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Christmas at the hall

Chapter 69: The Great Object of Life.
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About This Book

This collection presents a sequence of poems built around a framing Christmas family gathering that links diverse shorter pieces; it moves between domestic sketches, seasonal and religious meditations, elegies and occasional tributes. Maritime landscapes and coastal scenes appear alongside reflective night musings, sonnets and ballads, while personal aspiration toward the poetic calling recurs in a few direct addresses. The verse varies in metre and tone, alternating descriptive natural imagery, moral and devotional reflection, and narrative fragments, producing an earnest, uneven but sincere portrait of a nineteenth-century poet testing his powers across themes of home, nature, loss, and hope.

The Great Object of Life.

The soul was framed to trust
In God’s eternal might,
His Goodness love, His truth revere,
And in His works delight.
This is the law of life,
And brings unfailing peace,
Gives praise to God, deep bliss to man,
And joys that never cease.
But man has fallen thence
And lost his primal state;
For falsehood changed the light of truth
And holy love to hate.
Truth’s kingdom to restore,
From evil to redeem,
Christ came, God manifest in flesh,
And reigns in heaven supreme.
Free pardon he can give,
And by the Spirit’s might,
Create the soul to love again
The good, the true, the right.
Thus “born of God” will man
A son of God become,
And through a pilgrimage on earth
Haste to a Father’s home.