Life, with its perpetual stir,
Proves a foe to Love and me; Fresh entanglements occur,
Comes the night, and sets me free.
Never more, sweet sleep, suspend My enjoyments, always new: Leave me to possess my friend; Other eyes and hearts subdue.
may To the taste of pure delights? Oh the pleasures I partake,- Ι God the partner of my nights!
David, for the selfsame cause, Night preferr'd to busy day : Hearts whom heavenly beauty draws Wish the glaring sun away.
Sleep, self-lovers is for you ;- Souls that love celestial know, Fairer scenes by night can view Than the sun could ever show,
SEASON of my purest pleasure, Sealer of observing eyes! When, in larger, freer measure, I can commune with the skies; While, beneath thy shade extended, Weary man forgets his woes; I, my daily trouble ended,
Find, in watching, my repose.
Silence all around prevailing,
Nature hush'd in slumber sweet, No rude noise mine ears assailing, Now my God and I can meet :
Universal nature slumbers,
And my soul partakes the calm, Breathes her ardour out in numbers, Plaintive song or lofty psalm. Now my passion, pure and holy, Shines and burns without restraint, Which the day's fatigue and folly Cause to languish, dim and faint: Charming hours of relaxation! How I dread the ascending sun! Surely, idle conversation
Is an evil, match'd by none. Worldly prate and babble hurt me; Unintelligible prove;
Neither teach me nor divert me; I have ears for none but Love. Me they rude esteem, and foolish, Hearing my absurd replies; I have neither art's fine polish, Nor the knowledge of the wise. Simple souls, and unpolluted By conversing with the great, Have a mind and taste ill suited To their dignity and state; All their talking, reading, writing, Are but talents misapplied; Infants' prattle I delight in, Nothing human choose beside. 'Tis the secret fear of sinning
Checks my tongue, or I should say, When I see the night beginning, I am glad of parting day : Love this gentle admonition
Whispers soft within my breast; "Choice befits not thy condition, Acquiescence suits thee best." Henceforth, the repose and pleasure Night affords me I resign; And thy will shall be the measure, Wisdom infinite! of mine :
Wishing is but Inclination
Quarreling with thy decrees;
Wayward nature finds the occasion,— 'Tis her folly and disease.
Night, with its sublime enjoyments, Now no longer will I choose; Nor thy day, with its employments, Irksome as they seem, refuse; Lessons of a God's inspiring Neither time nor place impedes; From our wishing and desiring Our unhappiness proceeds.
NIGHT! how I love thy silent shades, My spirits they compose; The bliss of heaven my soul pervades, In spite of all my woes.
While sleep instils her poppy dews In every slumbering eye,
I watch, to meditate and muse, In blest tranquillity.
And when I feel a God immense Familiarly impart,
With every proof he can dispense, His favour to my heart;
My native meanness I lament, Though most divinely fill'd With all the ineffable content That Deity can yield.
His purpose and his course he keeps ; Treads all my reasonings down; Commands me out of nature's deeps, And hides me in his own.
When in the dust, its proper place,
Our pride of heart we lay,
'Tis then a deluge of his
grace Bears all our sins away.
Thou whom I serve, and whose I am, Whose influence from on high Refines, and still refines my flame, And makes my fetters fly;
How wretched is the creature's state Who thwarts thy gracious power; Crush'd under sin's enormous weight, Increasing every hour!
The night, when pass'd entire with thee, How luminous and clear! Then sleep has no delights for me, Lest thou shouldst disappear.
My Saviour! occupy me still In this secure recess; Let Reason slumber if she will, My joy shall not be less :
Let Reason slumber out the night; But if thou deign to make My soul the abode of Truth and Light, Ah, keep my heart awake!
THE JOY OF THE CROSS.
LONG plunged in sorrow, I resign My soul to that dear hand of thine, Without reserve or fear ;
That hand shall wipe my streaming eyes, Or into smiles of glad surprise Transform the falling tear.
My sole possession is thy love; In earth beneath, or heaven above,
I have no other store;
And though with fervent suit I pray, And importune thee night and day, I ask thee nothing more.
My rapid hours pursue the course Prescribed them by love's sweetest force; And I thy sovereign will, Without a wish to escape my doom, Though still a sufferer from the womb, And doom'd to suffer still.
By thy command, where'er I stray, Sorrow attends me all my way, A never failing friend; And if my sufferings may augment Thy praise, behold me well content,— Let Sorrow still attend!
It costs me no regret, that she, Who follow'd Christ, should follow me; And though, where'er she goes, Thorns spring spontaneous at her feet, I love her, and extract a sweet From all my bitter woes.
Adieu! ye vain delights of earth; Insipid sports, and childish mirth, I taste no sweets in you; Unknown delights are in the Cross, All joy beside to me is dross;
And Jesus thought so too.
The Cross! Oh ravishment and bliss,— How grateful even its anguish is,
Its bitterness how sweet! There every sense, and all the mind, In all her faculties refined,
Tastes happiness complete.
Souls once enabled to disdain Base sublunary joys, maintain
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