Death
nicholas johnson
12 Feb, 2013 08:41 PMDark were the world if o'er its gloom The gospel light had never dawned, Hopeless our fate if through the tomb We saw no better world beyond. The smile of earthly gladness fades Destined to swift and sure decay, Disease this mortal frame invades And leaves but cold and lifeless clay. So brief is life--a few short years Measure this fleeting transient breath, Sorrow and gladness, smiles and tears Surrender to the angel--Death. "Come unto me," the Saviour said; No more a weary pilgrim roam; Swift through the night the chariot sped That bore the deathless spirit home. Veiled are the joyous, sparkling eyes, No more on earth to smile or weep, No more to ope in glad surprise When earthly music breaks their sleep. Peaceful is now the weary brain Its tumult stilled, its tempest o'er, Its once bright prospects slowly wane As lights upon a distant shore. But oh, true heart, art thou asleep? Thou who wert faithful to the last Struggling the flickering flame to keep When all else sank before the blast? Yes, thou art still. No earthly voice Can rouse thee from thy pulseless calm, The heart once weighed with many a cross Has changed its sorrows for a psalm. They are not here, the soul has left But the frail house of its abode, The fires are quenched the hearth bereft That once with warmth and beauty glowed. Through the dim windows, curtained now, Once an ethereal spirit shone; On the pale rigid cheek and brow The blushing rose of health has blown. The mind dwells not within its walls Nor knows its desolate decay But far beyond death's lonely halls It revels in eternal day. The heart that oft unsatisfied Throbbed with a longing unexpressed, Freed when the quaking mortal died, Has found the Christian's peaceful rest. When on a lonely coffin lid You hear the heavy clods descend, And "dust to dust" is sadly said Above the ashes of a friend; Oh, do not mourn in mute despair! Death cannot break love's silent power; The hidden bud we nourish here In Heaven has bloomed a perfect flower. Love cannot die. A lengthened chain Binds heart and soul, and mind and will To those we hope to meet again, The same dear friends who love us still. The Christian knows no darkened grave, Before earth's bells their dirge could toll Angelic palms began to wave To welcome home a weary soul. Gather sweet flowers of hope and love And bring them with a noiseless tread, Symbols of joys that bloom above, To strew around your sacred dead. And as their sweet perfumes arise Linked with the spirit's voiceless prayer Look up to yonder paradise And count your loss a triumph there. For Hope's triumphant bow has spanned The cloud that hovers o'er the tomb, And Faith beholds the better land Where fairer flowers than Eden's bloom.
Tags: Death, Old English
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