Gladly I welcome thine all cheering ray:
’Midst frost and snow, a visit thus from thee,
Sets each numb toe and frozen finger free!
Who lives and reigns, the Lord of earth and sky!
Before thy face the hailstones melt away,
And thy glad light turns darkness into day.
Thy golden radiance from the mountain side;
Have often long’d upon yon hills to be,
To catch a comfortable ray from thee.
The trees around have lost their lovely green,
While horned cattle from the mountains roam,
And for their masters low, to take them home.
The tender female dances where she stands;
While I, half starv’d, have thought thy coming long,
But now I hail thee welcome with a song!
When o’er the mountain tops thy light they see:
But as thou here no homage dost receive,
I to thy Maker all the glory give.
Oppress’d with guilt, and overwhelm’d with fears:
A ray from thee, O uncreated Sun,
Breaks up, and makes long frozen fountains run!
Dost pour the living water from on high,
Which if it doth within the soul remain,
The sinner’s heart shall never freeze again!
For sensual pleasure shall no relish have,
But calm amidst the turbulence of life,
Shall dwell for ever free from care and strife.
And cheer our fallen world from hour to hour!
With thy glad beams, O visit every vale,
’Till every starving soul thine influence feel!
LINES IN MEMORY OF THE REV. D. DUCK, CURATE OF DANBY.
His weeping flock lament their loss;
No more they fix their eyes upon
That zealous preacher of the cross!
No breezes waft his silver’d hair,
While o’er the dead, both small and great,
His soul breathes out the ardent prayer!
His streaming tears are seen to flow,—
Those tears, which to the earth did fall,
And mingle with the dust below.
To bless, or break the hallow’d bread,
While from his lips and lifted hands,
Each hungry, holy soul is fed!
His ravish’d soul doth now ascend,
To share that bliss which he so long,
To others here did recommend.
AN ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF A BELOVED CHILD.
Why in such haste away?
Will no embrace, or tempting toy,
Induce thy longer stay?
To climb thy Father’s knee,—
Spring to the window or the door,
With such unusual glee?
And think it might be so,
Some Spirit then was passing by,
And beckon’d thee to go!
Which I have felt and fear’d,
Once something like the sound of wings,
Within the room was heard!
The city of our God?
Or on those holy mountains been,
By saints and angels trod?
Which fills the courts above?
Or has thy Saviour shown to thee
The tokens of his love?
So light on all below;—
If thou hast tasted of the brook
Where living waters flow!
Didst view the rising sun:
Then glance on us thine eye so bright,
And flutter to be gone!
The crown that thou shalt wear,
Forgive a parent’s fond desires,
To keep thee longer here.
Hadst any longer stayed,
With other rude and wicked boys,
Hadst into evil strayed;—
Who died thy soul to save,
Thy parents’ heads might have been laid,
With sorrow in the grave.
The Lord that wrong forgive,
And grant us grace each day, that we
In him may walk and live.
That hovers round our clay,
We might prefer an early tomb,
To one that’s old and grey!
Or see the robes they wear,
’Twould give our resolutions wing,
With longings to be there.
Light up the sacred fires;
To see their nimble fingers run
Along the golden wires;
His conflicts here below,
And give a mother’s soul relief,
With languishings to go!
And Jesus Christ adore,
And bring the resolution in,
To grieve our God no more.
To weep, and watch, and pray,
Until we gain that blissful port
Where tears are wiped away.
ON THE FIRST TEXT HEARD SPIRITUALLY.
(“My heart is fixed.”—Psalm lvii. 7.)
(Fix’d on the corner stone in Zion laid:)
He spoke, I wept, and heard the blessed text,
And all my wavering, wandering thoughts were stay’d.
And all my fears at once like lightning fled!
O how my troubled soul did then rejoice!
I was as one new risen from the dead!
So applicable to a case like mine;
Such music surely never reach’d my ears,
Nor words did ever with such lustre shine!
Nor feel the truths that sin sick hearts console,
Yet, O, it was a blessed text to me,
By which the Lord spoke peace unto my soul!
I hear its sound, as it sweeps through the wood,
I feel it come, but know not where it goes,—
And so is every one that’s born of God!
Of love to God, and every one I see;
Nor smiles, nor frowns, my happy soul can move,
A friend or stranger is alike to me!
Can angels sing for such a wretch as I?
Did Jesus die, that one so vile might live?
So vile, so full of sin and misery!
For rich, for poor, for all his grace is free!
Fly, sinners, fly to Christ, there yet is room
For all who feel their guilt and misery.
For he His witness doth to me impart;
He’ll bind the strong man arm’d, and cast him out,
And pour the living stream into my heart!
Let folly end, where genuine hope begins;
He finds a heaven, who truly finds the Lord,
But he that finds this heaven, must lose his sins!
My love to God, by true obedience show;
And read, and wrestle, strive, rebuke, and fight,
And watch, and pray, and to perfection grow!
And Death on me his chilling hand shall lay,
God will receive my ransom’d soul at last,
To live and reign with Him, in endless day!
TO A SQUIRREL IN A CAGE.
Dancing thus thy life away!
A King his palace might resign,
For a couch as soft as thine!
When to toil, and when to rest:
Free from earthly care and strife,
Merrily doth pass thy life.
Thou art at thy work alone;
By the early riser seen,
Turning round thy light machine.
Which more art than strength requires;—
Be the weather foul or fair,
Heart and foot are light as air!
Thou dost spread thy bushy tail:
Playing many a curious prank,
Tumbling like a mountebank!
And earth’s foundations seem to shake,
Free from terror and dismay,
Thou heed’st it not, but spin’st away.
From thy cronies of the wood,
Thou no more dost wander free,
Skipping light from tree to tree.
Thou seemest happy and content,
If some kind friend supply thy lack,
By giving thee a nut to crack.
In face of either friend or foe,
The beamings of thine eye impart
The motions of a grateful heart.
Thou fearest not the battle’s rage;
Of courage bold, and action brave,
Though in prison—thou’rt not a slave!
When I shall chance to come this way,
A present unto thee I’ll bring,
Thou bonny, little woodland thing!
Dancing thus thy life away!
A Queen her palace might resign,
For a pillow soft as thine!
TO A BIRD SINGING IN WINTER.
When all things around look so sad?
The prospect at present, as touching the spring,
Gives cause to be sorry, not glad!
And made the green meadows look gay,
Thou merrily might’st have mounted thy bough,
And warbled thy minutes away.
The cold winter’s snow doth descend,
Fierce winds, and sharp frosts, may yet blast thy hopes,
And bring thy sweet song to an end.
Thy foot may be caught in a snare,
And thou whilst seeking a morsel of food,
Be a captive, ere thou art aware.
In which to lay up thy grain?
Why warble thy notes, while unthankful man,
So often is heard to complain?
Or sun in the valley to shine?
’Tis proof that thy prospects are brighter than ours,
Thy heart more contented than mine!
PETCH’S ELEGY!
But yesterday it seems since we sprang forth:
Life doth no sooner sparkle in our eye,
Than we are subject to decline and die!
To Death, whose icy hand hath closed his eyes!
He sleeps, forgetful of his toil and care;
In prime of life, no more his voice we hear.
The sounding axe no more his skill demands:
But silence reigns,—his spirit’s gone to rest,
His ransom’d soul is number’d with the blest!
A heavy burden, grievous to be borne;
When lo, the Lord, a week before he died,
Dispers’d the gloom, and all his wants supplied
And God his pardoning love to him did give:
Such depth of mercy fill’d us with surprise,
And tears of gratitude flow’d from our eyes!
With love and patience beaming in his face;
Till fainting in the icy arms of death,
He praised his God with his departing breath
Joyful to labour, cross’d the dewy plain,
Before the morning stars had disappear’d,
Or early harmony the woodlands cheer’d!
Or sung in hymns our nightly hours away!
Alas! my partner’s gone! Can I forbear
To welcome down my cheek the rolling tear?
In social converse, or in songs divine!
Be it my chief concern to be prepar’d,
Like him to die, and meet my just reward.
And laid things to his charge that he knew not:
But now he’s gone to be with Christ on high,
Where he is safe, and may their power defy.
No more can they disturb our brother’s peace!
Their arrows keen can never pierce his soul,
He is departed, and hath reach’d the goal!
And join our voices in a nobler strain,
Where Jesus our great Prophet, Priest, and King,
In everlasting majesty doth reign!
REFLECTIONS ON PETCH’S TOMB.
As death hath left thee, so shall judgment find:
Thy spirit, with a world of spirits mix’d,
Hath left its mouldering tenement behind!
Didst fill thy station in this world of cares;
In life’s fair morn, thy soul hath slipt away,
From its delusions, and a thousand snares!
Thy voice with music sweetly did agree;
Thy heart was lively, thy complexion fair:—
Had I chose one for life, I’d chosen thee!
Anticipating more than was allow’d,
When pale affliction drew a veil between,
And death appointed thee an early shroud!
The dreary place where thy remains are laid,
Crying, “Prepare for the great judgment day!
That day which shall thy destiny decide!
Nor in that world in which I now exist;
Christ died, that he from hell thy soul might save,—
Keep his commands, or thou wilt ne’er be blest!”
And recollecting thy great sins now past,
Had not the grace of God, thy passport been,
Had not heaven deign’d to smile on thee at last!
Had I not witness’d oft the bless’d effect,
I might have fear’d, through disobedience,
That Heaven for ever would thy soul reject.
Which reach’d the dying thief upon the cross,
Had visited that troubled soul of thine,
Which else had mourn’d its everlasting loss!
Behind, a band of shining seraphs stood,
He pointed toward the opening sky,
And dipt his dart in the atoning blood!
And to his God resign’d his fleeting breath;
He view’d Heav’ns portals through the gloom around,
And shouted “Victory!” in the arms of Death!
Purchas’d for such as thee with blood divine;
Thank God, He ever did thy prayer regard,
And caus’d the light of life on thee to shine!
Hear and regard the caution thou hast given;
Repent, and turn to God, with hearts sincere,
And have, like thee, the earnest of their Heaven!
Still bear in mind my Shepherd’s care for me,
Weep o’er my sin, each day for death prepare,
Sigh o’er thy name-stamp’d tool, and think on thee!
“WHO HATH BELIEVED OUR REPORT?”
Isaiah liii. 1.
The agonizing prophet cried;
Where do the wandering tribes resort,
For whom the King of Glory died?
The fairest of ten thousand He,
Yet sin bewilders, and alas,
In Him they can no beauty see.
While round their altars they resort,
Well might the grieved prophet cry,
“Who hath believed our report?”
“Let timbrels sound, and damsels sing,
This strange impostor crucify,
For none but Cæsar is our King!”
Who strove His kingdom to support,
Well might the trembling prophet cry,
“Who hath believed our report?”
Their time, and strength, and souls devote,
Yet oft in sorrow cry alone,
“Who hath believed our report?”
From Him we have our faces hid,
We each have turn’d to his own way,
And done the things that were forbid.
Do to repentance us exhort,
Yet nightly raise the mournful song,
“Who hath believed our report?”
Sank under sorrows not His own,
Was buffeted, chastis’d, and bruis’d,
To raise us rebels to a throne.
And reed, with which His head was smote,
All cry in the deaf sinner’s ear,
“Who hath believed our report?”
The thunder of His power proclaim,
Commend His blood and righteousness,
And offer mercy in His name.
Of holy things to make a sport,
And weeping preachers yet may cry,
“Who hath believed our report?”
To them He hath “His arm reveal’d;”
To Him their lives they now devote,
For “by His stripes their souls are heal’d!”
When all shall be to judgment brought,
Thrice happy those who then can say,
We have believed this report.
Who wonder how these things can be;
They’ll wonder more, and perish then,—
Too late they will their folly see.
The Lord of life will cut them short;
And they shall weep and wish in vain,
They had believed our report!
THE BEES
The vessels are scudding along;
Before half the city’s awake,
The air is all action and song!
And eager their task to complete,
Extract from the bells of the flowers,
Their delicate essences sweet.
Their storehouse of food to increase,
Till Death puts an end to their song,
The citizen’s table to grace.
Or few can their forces defeat,
Yet Death with a torch at command,
Soon makes the wing’d armies retreat.
In the grave they lie silent and still,
While strangers are draining the cup,
They made such exertions to fill.
In work of a similar cast,
So faithful, industrious, and free,
And labour, and sing to the last!
CAUTION FROM LIMBER HILL.
(Occasioned by a fall during a frost.)
As I well remember,
I met with a rubber, and got some advice;
What harbour to rest in,
What Friend to put trust in,
And how we may walk with slape shoes upon ice!
Among the young timber,
My foot slipt, and falling, it was a take in,
The night being darkish,
And we a bit larkish,
Instead of a broom bush, I grasped a whin!
And pain was succeeding,
It set me a thinking,—of that you’ll not doubt;
And but for the blunder,
Which lessen’d the wonder,
I else had been punish’d enough to sing out!
I quickly did study,
What things upon earth to compare with this whin;
After walking around ’em,
I very soon found ’em
To be a false friend, or the pleasures of sin!
His favour’s delicious,
He’ll give you a lift, when he sees you break down;
In conflicts distressing,
You’ll find him a blessing,
He’ll mark your oppressions, and call them his own!
And vow quite contrary,
His heart to your grief will be hard as a stone;
In sorrow or sickness,
He’ll pity your weakness,
But only plant under your pillow a thorn!
He’ll answer you winking,
He’ll “Master,” and “Sir” you, and come at your call;
But give him a pincher,
You’ll find him a flincher,
Instead of a lift, he will fling you a fall!
Bewitching, bereaving;
’Twill pierce through the heart, and invite you to sing;
’Twill put on fair faces,
To woo your embraces,
But after you’ve grasp’d it, there follows a sting!
THE VILLAGE CHURCH IN RUINS!
(A decayed Church, a faithful Minister, a Gospel Sermon, a cold wind, a rainy day, and ten hearers!)
Her champions are sleeping beneath the cold sod;
She seems both by lover and friend quite forsaken,
Her total dependance is now on her God!
Her grey headed Elders may weep in despair;
Her once lovely fabric’s now ready to tumble,
While no one arises her breach to repair!
In humble devotion, and brotherly love,
Where early petitions like incense ascended,
And blessings in answer came down from above.
In youthful succession, both healthy and gay,
Which then did the Temple of Zion resemble,—
But briers and thorns have now choked up the way.
And her bells ring dolefully over her dead,
Her priest may lament from the porch to the altar,
Her pews are deserted, her virgins are fled.
And carve out a track for the frost or the snow;
Her walls, while they preach her departing epistle,
Are cover’d with gloom, both above and below.
The damp floor hath driven the hearers away;
A drop through the roof seems as if it were weeping,
To think how her beauty is gone to decay.
And offer’d to all in abundance, and free,
But her funds by the drones are now nearly exhausted,
In craftily clipping the wings of the Bee.
With precept on precept, and line upon line;
Still Ten there are found, who come to be furnish’d,
With heav’nly instruction, in lectures divine.
And wisely distinguish’d the bad from the good;
Of the present or absent who die unconverted,
That worm eaten pulpit is clear of their blood!
POETICAL REFLECTIONS.
(Composed during a visit from the West.)
And ask permission of the wise and great,
To admit, as tribute due, thy warbling song,
In thy own land, and in thy mother tongue.
Where I have oft experienc’d joys untold;
Where cattle graze, and crystal fountains flow,
And rivers glide, and healthy breezes blow.
And walks ’mong flowery banks, or shady groves,
Or nimbly climbs the rugged mountain’s height,
And views yon plains with ever new delight.
Where mellow fruits the loaded branches bend;
Sometimes I see old Esk in fury roll,
Or fish, or walk, or swim the silent pool.
And learn’d by grace, to walk in wisdom’s ways,
Its scenes can court my soul’s affections yet,
Their charms are such they cannot be forgot.
Which oft has prov’d a safe retreat for me,
From wintry tempest, or my neighbour’s frown,
From piercing frost, or scorching sun at noon:
As from the cloud the forked lightning glared.
Here did I notice first with wond’ring eye,
The rainbow’s beauty, and the bright blue sky;—
The moon’s eclipse, or comet’s sign of war!
Here oft our little tribe have muster’d up,
And from each eye have wiped the crystal drop;—
As we our little fire have circled round!
What each had read, or heard in times before,
Each eager open’d out his little store;—
Rocks, woods, or caves, or dens in foreign lands,
Enchanted castles, weapons, sceptres, crowns,
Of friars, giants, hermits, smiles and frowns!
Till glad we welcom’d in the morning ray;—
Ours might have been the cottage of content,
But we an absent Father did lament.
No evening song, no conversation’s heard!
The garden walls we did so often climb,
Are desolated by the hand of time!
Or skimm’d the frozen pond upon the green;
Where I may wander now, and sigh alone,
O’er pleasures past, and never to return!
I still behold a comeliness in thee,
Which to express I cannot language find,
Nor vent the deep emotions of my mind!
In thee I see a permanent delight,—
A secret sympathy I can’t express,
Which seems to feed the flame of happiness!
The desert sings, the work of God revives!
Cold, frozen hearts have felt the melting flame
Of Jesu’s love, and spread abroad the same!
Your wants supplied from field and fountain pure;
Live, and enjoy your privilege great,
Nor ever more forget the mercy seat!
Nor wild confusion robs you of your rest;
Here you in silence may your eyelids close,—
On downy pillows find a sweet repose!
And rocky bulwarks rise for your defence,
Whose silent caves present sublimer charms,
Than the shrill trumpet, or than war’s alarms.
Lies anchor’d in a harbour of his own;
He whose chief treasure is a humble mind,
By truth enlighten’d and by grace refined!
But early learns his tribes to sing and pray;
Though he but little knows of men and things,
Yet having this he needs not envy Kings!
Your God hath left a brighter throne for you;
And costlier robes than yours He laid aside,
And in your stead, He suffer’d, bled, and died!
As a poor beggar, Jesu’s love to know:
The beggar, or the king, that throne to gain,
Must know what’s meant by being “born again!”
And fill their habitations with thy peace;
That all may know, e’en husband, child, and wife,
The benefits of a religious life.
Till all thy favour feel, and praises sing;—
Thy favour, which alone true joy imparts,
Is thy law written on thy people’s hearts.
And make them dread thy name, and own thy laws;
O let not sin for ever them deceive,
But spare them breath to pray, repent, and live!
And with thy ransom’d few their voices blend:
I long to see them with their names enroll’d
Among thy people, in thine earthly fold.
To give them ears to hear, and eyes to see,
And hearts to feel;—apply the sprinkled blood,
And purify, and make them sons of God!
While I from much lov’d scenes am forced to part,
And leave the beauties of my native home,
With weary step, far o’er yon hills to roam.
Where I no more shall bid my friends farewell;
Nor mix with parting tears the morning dew,
Nor drop my pen, nor sigh my last adieu!
THE TWO HOURS’ TASK!
(A congratulatory Address to the Lambs, on their appearance in Spring.)