.
+
+Where may we learn that gentle spell?
+Mother of Martyrs, thou canst tell!
+Thou, who didst watch thy dying Spouse
+With pierced hands and bleeding brows,
+Whose tears from age to age are shed
+O'er sainted sons untimely dead,
+If e'er we charm a soul in pain,
+Thine is the key-note of our strain.
+
+How sweet with thee to lift the latch,
+Where Faith has kept her midnight watch,
+Smiling on woe: with thee to kneel,
+Where fixed, as if one prayer could heal,
+She listens, till her pale eye glow
+With joy, wild health can never know,
+And each calm feature, ere we read,
+Speaks, silently, thy glorious Creed.
+
+Such have I seen: and while they poured
+Their hearts in every contrite word,
+How have I rather longed to kneel
+And ask of them sweet pardon's seal;
+How blessed the heavenly music brought
+By thee to aid my faltering thought!
+"Peace" ere we kneel, and when we cease
+To pray, the farewell word is, "Peace."
+
+I came again: the place was bright
+"With something of celestial light" -
+A simple Altar by the bed
+For high Communion meetly spread,
+Chalice, and plate, and snowy vest. -
+We ate and drank: then calmly blest,
+All mourners, one with dying breath,
+We sate and talked of Jesus' death.
+
+Once more I came: the silent room
+Was veiled in sadly-soothing gloom,
+And ready for her last abode
+The pale form like a lily showed,
+By Virgin fingers duly spread,
+And prized for love of summer fled.
+The light from those soft-smiling eyes
+Had fleeted to its parent skies.
+
+O soothe us, haunt us, night and day,
+Ye gentle Spirits far away,
+With whom we shared the cup of grace,
+Then parted; ye to Christ's embrace,
+We to this lonesome world again,
+Yet mindful of th' unearthly strain
+Practised with you at Eden's door,
+To be sung on, where Angels soar,
+With blended voices evermore.
+
+
+
+BURIAL OF THE DEAD
+
+
+
+And when the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her, and said unto
+her, Weep not. And He came and touched the bier; and they that
+bare him stood still. And He said, Young man, I say unto thee,
+Arise.--St. Luke vii. 13, 14.
+
+Who says, the wan autumnal soon
+ Beams with too faint a smile
+To light up nature's face again,
+And, though the year be on this wane,
+ With thoughts of spring the heart beguile?
+
+Waft him, thou soft September breeze,
+ And gently lay him down
+Within some circling woodland wall,
+Where bright leaves, reddening ere they fall,
+ Wave gaily o'er the waters brown.
+
+And let some graceful arch be there
+ With wreathed mullions proud,
+With burnished ivy for its screen,
+And moss, that glows as fresh and green
+ As thought beneath an April cloud. -
+
+Who says the widow's heart must break,
+ The childless mother sink? -
+A kinder truer voice I hear,
+Which e'en beside that mournful bier
+ Whence parents' eyes would hopeless shrink,
+
+Bids weep no more--O heart bereft,
+ How strange, to thee, that sound!
+A widow o'er her only son,
+Feeling more bitterly alone
+ For friends that press officious round.
+
+Yet is the voice of comfort heard,
+ For Christ hath touched the bier -
+The bearers wait with wondering eye,
+The swelling bosom dares not sigh,
+ But all is still, 'twixt hope and fear.
+
+E'en such an awful soothing calm
+ We sometimes see alight
+On Christian mourners, while they wait
+In silence, by some churchyard gate,
+ Their summons to this holy rite.
+
+And such the tones of love, which break
+ The stillness of that hour,
+Quelling th' embittered spirit's strife -
+"The Resurrection and the Life
+ Am I: believe, and die no more."
+
+Unchanged that voice--and though not yet
+ The dead sit up and speak,
+Answering its call; we gladlier rest
+Our darlings on earth's quiet breast,
+ And our hearts feel they must not break.
+
+Far better they should sleep awhile
+ Within the Church's shade,
+Nor wake, until new heaven, new earth,
+Meet for their new immortal birth
+ For their abiding-place be made,
+
+Than wander back to life, and lean
+ On our frail love once more.
+'Tis sweet, as year by year we lose
+Friends out of sight, in faith to muse
+ How grows in Paradise our store.
+
+Then pass, ye mourners, cheerly on,
+ Through prayer unto the tomb,
+Still, as ye watch life's falling leaf,
+Gathering from every loss and grief
+ Hope of new spring and endless home.
+
+Then cheerly to your work again
+ With hearts new-braced and set
+To run, untired, love's blessed race.
+As meet for those, who face to face
+ Over the grave their Lord have met.
+
+
+
+CHURCHING OF WOMEN
+
+
+
+ Is there, in bowers of endless spring,
+ One known from all the seraph band
+ By softer voice, by smile and wing
+ More exquisitely bland!
+ Here let him speed: to-day this hallowed air
+Is fragrant with a mother's first and fondest prayer.
+
+ Only let Heaven her fire impart,
+ No richer incense breathes on earth:
+ "A spouse with all a daughter's heart,"
+ Fresh from the perilous birth,
+ To the great Father lifts her pale glad eye,
+Like a reviving flower when storms are hushed on high.
+
+ Oh, what a treasure of sweet thought
+ Is here! what hope and joy and love
+ All in one tender bosom brought,
+ For the all-gracious Dove
+ To brood o'er silently, and form for Heaven
+Each passionate wish and dream to dear affection given.
+
+ Her fluttering heart, too keenly blest,
+ Would sicken, but she leans on Thee,
+ Sees Thee by faith on Mary's breast,
+ And breathes serene and free.
+ Slight tremblings only of her veil declare
+Soft answers duly whispered to each soothing prayer.
+
+ We are too weak, when Thou dost bless,
+ To bear the joy--help, Virgin-born!
+ By Thine own mother's first caress,
+ That waked Thy natal morn!
+ Help, by the unexpressive smile, that made
+A Heaven on earth around this couch where Thou wast laid.
+
+
+
+COMMINATION
+
+
+
+ The prayers are o'er: why slumberest thou so long,
+ Thou voice of sacred song?
+ Why swell'st thou not, like breeze from mountain cave,
+ High o'er the echoing nave,
+ This white-robed priest, as otherwhile, to guide,
+ Up to the Altar's northern side? -
+ A mourner's tale of shame and sad decay
+Keeps back our glorious sacrifice to-day:
+
+ The widow'd Spouse of Christ: with ashes crown'd,
+ Her Christmas robes unbound,
+ She lingers in the porch for grief and fear,
+ Keeping her penance drear, -
+ Oh, is it nought to you? that idly gay,
+ Or coldly proud, ye turn away?
+ But if her warning tears in vain be spent,
+Lo, to her altered eye this Law's stern fires are lent.
+
+ Each awful curse, that on Mount Ebal rang,
+ Peals with a direr clang
+ Out of that silver trump, whose tones of old
+ Forgiveness only told.
+ And who can blame the mother's fond affright,
+ Who sporting on some giddy height
+ Her infant sees, and springs with hurried hand
+To snatch the rover from the dangerous strand?
+
+ But surer than all words the silent spell
+ (So Grecian legends tell)
+ When to her bird, too early 'scaped the nest,
+ She bares her tender breast,
+ Smiling he turns and spreads his little wing,
+ There to glide home, there safely cling.
+ So yearns our mother o'er each truant son,
+So softly falls the lay in fear and wrath begun.
+
+ Wayward and spoiled she knows ye: the keen blast,
+ That braced her youth, is past:
+ The rod of discipline, the robe of shame -
+ She bears them in your name:
+ Only return and love. But ye perchance
+ Are deeper plunged in sorrow's trance:
+ Your God forgives, but ye no comfort take
+Till ye have scourged the sins that in your conscience ache.
+
+ Oh, heavy laden soul! kneel down and hear
+ Thy penance in calm fear:
+ With thine own lips to sentence all thy sin;
+ Then, by the judge within
+ Absolved, in thankful sacrifice to part
+ For ever with thy sullen heart,
+ Nor on remorseful thoughts to brood, and stain
+This glory of the Cross, forgiven and cheereth in vain.
+
+
+
+FORMS OF PRAYER TO BE USED AT SEA
+
+
+
+When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee. Isaiah
+xliii. 2.
+
+The shower of moonlight falls as still and clear
+ Upon this desert main
+As where sweet flowers some pastoral garden cheer
+ With fragrance after rain:
+The wild winds rustle in piping shrouds,
+ As in the quivering trees:
+Like summer fields, beneath the shadowy clouds
+ The yielding waters darken in the breeze.
+
+Thou too art here with thy soft inland tones,
+ Mother of our new birth;
+The lonely ocean learns thy orisons,
+ And loves thy sacred mirth:
+When storms are high, or when the fires of war
+ Come lightening round our course,
+Thou breath'st a note like music from afar,
+ Tempering rude hearts with calm angelic force.
+
+Far, far away, the homesick seaman's hoard,
+ Thy fragrant tokens live,
+Like flower-leaves in a previous volume stored,
+ To solace and relieve
+Some heart too weary of the restless world;
+ Or like thy Sabbath Cross,
+That o'er this brightening billow streams unfurled,
+ Whatever gale the labouring vessel toss.
+
+Oh, kindly soothing in high Victory's hour,
+ Or when a comrade dies,
+In whose sweet presence Sorrow dares not lower,
+ Nor Expectation rise
+Too high for earth; what mother's heart could spare
+ To the cold cheerless deep
+Her flower and hope? but Thou art with him there,
+ Pledge of the untired arm and eye that cannot sleep:
+
+The eye that watches o'er wild Ocean's dead,
+ Each in his coral cave,
+Fondly as if the green turf wrapt his head
+ Fast by his father's grave, -
+One moment, and the seeds of life shall spring
+ Out of the waste abyss,
+And happy warriors triumph with their King
+ In worlds without a sea, unchanging orbs of bliss.
+
+
+
+GUNPOWDER TREASON
+
+
+
+A thou hast testified of Me in Jerusalem, so must thou bear witness
+also at Rome. Acts xxiii. 11.
+
+Beneath the burning eastern sky
+ The Cross was raised at morn:
+The widowed Church to weep stood by,
+ The world, to hate and scorn.
+
+Now, journeying westward, evermore
+ We know the lonely Spouse
+By the dear mark her Saviour bore
+ Traced on her patient brows.
+
+At Rome she wears it, as of old
+ Upon th' accursed hill:
+By monarchs clad in gems and gold,
+ She goes a mourner still.
+
+She mourns that tender hearts should bend
+ Before a meaner shrine,
+And upon Saint or Angel spend
+ The love that should be thine.
+
+By day and night her sorrows fall
+ Where miscreant hands and rude
+Have stained her pure ethereal pall
+ With many a martyr's blood.
+
+And yearns not her parental heart,
+ To hear THEIR secret sighs,
+Upon whose doubting way apart
+ Bewildering shadows rise?
+
+Who to her side in peace would cling,
+ But fear to wake, and find
+What they had deemed her genial wing
+ Was Error's soothing blind.
+
+She treasures up each throbbing prayer:
+ Come, trembler, come and pour
+Into her bosom all thy care,
+ For she has balm in store.
+
+Her gentle teaching sweetly blends
+ With this clear light of Truth
+The aerial gleam that Fancy lends
+ To solemn thoughts in youth. -
+
+If thou hast loved, in hours of gloom,
+ To dream the dead are near,
+And people all the lonely room
+ With guardian spirits dear,
+
+Dream on the soothing dream at will:
+ The lurid mist is o'er,
+That showed the righteous suffering still
+ Upon th' eternal shore.
+
+If with thy heart the strains accord,
+ That on His altar-throne
+Highest exalt thy glorious Lord,
+ Yet leave Him most thine own;
+
+Oh, come to our Communion Feast:
+ There present, in the heart
+As in the hands, th' eternal Priest
+ Will His true self impart. -
+
+Thus, should thy soul misgiving turn
+ Back to the enchanted air,
+Solace and warning thou mayst learn
+ From all that tempts thee there.
+
+And, oh! by all the pangs and fears
+ Fraternal spirits know,
+When for an elder's shame the tears
+ Of wakeful anguish flow,
+
+Speak gently of our sister's fall:
+ Who knows but gentle love
+May win her at our patient call
+ The surer way to prove?
+
+
+
+KING CHARLES THE MARTYR
+
+
+
+This is thankworthy, if a man for conscience toward God endure
+grief, suffering wrongfully. 1 St. Peter ii. 19.
+
+Praise to our pardoning God! though silent now
+ The thunders of the deep prophetic sky,
+Though in our sight no powers of darkness bow
+ Before th' Apostles' glorious company;
+
+The Martyrs' noble army still is ours,
+ Far in the North our fallen days have seen
+How in her woe this tenderest spirit towers
+ For Jesus' sake in agony serene.
+
+Praise to our God! not cottage hearths alone,
+ And shades impervious to the proud world's glare,
+Such witness yield; a monarch from his throne
+ Springs to his Cross and finds his glory there.
+
+Yes: whereso'er one trace of thee is found,
+ As in the Sacred Land, the shadows fall:
+With beating hearts we roam the haunted ground,
+ Lone battle-field, or crumbling prison hall.
+
+And there are aching solitary breasts,
+ Whose widowed walk with thought of thee is cheered
+Our own, our royal Saint: thy memory rests
+ On many a prayer, the more for thee endeared.
+
+True son of our dear Mother, early taught
+ With her to worship and for her to die,
+Nursed in her aisles to more than kingly thought,
+ Oft in her solemn hours we dream thee nigh.
+
+For thou didst love to trace her daily lore,
+ And where we look for comfort or for calm,
+Over the self-same lines to bend, and pour
+ Thy heart with hers in some victorious psalm.
+
+And well did she thy loyal love repay;
+ When all forsook, her Angels still were nigh,
+Chained and bereft, and on thy funeral way,
+ Straight to the Cross she turned thy dying eye
+
+And yearly now, before the Martyrs' King,
+ For thee she offers her maternal tears,
+Calls us, like thee, to His dear feet to cling,
+ And bury in His wounds our earthly fears.
+
+The Angels hear, and there is mirth in Heaven,
+ Fit prelude of the joy, when spirits won
+Like those to patient Faith, shall rise forgiven,
+ And at their Saviour's knees thy bright example own.
+
+
+
+THE RESTORATION OF THE ROYAL FAMILY
+
+
+
+And Barzillai said unto the King, How long have I to live, that I
+should go up with the King unto Jerusalem? 2 Samuel xix. 34.
+
+As when the Paschal week is o'er,
+Sleeps in the silent aisles no more
+ The breath of sacred song,
+But by the rising Saviour's light
+Awakened soars in airy flight,
+ Or deepening rolls along;
+
+The while round altar, niche, and shrine,
+The funeral evergreens entwine,
+ And a dark brilliance cast,
+The brighter for their hues of gloom,
+Tokens of Him, who through the tomb
+ Into high glory passed:
+
+Such were the lights and such the strains.
+When proudly streamed o'er ocean plains
+ Our own returning Cross;
+For with that triumph seemed to float
+Far on the breeze one dirge-like note
+ Of orphanhood and loss.
+
+Father and King, oh where art thou?
+A greener wreath adorns thy brow,
+ And clearer rays surround;
+O, for one hour of prayer like thine,
+To plead before th' all-ruling shrine
+ For Britain lost and found!
+
+And he, whose mild persuasive voice
+Taught us in trials to rejoice,
+ Most like a faithful dove,
+That by some ruined homestead builds,
+And pours to the forsaken fields
+ His wonted lay of love:
+
+Why comes he not to bear his part,
+To lift and guide th' exulting heart? -
+ A hand that cannot spars
+Lies heavy on his gentle breast:
+We wish him health; he sighs for rest,
+ And Heaven accepts the prayer.
+
+Yes, go in peace, dear placid spright,
+Ill spared; but would we store aright
+ Thy serious sweet farewell,
+We need not grudge thee to the skies,
+Sure after thee in time to rise,
+ With thee for ever dwell.
+
+Till then, whene'er with duteous hand,
+Year after year, my native Land
+ Her royal offering brings,
+Upon the Altar lays the Crown,
+And spreads her robes of old renown
+ Before the King of kings.
+
+Be some kind spirit, likest thine,
+Ever at hand, with airs divine
+ The wandering heart to seize;
+Whispering, "How long hast thou to live,
+That thou should'st Hope or Fancy gave
+ To flowers or crowns like these?"
+
+
+
+THE ACCESSION
+
+
+
+As I was with Moses, so I will be with thee; I will not fail thee,
+nor forsake thee. Joshua i. 5.
+
+The voice that from the glory came
+ To tell how Moses died unseen,
+And waken Joshua's spear of flame
+ To victory on the mountains green,
+Its trumpet tones are sounding still,
+ When Kings or Parents pass away,
+They greet us with a cheering thrill
+ Of power and comfort in decay.
+
+Behind thus soft bright summer cloud
+ That makes such haste to melt and die,
+Our wistful gaze is oft allowed
+ A glimpse of the unchanging sky:
+Let storm and darkness do their worst;
+ For the lost dream the heart may ache,
+The heart may ache, but may not burst;
+ Heaven will not leave thee nor forsake.
+
+One rock amid the weltering floods,
+ One torch in a tempestuous night,
+One changeless pine in fading woods:-
+ Such is the thought of Love and Might,
+True Might and ever-present Love,
+ When death is busy near the throne,
+Auth Sorrow her keen sting would prove
+ On Monarchs orphaned and alone.
+
+In that lorn hour and desolate,
+ Who could endure a crown? but He,
+Who singly bore the world's sad weight,
+ Is near, to whisper, "Lean on Me:
+Thy days of toil, thy nights of care,
+ Sad lonely dreams in crowded hall,
+Darkness within, while pageants glare
+ Around--the Cross supports them all."
+
+Oh, Promise of undying Love!
+ While Monarchs seek thee for repose,
+Far in the nameless mountain cove
+ Each pastoral heart thy bounty knows.
+Ye, who in place of shepherds true
+ Come trembling to their awful trust,
+Lo here the fountain to imbue
+ With strength and hope your feeble dust.
+
+Not upon Kings or Priests alone
+ The power of that dear word is spent;
+It chants to all in softest tone
+ The lowly lesson of Content:
+Heaven's light is poured on high and low;
+ To high and low Heaven's Angel spake;
+"Resign thee to thy weal or woe,
+ I ne'er will leave thee nor forsake."
+
+
+
+ORDINATION
+
+
+
+After this, the congregation shall be desired, secretly in their
+prayers, to make their humble supplications to God for all these
+things: for the which prayers there shall be silence kept for a
+space.
+
+After which shall be sung or said by the Bishop (the persons to be
+ordained Priests all kneeling), "Veni, Creator Spiritus." Rubric
+in the Office for Ordering of Priests.
+
+'Twas silence in Thy temple, Lord,
+ When slowly through the hallowed air
+The spreading cloud of incense soared,
+ Charged with the breath of Israel's prayer.
+
+'Twas silence round Thy throne on high,
+ When the last wondrous seal unclosed,
+And in this portals of the sky
+ Thine armies awfully reposed.
+
+And this deep pause, that o'er us now
+ Is hovering--comes it not of Thee?
+Is it not like a mother's vow
+ When, with her darling on her knee,
+
+She weighs and numbers o'er and o'er
+ Love's treasure hid in her fond breast,
+To cull from that exhaustless store
+ The dearest blessing and the best?
+
+And where shall mother's bosom find,
+ With all its deep love-learned skill,
+A prayer so sweetly to her mind,
+ As, in this sacred hour and still,
+
+Is wafted from the white-robed choir,
+ Ere yet the pure high-breathed lay,
+"Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire,"
+ Rise floating on its dove-like way.
+
+And when it comes, so deep and clear
+ The strain, so soft the melting fall,
+It seems not to th' entranced ear
+ Less than Thine own heart-cheering call.
+
+Spirit of Christ--Thine earnest given
+ That these our prayers are heard, and they,
+Who grasp, this hour, the sword of Heaven,
+ Shall feel Thee on their weary way.
+
+Oft as at morn or soothing eve
+ Over the Holy Fount they lean,
+Their fading garland freshly weave,
+ Or fan them with Thine airs serene.
+
+Spirit of Light and Truth! to Thee
+ We trust them in that musing hour,
+Till they, with open heart and free.
+ Teach all Thy word in all its power.
+
+When foemen watch their tents by night,
+ And mists hang wide o'er moor and fell,
+Spirit of Counsel and of Might,
+ Their pastoral warfare guide Thou well.
+
+And, oh! when worn and tired they sigh
+ With that more fearful war within,
+When Passion's storms are loud and high,
+ And brooding o'er remembered sin
+
+The heart dies down--oh, mightiest then,
+ Come ever true, come ever near,
+And wake their slumbering love again,
+ Spirit of God's most holy Fear!
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Christian Year
+by Rev. John Keble
+
diff --git a/old/chryr10.zip b/old/chryr10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..882d08f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/chryr10.zip
Binary files differ