Such too, who bend with age and care, And faint and tremble near the tomb • Who sick’ning at the present scenes, Sigh for that better state to comeAll, great Creator, all are thine; All feel thy providential care : Alike thy constant pity share. Or whether joy elate the breast; Or death invite the heart to rest; All are thy messengers, and all Thy sacred pleasure, Lord, obey; And all are training man to dwel! Nearer to bliss, and nearer thee. ON ETERNITY. [GIBBONS.) What is Eternity ? can aught Tell ev'ry beam the sun emits, grass the meads Produce when Spring propitious leads The new-born year;-tell all the drops, That night, upon their bended tops, Sheds, in soft silence, to display Their beauties with the rising day: Tell all the sands the ocean laves, Tell ocean's ever-changing waves; Or tell, with more laborious pains, 'The drops its mighty mass contains : Be this astonishing account Augmented, with the full amount Of all the drops the clouds have shed, Where'er their wat’ry fleeces spread, Through all time's long protracted tour, From Adam to the present hour-Still short the sum, nor can it vie With the more num'rous years that lie Embosom'd in Eternity. Were there a belt that could contain In its vast orb, the earth and main; With figures were it cluster'd o'er, Without one cipher in the score; And could your lab'ring thought assign The total of the crowded line-How scant th' amount! th' attempt how vain, To reach Duration's endless chain ! For when as many years are run, Unbounded age is but begun. Attend, O man, with awe divine; For this Eternity is thine! ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY. (MILTON.) That he our deadly forfeit should release, Forsnok the courts of everlasting day, And chose with us a darksome house of mortal clay. Say heav'nly Muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a pred nt to the Infant God? Hast thou no verse, no hymn, or solemn strain, To welcome him to this his new abode, Now while the Heav'n by the sun's team untrod, Hath took no print of the approaching light, bright? And join thy voice unto the angel quire, S THL HYMN. IT was the winter wild, All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lice; With her great Master so to sympathise; To hide her guilty front with innocent snow, The saintly veil of maiden white to throw, She, crown'd with olive green, came Niftly sliding With turtle wing the amorous clouds dividing, The idle spear and shield were high up hung, The trumpet spake not to the armed throng, But peaceful was the night, His reign of peace upon the earth began; Whisp'ring new joys to the mild ocean, The stars with deep amaze Bending one way their precious infuence, Or Lucifer that often warn’d them thence; And though the shady gloom The sun hinself withheld his wonied speed, The new enlighten'd world no more should need; bear. The shepherds on the lawn, Sat simply chattiug in a rustic row; Was kindly come to live with then beiow; |