MffiiSSi ll J liMWl^S a^wiSiiiPMffliiWi ^ GANSEVOORT - LANSING COLLECTION 3 ) V-' 4 li ^ 7^^ l^^/^>^^^^^^^^l^^^ c:>c^^i::^^t^i^;^^^ .^ /^^'^^^^^ ^^^^^^^'^^ . ^/ * 5 ' //^/9y^ , '^-^ ^u 'Aeah-^:^^- SONGS BY THE WAY. ui'xuX W^ninp OP THE RIGHT REV. GEORGE WASHINGTON DOANE„DD.,LL.D., ARRANGED AND EDITED BY HIS SON, WILLIAM CROSWELL DOANE " Cantantes licet usque, (minus via laedet) eamus/' " Sometimes a listless hour beguile. Framing loose numbers." " Where pei'fect sweetness dwells, is Cosmos gone. Hut his sweet lays, to cheer the church, live on." THIRD EDITION. -P-' ALBANY: J O E I. iM U N S E L L 1875. pi iWemorial ot ti^t Meuninn. GRADUATES AND PUPILS OF ST. MARY'S HALL, THESE VERSES OF MY FATHER ARE DEDICATED; As to those, " who rise up and call him blessed " and who have everywhere vindicated and illustrated HIS BELOVED MEMORY. W. C. D. Bishop's House, Albany, All Saints, A. D. 1875. The Graduates of St. Mary's Hall, present at the ftrst Reunion, May, 1875, unanimously re- solved : That a Committee be appointed to wait upon the Bishop of Albany, and request a copy of his Father's Poems, for publication. The Committee subsequently reported, that the Bishop had acceded to the request, as his memorial offering to the Reunion, INTRODUCTION. In an old wood, stands a great oak tree. It braves the winds, and courts the fury of the storm, and challenges the forked points of the lightning ; and keeps off, from the young trees and the new grass and the dear flowers, what would kill them^ at the risk of its own life. This is its work. And, yet, it has time to shade the little children, and give them acorns for their play ; and time to make a winter home for squirrels, and a hive for the wild bees ; and time, to throw its leaves out, for coolness and for beauty ; and time, to change them, in the autumn glory, for our eyes to look on ; and time, to give its dry and withered leaves to God's great winter wind, to play its solemn music. And the leaves crown all. It is mighty in its roots, gnarled in its trunk, great in its branches. It can be a ship to carry the world's treasures, or a nation's armies ; it can be the arched roof of a cathedral. And yet, its Spring leaves are as tender as a sapling's ; its Summer emeralds, as green as the grass blades ; its Autumn colours, as deep, as though its only care were beauty. And the leaves are the crown of all. So God glorifies strength with beauty ; as, in the old fable, Venus was the wife of Vulcan ; and the highest human glory, of the greatest life, is God's adorning of a brave, great soul, with the loveliness, of grace and beauty. Such great- Vlll INTRODUCTION. ness, did He give my Father. And with the earnest seal, which death sets, on reverent and abiding love, this crown of the oak's own leaves — the beauty of a strong, enduring soul — hangs round the arms of the Cross, that marks his first and final rest. My Father's poems were not the labour of his life. His own name for them, " Songs by the Way," is the best and truest name. Poems are creations. And in the truest sense, the creations of his life are poems, permanent and beautiful, in all their usefulness and strength. His poems either bloomed, out of the deep valleys of suffering, which duty made in his life ; or were the graceful vine, that grew, unsolicited, over the rough rocks, of his steep pathway into glory. His heart was full of them ; and when the rod smote the rock ; when he was touched by kindness, or by suffering, by a child's gift of a violet, or some heroic deed of a man ; they just flowed out, in all the force and fervour of nature and necessity. And, like all his life, they were all tributary streams, of that great ocean of worship, that gathers round the Church's Altar, and dashes its eternal waves against the very Throne of God. The hard workman, beguiled the weariest task, setting its labour, to the music of his soul. Many of these verses were published, in A. D. 1824, '" a volume now out of print ; bearing the title of this book. Many others, from time to time, have appeared in news- papers, — and there are many, beside these, whose echoes linger round his beautiful home, and in our loving hearts ; that will not go beyond those sacred shrines. Riverside, May is^J.D. 1859. SONGS BY THE WAY MORNING. " My voice shalt thou hear in the morning." To Thee, O Lord, with dawning light, My thankful voice I'll raise. Thy mighty power to celebrate. Thy holy Name to praise; For Thou, in helpless hour of night. Hast compass'd all my bed. And now, refresh'd with peaceful sleep, Thou liftest up my head. Grant me, my God, Thy quick'ning grace, Through this, and every day. That, guided and supported thus. My feet may never stray. Increase my faith, increase my hope. Increase my zeal and love ; And fix my heart's affections, all. On Christ, and things above. 1 SONGS BY THE WAY. And when, life's labours o'er, I sink To slumber, in the grave, In death's dark vale, be Thou my trust, To succour and to save ; That so, through Him who bled and died. And rose again, for me ; The grave and gate of death, may prove, A passage, home, to Thee. NOON. "At noon will I pray." Father of lights, from Thee, descends, Each good, and perfect gift ; Then hear us, while our thankful hearts. In songs of praise, we lift ; We praise Thee, Maker, that Thou, first, Didst form us, from the clay ; And gav'st us souls, to love Thy name. To worship, and obey. We praise Thee, that the souls Thou gav'st. Thou, still, in life dost hold : Preserver, noon would fade to night. Ere half Thy love, were told ! SONGS BY THE WAY. 3 i } We praise Thee, Saviour, that Thou didst ] Our souls, from death release. And, with Thine own atoning blood, ' Procure us, endless peace. | i Maker, Preserver, Saviour, God ! J What varied thanks, we owe ' To Thee, howe'er addressed ; from Whom, j Such varied blessings flow : .1 To Thee, who on a darken'd world, ■ Celestial light, hast pour'd ; And told of heav'n, and taught the way. In Thy most holy Word. Wide, as the blaze of noon is spread, Spread Thou, that Word abroad : ] We ask it. Saviour, in Thy name ; . \ Maker, Preserver, God. | EVENING. Psalm cxli. 2. * Softly now the light of day Fades upon my sight away ; Free from care, from labour free, Lord, I would commune with Thee * Since inserted among the hymns in the Prayer Book. SONGS BY THE WAY. Thou, whose all-pervading eye, Naught escapes, without, within. Pardon each infirmity. Open fault, and secret sin. Soon, for me, the light of day Shall for ever, pass away ; Then, from sin and sorrow, free. Take me. Lord, to dwell with Thee Thou, who, sinless, yet hast known All of man's infirmity ; Then, from Thine eternal throne, Jesus, look with pitying eye. MIDNIGHT. " God my Maker, who giveth songs in the night." At midnight hour, O Lord, I wake, To think upon Thy name ; To call to mind Thy gracious acts. And all Thy praise, proclaim ; And though no friendly ray should shine, Nor single eye should wake, but mine. My spirit knows no startling fear. Convinced that Thou, my God, art near. SONGS BY THE WAY. Thou, in my time of deep distress, Didst aid me, from on high ; Didst wipe the starting tear, away. And still the bursting sigh : Life cannot throw so deep a gloom. There is no darkness in the tomb. Can e'er disturb my breast with fear. For Thou, my God, wilt still be near. THE VOICE OF RAMA. ' Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted. Heard ye from Rama's ruined walls. That voice of bitter weeping ? Is it the moan, of fetter'd slave ; His watch, of sorrow, keeping ? Heard ye, from Rama's wasted plains, That cry of lamentation ? Is it the wail of Israel's sons. For Salem's devastation ? Ah, no, a sorer ill, than chains. That bitter wail, is waking ; And deeper woe, than Salem's fall. That tortured heart is breaking : 'Tis Rachel, of her sons bereft ; Who lifts that voice of weeping; And childless are the eyes, that there. Their watch, of grief, are keeping. SONGS BY THE WAY. Oh ! who shall tell, what fearful pangs, That mother's heart, are rending ; As o'er her infant's little grave, Her wasted form is bending ; From many an eye, that weeps to-day, Delight may beam, to-morrow; But she, her precious babe is not ! A.nd what remains, but sorrow ? Bereaved One ! I may not chide Thy tears, and bitter sobbing ; Weep on ! 't will cool that burning brow, And still that bosom's throbbing; But, be not thine, such grief as theirs, To whom, no hope is given : Snatched from the world, its sins and snares. Thy infant rests, in Heaven. "I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life."' Thou art the Way ; to Thee alone, From Sin, and Death, we flee; And he, who would the Father seek, Must seek Him, Lord, by Thee. » Since inserted among the hymns in the Prayer Book. A few nights before Bishop White died, as my Father was watching at his bedside, he asked him to read this hymn. SONGS BY THE WAY. Thou art the Truth ; Thy word alone, True wisdom, can impart ; Thou only canst inform the mind, And purify the heart. Thou art the Life ; the rending tomb, Proclaims Thy conquering arm. And those who put their trust in Thee, Nor death, nor hell, shall harm. Thou art the Way, the Truth, the Life ; Grant us, that Way to know. That Truth, to keep ; that Life, to win ; Whose joys, eternal flow. THE WATERS OF MARAH. " And Moses cried unto the Lord ; and the Lord showed him a tree, which, when he had cast into the waters, the waters were made sweet." By Marah's stream of bitterness. When Moses stood and cried, Jehovah heard his fervent prayer, And instant help, supplied : The Prophet sought the precious tree. With prompt, obedient feet ; 'Twas cast into the fount, and made The bitter waters sweet. SONGS BY THE WAY. Whene'er affliction, o'er thee sheds Its influence malign, Then, sufferer, be the Prophet's prayer, And prompt obedience, thine : 'Tis but a Marah's fount, ordained, Thy faith in God, to prove ; And prayer and resignation shall Its bitterness, remove. **Our Father, who art in Heaven." "Our Father — " such Thy gracious name, Though throned above the starry frame, Thy holy name, be still adored. Eternal God, and Sov'reign Lord : Spread far and wide. Thy righteous sway ; Till utmost earth. Thy laws, obey ; And, as in Heaven, before Thy throne. So here. Thy will, by all, be done: This day. Great Source of every good, Feed us, with our convenient food : As we, to all, their faults forgive. So bid us, by Thy pardon, live : Let not our feeble footsteps stray. Seduced by sin, from Thy right way : But, saved from evil work, and word. Make us Thine own. Almighty Lord : SONGS BY THE WAY. For Thine the sceptre is, and throne, That shall be crush'd, or shaken, never ; The glory Thine, O God, alone, And power that shall endure, for ever. " Lord, I believe : help Thou mine unbelief." "Lord, I believe," the father cried; " Help Thou mine unbelief: O ! if Thou canst, have mercy now, And give my child relief !" The father's fervent prayer was heard, Fulfill'd, the father's joy ; The Saviour pitied, spake, and healed His poor demoniac boy. Sinner, this Lord is still the same, Still waiting, to forgive ; Seek, then, His cleansing, saving blood. Believe, obey, and live. Sufferer, it is thy Father smites. Thy Father's chastening love : The hand that gives, will heal the wound, In fairer realms above. 2 lO SONGS BY THE WAY. Christian, 'tis there thy Saviour reigns, Enthroned above the skies. And thither, freed from death's dark thrall, Thy ransom'd soul shall rise. Believer, press undaunted on. Nor heed earth's dull delay. While angels wait, to welcome thee, To realms of ceaseless day. Sinner, no more, nor sufferer then. Life's painful journey o'er. Thine is the Christian heritage Of joy, for ever more ; And crowns of quenchless glory thine. Thy constancy's reward ; Believer, thine, in Heaven to dwell Forever with the Lord. THE LOVE OF CHRIST. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ ?" Shall tribulation's deep distress, Or fear, or want, or nakedness. Or cruel foe, or conquering sword. Divide us, from thy love, O Lord ? SONGS BY THE WAY. I I t i No, vain alike, were death, and life, j And powers of hell, and Satan's strife, And things that are, and things to be, ] To separate us. Lord, from Thee ! ' So shall we. Saviour, through Thy love, ■ In all things, more than conquerors prove; 1 Nor grave shall hold, nor hell shall harm, \ The ransom'd of Thy holy arm. THE FAITHFUL SAYING. "This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus, came into the world, to save sinners." Yes, it is a faithful saying, Christ, the Saviour, died for me : Haste my soul, without delaying. To His great atonement, flee. Shall the Lord of earth and heaven, Sojourning with sinful men, Die, that they may be forgiven. Yet his death, be all in vain ? No, by every drop, that's streaming Down, from that accursed tree. By Thy death, my soul redeeming. Saviour, I will come to Thee ! 12 SONGS BY THE WAY. Worldly riches, honours, pleasures. Shall no more, my soul detain ; Dearer, Thou, than all the treasures, Earth can give, or life can gain. THE SINNER CALLED. Return, and come to God, Cast all your sins away. Seek ye the Saviour's cleansing blood. Repent, believe, obey. Say not, ye cannot come. For Jesus bled, and died. That none, who ask in humble faith, Should ever be denied. Say not, ye will not come 'Tis God, vouchsafes to call. And fearful, shall their end be found. On whom. His wrath shall fall. Come, then, whoever will. Come, while 'tis called to-day. Flee to the Saviour's cleansing blood, Repent, believe, obey. SONGS BY THE WAY. *' In the hour of death, and in the day of judgment." My God, when nature's frame shall sink, And totter on destruction's brink. Be Thou my portion, and my cup, And bear my fainting spirit, up. For Thou didst form me first, from clay ; Hast led me, through life's devious way ; Then take, O God, my parting breath, Support me in the hour of death. And when before the throne I stand. And wait Thy judgment's dread command, Do Thou, my strong supporter, be. And save the soul, that trusts in Thee. Thou, Saviour, for my sins hast died. Thy grace alone, my strength supplied ; Then cast me not, O Lord, away. But save me, in the judgment day. THE PLAGUE OF DARKNESS. But all the children of Israel had light in their dwelling8." When darkness erst, by God's command. Enveloped haughty Egypt's land, Throughout that long and fearful night, In Israel's dwellings, all was light. 14 SONGS BY THE WAY. So, to the righteous, light shall rise. Though clouds and tempests wrap the skies. And faith, triumphant, mock the gloom. That gathers round the silent tomb. Then grant us, God, while here we rove, Thy will to know. Thy ways to love. To prove the riches of Thy grace. And share the brightness of Thy face ; Till, guided, so in all our way, And cheered by Thy celestial ray. We reach, at last, that heavenly height. Where all is peace, and joy, and light. " Lord, to whom shall we go ? Thou hast the words of eternal life.' Lord, should we leave Thy hallowed feet. To whom should we repair ? Where else, such holy comforts meet. As spring, eternal, there ? Earth has no fount of true delight. No pure, perennial stream ; And sorrow's storm, and death's long night. Soon wrap life's brightest beam. SONGS BY THE WAY. Unmingled joys, 'tis Thine to give, And undecaying peace ; For Thou canst teach us, so to Hve, That hfe shall never cease. Thou, only, canst, the cheering words Of endless life, supply. Anointed, of the Lord of Lords, The Son of God, most High. 15 THE WATER OF LIFE. "Whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely. Ho ! all that thirst, draw nigh, And drink of that pure fount, Which issues forth eternally, From Zion's holy mount. Haste to that blessed fold, Which Jesus first ordained, And which. His hand and holy arm, Have ever since maintained. There, shall the sacred Fount, Wash all your sins away. And fit you, so your faith be firm, For realms of endless day. 1 6 SONGS BY THE WAY. There, is that Word dispensed, By which alone, we live. Which only can our hopes confirm. And joys eternal, give. There is that Feast prepared, For those in Christ who live ; Rich banquet ! where the contrite heart True comfort shall receive. Come, then, the Spirit cries, And she, the heavenly Bride, Come, all that are athirst, nor fear That one shall be denied. Come, whosoever will. Nor price, nor money bring ; Come to that fount, whose streams of life Through endless ages, spring. "The fashion of this world passeth away." In careless childhood's sunny hours, When all we love, is nigh. No thorn, amid life's opening flowers, No cloud, in all its sky ; SONGS BY THE WAY. I7 We fear no ill, nor dream of care, But deem, each following day, Shall light us, on, to fairer scenes. And beam, with brighter ray. And childhood's vernal season past ; And shunned youth's thousand snares, When manhood's autumn comes at last, With sorrows, fears, and cares. Still, autumn-like, its skies are bright, And still, the world seems young. And still, we love its mellow light. Its bowers, with fruitage hung. But autumn's golden skies must fade, And autumn's fruits decay. And soon, 'mid snows and storms, must come Old age's wintry day. A wintry day at best, as short. As gloomy, and as cold. Till the worn body yields at last, And life lets go its hold. And when its earthly hold is gone. The world's brief fashion past. Are there no hopes, that shall survive. No pleasures, that shall last ? Yes, Christian, it is thine to know. Life's but a weary way, A short, though painful, pilgrimage. To realms of endless day ; 3 I 8 SONGS BY THE WAY. Where Faith, her crown of life, shall wear, And Hope, be lost in joy. And meek-eyed love, be paid with bliss, That time can ne'er destroy : For thither, has the Lamb gone up. Who suffered, and was slain. That, risen with Him, His followers might With Him, for ever, reign. TO A VERY DEAR FRIEND.^ " Friendship, I owe thee much." Dark to the soul, and desolate, Life's sunniest hours would be. And cheerless, fortune's best estate. Fair Friendship ! but for thee. And oh ! when tempests wrap the skies. How comfortless, their gloom. Did not thy radiant visions rise. Our darkness to illume ! Friend of my heart ! in hours of joy, I've listened to thy voice ; And felt, in each inspiring tone. New motive, to rejoice ; »The venerable Rector of Trinity Church, New York, the Rev. Dr. Berrian. SONGS BY THE WAY. 1 9 And oft, with anxious cares oppressed, And griefs, thou didst not know. Thy kindness has relieved my breast. And lightened every woe. Oh ! I have loved, with thee to rove. In Spring's reviving hour. Ere verdure yet, had clad the grove. Or fragrance filled the flower ; And joyed, when Summer found us laid. Beneath some aged oak. Where, save the streamlet's bubbling tale, No sound, the stillness broke. With thee, when Autumn's mellowing hand Has tinged the woods with gold, How dear, to mark each varied tint Successively unfold ! And e'en in Winter's sullen hour, To roam, delighted, on, And feel, that not in Summer bower, Is nature wooed, alone. Those happy hours, those happy hours, Have flitted on the wind ; But many a dear remembrance Hves, Deep in my heart, entwined ; And oft, the chords with which they're bound. Shall fancy wake again ; And memory love to Hnger long. Delighted, on that strain. 20 SONGS BY THE WAY. LIFE'S LITTLE LINES. " Noting, ere they fade away, ! The little lines of yesterday." ] Life's " little lines ;" how short, how faint, How fast they fade away ; 1 Its highest hopes, its brightest joys, Are compassed, in a day. Youth's bright, and mild, and morning light, Its sunshine, and its showers. Its hopes and fears, its loves and tears, ! Its heedless, happy hours ; And manhood's high and brightened noon. Its honours, dangers, cares, i The parents' pains, the parents' joys, j The parents' anxious prayers ; Fade in old age's evening gray, j The twilight of the mind ; Then sink, in death's long, dreamless night, And leave no trace, behind. Yet, though so changing, and so brief. Our life's eventful page. It has its charms, for every grief, Its joys, for every age. In youth's, in manhood's, golden hours, Loves, friendships, strew the way With April's earliest, sweetest flowers. And all the bloom of May ; SONGS BY THE WAY. 21 And when old age, with wintry hand, Has frosted o'er, the head, Virtue's fair fruits, survive the blast, When all beside, are fled ; And faith, with pure, unwavering eye, Can pierce the gathered gloom ; And smile upon the spoiler's rage, And live, beyond the tomb. Be ours, then, virtue's deathless charm. And faith's untiring flight ; Then shall we rise, from death's dark sleep. To worlds of cloudless light. THERMOPYL^. 2di Ttepij Ttap^svB, jj.opq>a The servant of the Lord : j 104 SONGS BY THE WAY. And I saw, how the depths of his manly soul, By that sacred vow, were stirred. And nobly, his pledge he kept ; For the truth, he stood alone. And his spirit never slept. And his march was ever, on ! Oh ! deeply and long, shall his loss be wept; The brave old man, that's gone. There were heralds of the cross. By his bed of death, that stood, And heard, how he counted all but loss, For the gain of his Saviour's blood ; And patiently waited his Master's voice, Let it call him, when it would. The good old man is gone ! An apostle's chair is void. There's dust on his mitre, thrown. And they've broken his pastoral rod ! And the fold of his love, he has left alone. To account for its care, to God. The wise old man is gone ; His honoured head lies low. And his thoughts, of power are done. And his voice's manly flow. And his pen, that, for truth, like a sword, was drawn. Is still, and soulless, now. SONGS BY THE WAY. The brave old man is gone ! With his armour on, he fell ; Nor a groan, nor a sigh, was drawn, When his spirit fled, to tell ; For mortal sufferings, keen and long, Had no power, his heart to quell. The good old man is gone ! He is gone, to his saintly rest ; Where no sorrow can be known. And no trouble can molest ; For his crown of life is won. And the dead, in Christ, are blessed ! Boston^ March 15, 1830. 05 WRITTEN ON LEAVING HOME. I LEAVE thee, dearest, for a while, Yet leave thee, with our God ; His sheltering wing, is o'er us still, At home, and when abroad. I leave with thee, our little ones. The lovely, and the loved ; And if, for only joy I sought. My feet had never roved. H I06 SONGS BY THE WAY. But He who gave, and guards them, still, Has called me, as His own. To bear His word to sinful men, And lead them to His throne. Thus must the Master's work be mine, Till life's brief hour, is o'er ; I dare not " love thee," dear, so well. Loved I not Jesus, more. TO MY DEAR GEORGE HOBART. My beauty and my blessing, A year ago, to-day. Thy little eyes first opened. To the morning's blessed ray ; And, as I saw thee lying. On thy gentle Mother's breast, I felt, what only Fathers feel. And cannot be expressed. My beauty, what strange wonders. Since that day, have been wrought ; Thy life, how wreathed with sunny smiles. Thine eye, how full of thought ! How many a queer and quaint device, How many a guileless art ; Thine infant nature's eloquence. To win a parent's heart. SONGS BY THE WAY. lOJ My blessing, such I feel thee, With each returning day, A fountain, heaven-opened, To refresh life's dusty way ; To cheer, with love, and hope, the path, Else, ah ! how lonely trod. And lift the heart's affections, up. In prayers, for thee, to God. My beauty and my blessing. For thee, my prayers shall rise, With morning's dawn, and evening's fall, Unfailing, to the skies ; That He, who gave thee, to us. Would guard and guide thy way. Through life, in peace and purity. To Heaven's eternal day. THE FOUNTAIN OPENED IN THE CHURCH Within the Church, a fountain springs ; It started from the Saviour's side ; Peace, pardon, joy, to all, it brings,— The life-blood of the Crucified. Its living streams, forever flow, Forever pure, forever free ; . The spirit's solace, here below, Its succour, for eternity. I08 SONGS BY THE WAY. " Ho, every one that thirsts, draw nigh — " Beloved, hear the voice divine ! The broken heart, the contrite sigh, Are welcome there ; and these are thine. Come, then — the Spirit calls, — come near, In humble faith, in trembling love : Drink comfort, for thy sorrows here, And taste, before, the bliss above. SPIRIT OF SPRING. Spirit, that from the breathing south, Art wafted hither, on dewy wing, By the softened light, of that sunny eye. And that voice, of wild-wood melody. And those golden tresses, wantoning, And the perfumed breath, of that balmy mouth, We know thee. Spirit of Spring, Spirit of beauty, these thy charms, Spirit of Spring. Spirit of Spring, thou comest to wake. The slumbering energies of earth, The zephyr's breath, to th^e, we owe. Thine is the streamlet's silver flow. And thine, the gentle floweret's birth ; And their silence, hark ! the wild birds break. For thy welcome. Spirit of Spring. SONGS BY THE WAY. I09 Spirit of Spring, when the cheek is- pale, There is health, in thy balmy air. And peace, in that brow of beaming bright, And joy, in that eye of sunny light ; And golden hope, in that flowing hair ; Oh ! that such influence e'er should fail, For a moment. Spirit of Spring, Spirit of health, peace, joy, and hope \ Spirit of Spring. Yet fail it must, for it comes of earth. And it may not shame its place of birth. Where the best can bloom, but a single day, And the fairest, is first to fade away. But oh ! there's a changeless world above, A world of peace, and joy, and love. Where, gathered from the tomb. The holy hopes, that earth hast crost, And the friends, so dear, we have loved and lost, Shall enjoy immortal bloom. Who will not watch, and strive, and pray. That his longing soul may soar away, On faith's untiring wing. To join the throng of saints in light, • In that world, forever fair and bright, Of endless, cloudless. Spring. 1833- IIO SONGS BY THE WAY. THE AMULET OF GRACE. Written in " the Amulet." Dearest, could thy husband get, With his blood, an amulet. That could charm away thy woe. From his heart the stream should flow. But from mortal misery. Such redemption may not be ; Vain before the holy God, Oceans filled with human blood. Yet let heaven and earth resound. Such a ransom has been found, God's atoning Lamb has died, Jesus has been crucified. Dearest, let that fountain be. Opened, not in vain, for thee : It alone, can soothe, can save \ Seek, by faith, its precious wave. Seek it, sweet one, while you may. Seek it, while 'tis called to day. Seek the Lamb, for sinners slain — None who seek Him, seek in vain. January I, 1833. SONGS BY THE WAY. Ill TO MY DEAR SISTER. I i My sister, I remember, ' How lonely was my heart. Till thou, in all its joys and griefs, Wert born, to bear a part : — And well do I remember The pleasure and the pride. That filled my boyish bosom. When thou wert by my side. My sister, since you joined me, Upon life's rugged way. Through what vicissitudes, we've passed, Of darkness and of day. Yet still, thy love has steadfast been, Unchanged in cloud, or shine, And thy own sorrow, been forgot. To sympathize with mine. My sister, to repay thee Is only, with the Lord, And He can make thy love, its own Exceeding great reward. O ! ever may His sheltering shield, Outstretched above thee, lie. And brightest beams of light, direct Thy footsteps, to the sky. Philadelphia^ March 2, 1834. 112 SONGS BY THE WAY. TO WILLIAM CROSWELL. " Perennis et Fragrans." William, my brother and my bosom friend ! For thrice ten years, the sun, this blessed day, Has lighted thee along life's chequered way, Serene and placid, towards thy journey's end. One third the distance, we have trod together, Hand grasping hand, and heart enclosed in heart. Each of the other's life, breath, beii)g, part; Breasting as one, time's rough and rugged weather. Poet and Priest, as in thy face I look. So full of thought, so tranquil, so benign, With pride of soul, to hail thee friend of mine, I greet thee, with the legend of this book : — " Fragrant and lasting," be thy memory here. And then a fadeless crown, through heaven's immortal year ! Burlington^ Nov. 7, 1834. A PRAYER. Grant me, great Lord, Thy graces three, Faith, and Hope, and Charity ; Faith, that on the cross relies. And trusts, but in Thy sacrifice. SONGS BY THE WAY. I I 3 Hope, that, when by woe opprest, Points upward to a heavenly rest j And last, the greatest of the three, O ! give me gentle Charity : To suffer all ; to know no pride ; To strive, another's faults to hide ; To answer with a soothing smile. When men, with angry words, revile ; To envy not that happiness. Thy hand denies me, to possess ; The rich man's wealth to covet not, Though poverty should be my lot. Teach me through every earthly ill, To be submissive, to Thy will ; And let me of Thy grace, receive. As I, my enemies, forgive. Then Faith, and Hope, and Charity Will lead me on, to Heaven, through Thee. THE GERANIUM LEAF. " It grew and blew, in my little room, and I pressed it in my Bible." Ten thousand thanks, my dearest, for this precious little leaf. Henceforth, to bear me company, in pleasure and in grief; Still breathing to my heart, its fragrant memories of thee. And consecrating all the past, with natural piety. 15 114 SONGS BY THE WAY. I gaze upon its greenness, and I think of where it blew, Till all that charmed atmosphere grows radiant to my view. And I felt it was a happy lot, to live, and grow, and bloom. Beneath thy light of loveliness, in that enchanted room. Be ever thus, my gentle one, the Bible at thy side. And every joy and every grief, shall thus be sanctified ; Nor trust the love, that only drinks at fountains of the earth, To satisfy the longings, of a soul of heavenly birth. 1838. SPRING THOUGHTS. Dearest, those purple flowers, They seem to me to spring. From the grave of him, ^ whose loving breast Was wont to be the living nest Of each beautiful thought and thing. Dearest, those early flowers. They speak to me of him, With the youthful mind, so richly stored. With loftiest thoughts, and as freely poured, As from fountain's bubbling brim. Dearest, those fragrant flowers Are odours of his life. » The Rev. B. D. Winslow. SONGS BY THE WAY. I If The gentle-hearted, the heavenly-willed, With the choicest grace of the Holiest, filled, Where loveliest deeds, were rife. Dearest, they breathe, those flowers. Of the land, where he takes his rest, Where the river of immortality flows, With our White, and Hobart, and Jebb, and Rose, And all, that he loved, the best. Dearest, they say, those flowers — Earth's winter womb's first born — " So shall the dead in Christ arise. Heirs of the world, beyond the skies, On the resurrection morn." 1839. TO MY WIFE. " It is well." ^ Beloved, " it is well ! — '* God's ways are always right ; And love is o'er them all. Though far above our sight. « In a little book of Dr. Bedell's, having this title. I I 6 SONGS BY THE WAY. Beloved, " it is well ! — " Though deep and sore, the smart, He wounds, who skills to bind. And heal the broken heart. Beloved, "it is well! — " Though sorrow clouds our way, 'Twill make the joy more dear. That ushers in the day. Beloved, "It is well!—" The path that Jesus trod. Though rough and dark it be. Leads home, to heaven, and God. March 2, 1833. TO MY WIFE. My only, and my own one. How dark and drear, the day That drags its lingering hours along ; When thou art far away. The loveliness, that lighted up My life, no longer nigh. And hushed the voice, that used to fill My soul with melody. SONGS BY THE WAY. I IJ High, in the broad blue firmament, Among those worlds of light, The faithful witness holds her place, Constant, serene, and bright ; My aching heart in sadness sinks, For so, her placid eye Looked down, when heart to heart, we walked, In hours of joy, gone by. I sit among my silent books, And think, with what a pride, I scanned their hoarded treasures o'er. When thou wert by my side ; I listen for thy gentle step, I watch the opening door; The page is marked, the pen laid down, Alas ! thou comest no more. By day or night ; at home, abroad. Where'er I roam or rest. The thought of thee, my absent love. Thus fills my faithful breast ; Nor bitter, bitter, though it be. As pang of parting Ufe ; Has earth a joy, my soul so craves. While thou'rt away, my wife. I 18 SONGS BY THE WAY. TO MY DEAR SISTER. ON HER 19TH BIRTHDAY, My gentle sister, if the love, My bosom bears for thee, Were poured, like running waters, out, 'Twould be a surging sea. But fullest streams, are ever those, Most silently vi^hich run, And the deep earth has deeper founts. Than ever see the sun. My gentle sister, could the thoughts. That throng my heart, of thee, Be coined in ducats, vi^hat a shovi^er, Of minted gold, 'twould be ! But richest ores, lie farthest down, And, ripening in the mine. Sleep gold and jewels, costlier far Than all, on earth, that shine. Then, gentle sister, think not hard, Nor count it, loss of love. That ne'er for thee, in idle hours, One idle rhyme I've wove ; That fitful harp, whose sleeping strings, The wild wind wakes at will. The soul of music harbours yet, Though all its strings are still. SONGS BY THE WAY. II9 Then, sister dearest, with the year. That newly dawns to-day, To light thee on, in gentlenesss, Thy pure and peaceful way ; Take deeply, warmly, from the heart. The silent prayer of love — God's blessing be thy portion here, His blessedness above ! TO MY DEAR SISTER. My gentle sister, twenty years, To day, have flitted by. Since first thou earnest, a helpless thing, Among our hearts to lie. We welcomed thee, as best we might, With mingled smiles and tears; And poured, we could no more, our prayers. For blessings on thy years. And, sister sweet, our prayers were heard, God's blessed one thou art : Not, with the rich, or proud, or gay, But, with the pure in heart : His gifts, to thee, in gentleness And piety, are given ; The treasures that endure, on earth, And never fail in heaven, I20 SONGS BY THE WAY. My gentle sister, thou hast been, Even as a child to me. Since first thy new-born helplessness Was tended on my knee ; And stretched upon the shaded bank, Whole summer days, I lay. And watched, as with a parent's joy, Thy happy, infant play. And still, the holy bond endures, And still, a father's care Makes tenderer, deeper, more intense. The love, for thee, I bear. It grows with years, with cares it grows, Unchanged by change of lot ; In joy and sorrow, hope and fear. Still failing, faltering not. My gentle sister may the years, That yet remain to thee, Be spent, as all the past have been, In tranquil piety : May Heaven, in mercy, spare thee long To all who share thy love ; And faith and peace, prepare thee here, For endless joy above ! SONGS BY THE WAY. 121 1 840-1 850. TO MY TWO DEAR CHILDREN. CORNELIA AND ANNIE R. Your beautiful present/ my children, Has filled me with pleasure and joy, That the thought of my personal comfort, Your fingers, and hearts, should employ. Be assured of my fond supplication. That you, in all grace may increase. And your fett have that blest " preparation " That comes from the " Gospel of Peace." Christmas^ 1846. THE SMELL OF SPRING. The first violets of the year 1840, seen this day, 4th March, Ash Wednesday. The smell of Spring ! how it comes to us. In those simple, wild-wood flowers. With memories sweet, of friends and home, When never a cloud on our sky had come. In childhood's cheerful hours. ^ A pair of slippers. 16 122 SONGS BY THE WAY. The smell of Spring ! how it comes to us, In that cluster of purple bloom, With thoughts of the loved and loving one. Not lost, we know, but before us gone. Whom we left, in his wintry tomb. The smell of Spring ! how it comes to us. In the violet's fragrant breath. With beaming hopes of that brighter shore. Where flowers and friends, shall fall no more, " And there shall be no more death." 1840. TO A DEAR LITTLE BOY. WITH A BIBLE. This little book, my precious boy. If studied and obeyed, Will bring Heaven's choicest blessings down Upon thy youthful head ; Will lead thee, shouldst thou grow a man. Safe through life's pilgrimage ; And crown thy latest days with peace. The glory of old age. SONGS BY THE WAY. I 23 Nay, will not leave thee then, my boy, j But through the darkling grave Support and guide thy shrinking feet, ' And in the judgment, save. 1 J Then take this book, my precious boy, ' \ And study it with prayer ; ; 'Twill charm for thee each ill of earth, : And foil each secret snare. I i 'Twill teach thee, wisely, how to live. And, better, how to die ; ■ And bring thee, saved, through Christ, from sin, | To reign with Him, on high. } WITH A BIBLE AND PRAYER BOOK, TO MY GODSON. Dear boy, had I the wealth of worlds To lavish full and free, I could add nothing to the gifts, Which now I send to thee. The Word of God, the Church's prayers With all thy heart embrace ; And thou shalt never lose the gift, Of thy baptismal grace, 124 SONGS BY THE WAY. The cross, imphnted on thy brow, Enthroned thus within, Shall save thee from the guilt and power. And punishment of sin ; Through all the changing scenes of life Thy succour and thy stay, Shall guide thee onward thro' the grave. To realms of endless day. ON THE LITTLE URN IN THE GARDEN. "H. T. Jan. i6, 1815. M. T. Oct. 12, 1815." ** Lovely and pleasant in their lives, and in their death they were not divided." Wind, graceful clematis, around the urn. Where filial love, a Mother's name has traced. Type of her loveliness, whose loss we mourn. With every charm, with every virtue, graced. Wave, tall acacia, o'er the sacred stone. Which bears inscribed a Father's honoured name ; So was his sheltering shadow, round us, thrown, So fresh, so full, the verdure of his fame. Blend thus your leaf and tendril, vine and tree. And waft, as one, the fragrance of your flowers \ So they, in fond communion, full and free, Passed their sweet lives, amid these happy bowers. SONGS BY THE WAY. I 25 Sweet sainted ones, thus lovely in your life, Nor, in your peaceful death, divided long. Saved from the world, its sin, its care, its strife, May we but join you, in that white-robed throng. Batter sea Rise^ 1841. "SO HE GIVETH HIS BELOVED SLEEP." ** Your boy is looking as peaceful and happy, asleep in his cradle, as you can desire." Sleep lies like dew about thee. The sleep, which God bestows ; Nor pain, nor care, nor sorrow, yet, Thy peaceful spirit knows : Washed, from the first transgression, In that baptismal flood ; God makes thee. His beloved. Through the Beloved's blood. Sleep sweetly on, and safely. Mine own baptismal child ; Calm, as the stream in Eden's bower. While yet Jehovah smiled ; The heavenly Dove hangs o'er thee. With blessed, brooding wing, To shelter and to shield thee. From evil thought and thing. London^ August 24, 1841. 26 SONGS BY THE WAY. THE BEAUCHAMP MONUMENT, IN THE CHOIR OF WARWICK CHURCH. " Te spectem, suprema mihi cum venerit hora, Te teneam moriens deficiente manu." ' Tibullus Eleg.j i. 59, 60. " Love, let me take thy hand. That tenderest, truest one. The same I held, when we did stand, Before the altar stone : There, let me hold it so ; It stays my fluttering heart : Nor, till its pulses cease to flow. Permit that grasp to part. " Nay, — when thy breast, my bride. Mingles its dust with mine. And sweetly sleeping, side by side. We rest beneath the shrine ; So let the Sculptor's art. Our love perpetuate : The grasp, that life could never part, Death shall but consecrate !" * Thee let me gaze on, with my dying breath. And clasp thy hand, when mine relents in death. G. W. D. SONGS BY THE WAY. \TJ Thus dying Beauchamp spake ; His will was strictly done \^ Sweetly they sleep, as once they stood. Before the altar-stone ; He, in his mailed coat. She, in her bridal vest ; In sculptured beauty, side by side. And hand in hand, they rest. Tve stood among the tombs. In many an ancient fane, Where mitred head, and sworded hand. Call ages up, again : But all the stone seems here Instinct with vital breath ; And this, its lesson to the heart — Love, overmastering death. Stratford-upon-Avon^ 2/i^th July^ 1 84 1. * In the centre of the choir is a fine table monument, supporting the recum- bent effigies of Earl Thomas Beauchamp, the founder of the choir, and Catha- rine, his Countess, daughter of Roger Mortimer, Earl of March. The Earl is represented in armour covered with a surcoat, a dagger on his right side, spurs on his heels, his left hand gauntleted, resting on his sword, his right hand un- covered, clasping that of bis Countess, his helmeted head supported by a cushion, his feet resting on a bear. His Countess is habited in a mantle and petticoat, laced down the front, below the girdle, and very rich, her sleeves reaching to the wrists, and buttoned, her headdress reticulated, her head supported by a cushion, and her feet resting on a lamb. Her right hand is clasped in that of the Earl, her left hand reposes on her breast. 128 SONGS BY THE WAY. THE BEAUCHAMP MONUMENT.^ Hand in hand, we stood together, At the altar-stone ; Hand in hand, in roughest weather, Life-long, we have gone : Hand in hand, in hours of gladness. Cheerily we strayed ; Hand in hand, in hours of sadness. Knelt to God, and prayed. Hand in hand, we went, my own love. For a little while ; Hand in hand, we'll sleep, in stone, love, In the sacred aisle : Hand in hand, the trumpet sounding. Saved through Christ, we'll rise ; Hand in hand, through grace abounding, Soar beyond the skies. The Breakers^ C)th June^ 1853. HOC ERAT IN VOTIS. This was in all my prayers, since first I prayed, A parsonage in a sweet garden's shade ; * This was written twelve years later j the impression still fresh and strong. SONGS BY THE WAY. 1 29 The Church adjoining with its ivied tower ; A peal of bells j a clock to tell the hour ; A rustic flock to feed from day to day ; And kneel with them, at morn and eve, and pray. He, who doth all things well, denied my prayer. And bade me take the apostle's staff, and bear j The scattered sheep, o'er hill and dale, pursue, Tend the old flocks, and gather in the new ; Count ease, and health, and life, and all things, loss. So I make known, the blessed, bleeding Cross. These quiet scenes, that never can be mine, This home-bred happiness, dear friend, be thine ; Each choicest gift, and influence from above, Descend on thee, and all that share thy love ; Peace, which the world gives not, nor can destroy, The prelibation of eternal joy. North field Vicarage^ August 3, 1 84 1. TO MY DEAR WILLIE, ON HIS TWELFTH BIRTH-DAY My second born, my gentle. My sweet and precious boy. Sent to us, in our darkling day. To be our bosoms' joy ; 17 130 SONGS BY THE WAY. How like a sunbeam, to our hearts, Thy beauty, in our eyes, Dispelling every cloud, that spreads Its sackcloth, on the skies. Be ever thus, my blessing, So patient and so meek ; So careful always, what to do. So thoughtful what to speak ; Till grown in wisdom, as in years, Through His abounding grace. He take thee, — 'tis my fondest prayer — To fill a deacon's place. How sweet, should he permit it. To lean on thy stout arm ! Thy silver-voiced litany. Mine ear, how it will charm ! And, when my days are numbered all, And all my labours, done ; My death-bed, with the Church's prayers. Console and cheer, my son ! March 2, 1844. *' How often little lucid intervals of the most golden light, fall in upon our path} as you have seen it, through a trellised vine." Look, dearest, how the golden glow. Gleams, through the trellised vine ; Chequering with light and shade, the way. Before thy feet, and mine : SONGS BY THE WAY. I3I So, on our path of parted life, When clouds shut out the day, Love's lucid intervals fall in, As here, the sunbeams play. And could our linked and loving feet, Together, vi^alk through life, This beating breast, these clasping arms. Thy home, my more than wife ; How would the clouds, about our path. Be fleckered with the day ; And gleams of love's own golden light. Chequer life's trellised way ! THE SELF-FLOWING. "The grapes are collected late in the season, and picked one by one. The juice runs, from its own pressure, over a grooved table, into earthen jars. The quantity is small, and very precious. It is called, Ausbruch ; the self-flow- ■ ing." Sweetest, in the Rhine-land, Famous, as a vine-land. When the golden clusters burst with juice. They hang them by the stems. All gleaming, there, like gems ; To let the luscious, limpid, liquor loose : And these sweet, spontaneous, streams. Every Rhinelander still deems. The choicest, that the vintage can produce. 132 SONGS BY THE WAY. So my verses, dearest, Sprung from love sincerest, Filling all my spirit, full of thee. Gushing out, like fountains, Down the side of mountains, Flovv^, forever full, and fresh, and free ; Or breathe, like scent, from flovv^ers. In Spring's first, dewy, hours. When violets and roses tempt the bee. TO MY ENGLISH GOD-SON, JAMES WILLIAM DOANE FORSTER, ON HIS BAPTISMAL DAY. God's blessing rest upon thee. My precious little boy ; Make thee thy mother's comfort still. And still thy father's joy ; Conduct thee, through life's pilgrimage. In purity and peace ; And take thee, to that blessed world, Where sin and sorrow cease. Long time, I've loved thy father. Thy gentle mother, too ; And tenderest cords, have twined our hearts. Across the waters blue ; SONGS BY THE WAY. 1 33 ! i And now, I sit beside their hearth, j An honoured, happy guest, i And feel, how truly Christian home ] Is type of heavenly rest. ; Dear child, how opportunely, ; Thy coming has been timed, j And providential orderings, 1 With human wishes, chimed ; ] That hearts, which long in unison, i Have beat, beyond the sea, ' Should flow together, at the font, j And blend themselves, in thee. j •1 Dear child of dearest parents, ! I take thee to my heart. To be, as they, so long have been, i Its parcel and its part ; To grow, like sweetest flower, beside That sainted Bishop's ' tomb. And give, its sweetest memories, ' New fragrance and new bloom. Dear child, with Thornton, ^ Forster, Jebb I My name is knit in thee. All written in that Blessed Book, ] One Christian family. | i 'Bishop Jebb, "the good Bishop of Limerick." Mr. Forster was his Do- ' mestic Chaplain, and his " own familiar friend." j ^The excellent Henry Thornton, M.P., his maternal grandfather; Miss j Isabella Thornton was a god-mother. \ 1^4 SONGS BY THE WAY. ! So when the dead shall all come forth, At that clear trumpet's sound, ! May each dear name, recorded in , The Lamb's own Book, be found. | Sttsted Rectory, August 15, 184 1. BATTERSEA RISE. THE THORNTON FAMILY RESIDENCE, CLAPHAM COMMON. Old house, how long I've known thee. By high, historic fame. By Thornton, Inglis, Wilberforce,^ Each loved and sainted name ; And now, my pilgrim feet have trod Thy consecrated ground. And underneath thy sacred roof, A pilgrim's rest, have found. * Battersea Rise, Clapham Common, a few miles from London, was the re- sidence of the late Henry Thornton, Esq. M.P. At his death, it became the residence of his friend, and the faithful guardian of his children, Sir R. H. Inglis, Bart., M.P. It is now occupied by the eldest son, Henry Sykes Thorn- ton, Esq., and his family. In this House, Mr. Wilberforce wrote his " Prac- tical View." Sir Robert Inglis' edition of Mr. Thornton's Family Prayers, bears date from this house. It was the resort, besides these, of Hannah More, the Grants, the Bowdlers, Macaulay, Babington. The excellent Dr. Dealtry is the rector of Clapham. The late Rev, Charles Thornton, who translated S. Cyprian's Treatises, for the Library of the Fathers, at Oxford, was the son of Mr. Henry Thornton. SONGS BY THE WAY. I 35 Home of each heart-attraction, Of manly piety, Of lovely woman's gentleness, Of childhood's artless glee ; A tenderer tie, than history, now Shall hold thee, to my heart. And make thy blessed memory. Of every pulse, a part. My children shall be told of thee, And every dearest name, In every murmured orison. Their lips, shall learn to frame ; And fervent prayers, shall daily rise, From far beyond the sea. That God, His blessings, still may pour. Sweet Christian home, on thee ! Batter sea Rise^ August 20, 1 84 1. MY BEST OF BLESSINGS. My best of blessings, when from thee, I turn my feet, away. My heart dies down, as children's do. From hearth and home who stray ; The heart, that fears no face of man. Nor shrinks, from shape of ill. All melted, like a weaned child's, Is swayed, at thy sweet will. 136 SONGS BY THE WAY. Upon the stern and stormy sea, When tempests foam and frown, The gentle moon, serene and still. In loveliness, looks down : Silent and sweet, her tender eye The heaving mass controls. And the whole world of water sleeps, Till not a ripple rolls. My best of blessings, in my heart. Subdued, to love and thee. Thy gentle beauty sinks, as soft As moonlight, in the sea : Its waves and billows heave no more. Its storms and tempests cease : And all its troubled depths are lulled, In placidness, and peace. THE CATHOLIC'S ASSERTION OF THE CROSS. God forbid that I should glory, save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ." Gal. vi. 14. " We do sign him with the sign of the Cross." — Baptismal Office. Lift up the Cross, lift up the Cross ! Let it surmount each loftiest spire, And beam, the beacon of the world. To warn it, from eternal fire. SONGS BY THE WAY. 137 Lift up the Cross, lift up the Cross ! Let every eye the token see, And look, through it, to Him, Whose blood Streamed, for them, from the atoning Tree. Lift up the Cross ! Through all the storms Of more than eighteen hundred years, Its changeless beauty, clear and calm, The radiant signature uprears ; Unharmed it stands, undimmed it shines, And sheds its glory, near and far ; God's pillar-light, to guide His Church, Salvation's '' bright and morning star." Lift up the Cross ! Rome shall not have Our birthright, in that blessed sign : We still will bear it, on the brov^^. We still will rear it on the shrine. So that be ours, and we be His, All other things, we count " but loss ;" Our single hope, the Crucified, And all our glory, in the Cross. Riverside^ Tuesday in Easter Week^ 1843. TO A MOURNING MOTHER. Mother weep ! the heart is flesh ; Wounds will bleed while they are fresh ; 18 138 SONGS BY THE WAY. Gentlest hands, the flower, may crop ; Tears will trickle, drop by drop. Yet, weep not ! that darling child, Like a bird, as sweet and wild, Has but winged her winter flight, To the land of life and light. There, she builds her blessed nest, In the gentle Saviour's breast ; While, that flute-like voice, she tries. In celestial symphonies. Mothers' tears lie near the lid ; Mothers' tears can not be hid ; This, the thought, to dry their eyes — One more song, in Paradise ! TO MY HEART. FROM THE ITALIAN OF SAVONAROLA. My heart, if thou at peace wilt be, Thou canst no longer, live with me; Fly to Jesus, there to stay, From this false world, far away ; Favour here, can only be. At the cost of treachery. SONGS BY THE WAY. I 39 While on earth, thou art with me, Bitter all thy life must be. Faith and peace, are fled afar ; Everywhere, there is but war. If thy life is dear to thee. To the light of Jesus, flee. COME WHEN THOU WILT. Come, in the sun-glint, or come, in the shower; Come, with the snow-flake, or come, with the flower ; Come, when thou wilt, thou art welcome to me. As the fragrance of Spring, to the scent of the bee. Come, at the dawn of day, come, at its close ; Come with the violet, come with the rose : Come when thou wilt, thou art fair, to my eye. As the first star of evening, that flames from the sky. Come, at the noon-tide, or come in the night ; Come, when the skies are black, come, when they're bright; Come, when thou wilt, thou art dear to my heart. As the streams of red life, from its fountain, that start. Come, in the Winter, or come, in the Spring ; Come, when the birds are still, come, when they sing ; Come, when thou wilt, and thy coming shall be. For beauty, for balm, and for blessing, to me. 140 SONGS BY THE WAY. j I TO MY WIFE. I WITH AN ILLUSTRATED COPY, OF "THE BABES IN THE WOOD." , I Dear, when you and I were young, j How delightedly, we hung 1 On this little story : j Still its simple beauty charms I Every age ; the babe in arms, Maids, and matrons hoary. j This the lesson : truth and nature, ! Everywhere, alike prevail ; | Love and beauty are immortal, I Trust in God can never fail. \ Riverside, Eve of the Circumcision^ 1848. I GLEAMS OF SUNSHINE IN A DARKENED ROOM. MORNING. " Joy Cometh in the morning." O, COME with blessings, new-born day. To all, my soul holds dear ; Or, bring the grace that crowns them all. To die without a fear ! SONGS BY THE WAY. I4I 1 NOON. " Never give up." " Never give up !" It can be of no use, Tugging and trying, may bring something round again. Bread, that is cast on the w^aters, profuse. Scripture hath told us, shall surely be found again. " Never give up !" We can make nothing by it, 'Tis but to die, v^^hen the breath has gone out from us. While the last moment lasts, take it, and try it. " God for the right !" will dispel every doubt from us. EVENING. j " Light is sown, for the righteous." Night closes in : but, to the just, The light of God is sow^n ; As seeds, upon the furrov^^ed field. In opening Spring, are strovs^n. Through cold, through heat, through calm, through storm, It w^orks its steadfast way ; And, at the harvest-tirne, breaks forth, In floods of golden day. Riverside^ November^ 1848. 142 SONGS BY THE WAY. THE SAILOR'S HOME. The Floating^ Church of the Redeemer, for Sailors and Boatmen ; built at Bor- dentown, New Jersey; and to be moored at a wharf in Philadelphia. The seats are all to be free. The Jersey woods are tall and green, The Jersey mines are broad and deep, And cool and pure, the sparkling streams, That, down the Jersey mountains, leap. Search out, from all the Jersey woods. The sturdiest oaks, the loftiest pines ; And gather in the choicest ore. That deepest Hes, in Jersey mines. And, where the Jersey mountain streams Fill the deep rolling Delaware, Lay, broad and strong, the Christian keel. And fasten every plank, with prayer. Complete the sacred structure stands, And towers, majestic, from the wave : A floating Church, a Christian ark j The sailor's soul, from sin, to save. Float gently down, thou blessed bark. To Philadelphia's ship-lined shore ; And moored 'long side her teeming wharves, Unfold the Gospel's sacred store. ^ Now St. John's Church, Camden, N. J. SONGS BY THE WAY. I43 Show, from the topmast's tallest peak, The great Redeemer's glorious name ; Display the blessed, bleeding Cross ; Its love, its agony, its shame. Proclaim the life-restoring Word ; Pour all the energy of prayer ; Sprinkle the blest baptismal wave ; The Bread, the Wine, of life, prepare. Arrest the thoughtless, check the rash. Win home the wanderer, from his ways ; The broken-hearted, bind with balm, And fill the penitent with praise. Like clouds that scud before the storm, Like doves that to their windows come ; Crowd, brothers, to the floating Cross, And find the Church, the Sailor's Home. Riverside^ St, John the Evangelist^ 1848. THE CHILD AT PRAYER. A CAST FROM GREENOUGH. Child that kneelest meekly there. Pouring all thy soul in prayer. Would that I might be like thee. In unreserving piety ! 144 SONGS BY THE WAY. Such as thou, did Jesus take, Model for mankind, to make ; Such as thou, in guileless love, Nursling of the Heavenly Dove. Oh, that while on thee, I gaze, 1 might learn thy blessed ways ; All thy confidence of heart, All thine innocence of art ! Saviour, once Thyself a child. Good and gentle, meek and mild, Make me such as this to be ; Reproduce Thyself, in me ! THE BANNER OF THE CROSS. Fling out the Banner ! Let it float, Sky-ward, and sea-ward, high and wide ; The sun, that lights its shining folds. The Cross, on which, the Saviour died. Fling out the Banner ! Angels bend, In anxious silence, o'er the sign ; And vainly seek to comprehend The wonder of the love divine. SONGS BY THE WAY. Fling out the Banner ! Heathen lands Shall see, from far, the glorious sight, And nations, crowding to be born. Baptize their spirits in its light. Fling out the Banner ! Sin-sick souls. That sink and perish in the strife. Shall touch, in faith, its radiant hem, And spring, immortal, into life. Fling out the Banner ! Let it float, Sky-ward, and sea-ward, high and wide ; Our glory, only in the Cross ; Our only hope, the Crucified. Fling out the Banner ! Wide and high. Sea-ward and sky-ward, let it shine : Nor skill, nor might, nor merit, ours ; We conquer only in that sign. Riverside^ id Sunday in Advent^ 1848. 145 WALL FLOWERS. "They smell sweetest by night-time, thae flowers ; and they're maist aye seen about ruined buildings. " — Edie Ochiltree, in the Antiquary. Sweetest by night : like gracious words. That scent the sacred page ; But freeliest pour their perfumed store, In sickness, grief, and age. 19 146 SONGS BY THE WAY. Seen most by ruins : like the love, 1 That gave itself for all ; Yet closest clings to guiltiest things, As Magdalene, or Saul. Riverside^ December^ 1848. RASPBERRY VINEGAR, WITH ICED WATER. IN EXTREME ILLNESS. Breath of Summer, how I feel you, As you play about my brow ; Wings of damask roses fan me, Through that bed of violets, now. Smell of blossom ; taste of berry ; Sound of brooklet ; flash of bird : All the memories of my boyhood j Have, in turn, my bosom stirr'd. j Hand, That holds me ; Eye, That guides me ; ! Heart, That loved me, to the death : j New devotion thrills my spirit, 1 While I breathe this summer breath ! Riverside^ January 29, 1849. ' SONGS BY THE WAY. I47 MALLEUS DOMINL " Is not My word, saith the Lord, like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces ? " — yeremiab xxiii, 29. S/edge of the Lord^ beneath whose stroke, The rocks are rent, the heart is broke, I hear thy pond'rous echoes ring. And fall a crushed and crunribled thing. Meekly these mercies I implore. Through Him Whose Cross, our sorrows, bore ; On earth. Thy new-creating grace ; In heaven, the very lowest place. Oh, might I be a living stone. Set in the pavement of Thy throne ; For sinner saved, what place so meet. As, at the Saviour's bleeding feet. Riverside^ September 19, 1849. AN ANSWER. You asked me once my dearest. Why infants ever die. And when I could not answer You sweetly, told me why — 148 SONGS BY THE WAY. That so, in heaven, those loveliest things Of earth, we might not miss ; The radiance of an infant's smile, The fragrance of its kiss. " SWEET FROM THE RAIN." The violets are sweet, from the rain, this morning," my gardener said, "I let it in upon them. " " Sweet from the rain : " the scentless shower Upon the earth descends ; And all Arabia, in the flower. Its thousand odours, blends. " Sweet from the rain : " so human hearts Grow tender, after tears ; " And sorrow, sanctified, imparts The peace of happier spheres. " Sweet from the rain : " beloved, so ' Thy kindness soothes my heart ; And joys, I thought no more to know, Their sympathies impart. " Sweet from the rain : " the heavenly grace, On sinful souls, is poured ; And from the lost and guilty race. Rise praises, to the Lord. SONGS BY THE WAY. I49 2r7/5z edpaioi ooS aujuc^v TV7tT6fJ.EV0