登陆注册
19637900000020

第20章 III(12)

Glory to God, in highest Heaven, Good-will to men, and peace on earth, To us a Saviour-king is given;Our God is come to claim His own, And Satan's power is overthrown!

A sinless God, for sinful men, Descends to suffer and to bleed;Hell MUST renounce its empire then;The price is paid, the world is freed, And Satan's self must now confess That Christ has earned a RIGHT to bless:

Now holy Peace may smile from heaven, And heavenly Truth from earth shall spring:

The captive's galling bonds are riven, For our Redeemer is our king;And He that gave his blood for men Will lead us home to God again.

STANZAS.

Oh, weep not, love! each tear that springs In those dear eyes of thine, To me a keener suffering brings Than if they flowed from mine.

And do not droop! however drear The fate awaiting thee;For MY sake combat pain and care, And cherish life for me!

I do not fear thy love will fail;Thy faith is true, I know;But, oh, my love! thy strength is frail For such a life of woe.

Were 't not for this, I well could trace (Though banished long from thee)

Life's rugged path, and boldly face The storms that threaten me.

Fear not for me--I've steeled my mind Sorrow and strife to greet;Joy with my love I leave behind, Care with my friends I meet.

A mother's sad reproachful eye, A father's scowling brow--

But he may frown and she may sigh:

I will not break my vow!

I love my mother, I revere My sire, but fear not me--

Believe that Death alone can tear This faithful heart from thee.

IF THIS BE ALL.

O God! if this indeed be all That Life can show to me;If on my aching brow may fall No freshening dew from Thee;If with no brighter light than this The lamp of hope may glow, And I may only dream of bliss, And wake to weary woe;If friendship's solace must decay, When other joys are gone, And love must keep so far away, While I go wandering on,--

Wandering and toiling without gain, The slave of others' will, With constant care, and frequent pain, Despised, forgotten still;Grieving to look on vice and sin, Yet powerless to quell The silent current from within, The outward torrent's swell While all the good I would impart, The feelings I would share, Are driven backward to my heart, And turned to wormwood there;If clouds must EVER keep from sight The glories of the Sun, And I must suffer Winter's blight, Ere Summer is begun;If Life must be so full of care, Then call me soon to thee;Or give me strength enough to bear My load of misery.

MEMORY.

Brightly the sun of summer shone Green fields and waving woods upon, And soft winds wandered by;Above, a sky of purest blue, Around, bright flowers of loveliest hue, Allured the gazer's eye.

But what were all these charms to me, When one sweet breath of memory Came gently wafting by?

I closed my eyes against the day, And called my willing soul away, From earth, and air, and sky;That I might simply fancy there One little flower--a primrose fair, Just opening into sight;As in the days of infancy, An opening primrose seemed to me A source of strange delight.

Sweet Memory! ever smile on me;Nature's chief beauties spring from thee;Oh, still thy tribute bring Still make the golden crocus shine Among the flowers the most divine, The glory of the spring.

Still in the wallflower's fragrance dwell;And hover round the slight bluebell, My childhood's darling flower.

Smile on the little daisy still, The buttercup's bright goblet fill With all thy former power.

For ever hang thy dreamy spell Round mountain star and heather bell, And do not pass away From sparkling frost, or wreathed snow, And whisper when the wild winds blow, Or rippling waters play.

Is childhood, then, so all divine?

Or Memory, is the glory thine, That haloes thus the past?

Not ALL divine; its pangs of grief (Although, perchance, their stay be brief)

Are bitter while they last.

Nor is the glory all thine own, For on our earliest joys alone That holy light is cast.

With such a ray, no spell of thine Can make our later pleasures shine, Though long ago they passed.

TO COWPER.

Sweet are thy strains, celestial Bard;And oft, in childhood's years, I've read them o'er and o'er again, With floods of silent tears.

The language of my inmost heart I traced in every line;MY sins, MY sorrows, hopes, and fears, Were there-and only mine.

All for myself the sigh would swell, The tear of anguish start;I little knew what wilder woe Had filled the Poet's heart.

I did not know the nights of gloom, The days of misery;The long, long years of dark despair, That crushed and tortured thee.

But they are gone; from earth at length Thy gentle soul is pass'd, And in the bosom of its God Has found its home at last.

It must be so, if God is love, And answers fervent prayer;Then surely thou shalt dwell on high, And I may meet thee there.

Is He the source of every good, The spring of purity?

Then in thine hours of deepest woe, Thy God was still with thee.

How else, when every hope was fled, Couldst thou so fondly cling To holy things and help men?

And how so sweetly sing, Of things that God alone could teach?

And whence that purity, That hatred of all sinful ways--

That gentle charity?

Are THESE the symptoms of a heart Of heavenly grace bereft--

For ever banished from its God, To Satan's fury left?

Yet, should thy darkest fears be true, If Heaven be so severe, That such a soul as thine is lost,--

Oh! how shall I appear?

THE DOUBTER'S PRAYER.

Eternal Power, of earth and air!

Unseen, yet seen in all around, Remote, but dwelling everywhere, Though silent, heard in every sound;If e'er thine ear in mercy bent, When wretched mortals cried to Thee, And if, indeed, Thy Son was sent, To save lost sinners such as me:

Then hear me now, while kneeling here, I lift to thee my heart and eye, And all my soul ascends in prayer, OH, GIVE ME--GIVE ME FAITH! I cry.

Without some glimmering in my heart, I could not raise this fervent prayer;But, oh! a stronger light impart, And in Thy mercy fix it there.

While Faith is with me, I am blest;It turns my darkest night to day;But while I clasp it to my breast, I often feel it slide away.

同类推荐
  • 净土证心集

    净土证心集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 证类本草

    证类本草

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 国闻备乘

    国闻备乘

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 历代名贤确论

    历代名贤确论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 毗尼心一卷

    毗尼心一卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 国际艺术品贸易

    国际艺术品贸易

    经济全球化程度的日益深化加速了艺术品的跨国流通,艺术品贸易已经成为世界经济舞台上一个蓬勃发展的新兴领域,形成了一个全球性的巨大的艺术品市场。肇始于20世纪70年代欧美等国掀起的艺术品投资潮,促进了对艺术品贸易中法律问题的研究。本书采用历史分析的方法、比较法学的研究方法及实证分析的方法,绕以美国为代表的普通法系国家和以法国为代表的大陆法系国家的立法和司法实践对艺术品贸易中的法律问题,诸如进出口的法律规制、所有权问题、艺术品评估鉴定中的法律问题及国际艺术品贸易中的法律冲突与协调问题进行了较深入的研究,基本形成了一个国际艺术品贸易法律制度的研究框架。
  • 路魂

    路魂

    这是一首中国高速公路事业发展的颂歌,凡曾经抑或正在参与者,必然引起共鸣而与之唱和。
  • 皇宫情殇

    皇宫情殇

    《皇宫情殇》是国内第一部突出皇家情感悲剧的图书、“妒火”燃烧的皇宫、剥夺他人情感的皇家“试婚”、皇帝和女人们的裸泳馆、中国古代最早的红灯区、皇帝的难言之隐和断袖之癖、丑恶的性贿赂和性奏疏、“采阴补阳”的火骗术、让你更深层次地认识封建社会。
  • 见见内心的鬼朋友:了解自己的消极情绪

    见见内心的鬼朋友:了解自己的消极情绪

    鬼,是我们内心中各种消极情绪和心理障碍的象征,是这个象征以幻想形式的表现。柔弱的白衣女鬼、令人心酸的骷髅鬼、憋屈的吊死鬼、苍白的吸血鬼……走进它们,了解它们,才发现,原来它们正是我们自己并不曾认真考虑过的各种消极情绪的化身。 本书适合心理学工作者、文化和神话学者以及所有有兴趣的读者阅读。
  • 小娘子,从天而降

    小娘子,从天而降

    她是一千年前无忧无虑的公主,一场皇位争夺,让最疼爱她的父皇和母后落入牢狱之中。他们想尽一切办法,让她逃过了这一劫。她不愿放下她的父母不管,可是,她只能这样做,只因她的父皇告诉她:“快走!去找能帮助你的那个人!我和你母后,就全靠你了!”他是一位冷酷的君王!这是所有认识他的人,对他的评价,尽管这是在21世纪的现代。他做事狠绝,只要惹到他,无论他们怎样求情,他都从不正眼看,一定会将对方置于死地,因为,与他无关。两个相隔千年的人,又是怎样相遇,演绎一段怎样的爱恨情仇?!
  • 最强商人

    最强商人

    商人嘛,是一个以社会之间营生关系为基本的一个人人可以触摸的职业。这个职业是我的作为一个人的吃饭的本钱,可是我也有我的梦想就是超越我的师傅,我叫罗宽,至于我的师傅嘛。他的名字叫罗贯中他是一个为了宇宙与宇宙之间每一个有着商人存在的地方来保护的人,他就像周星驰《功夫》电影里那个以宇宙为和平的人我的第一站就是从那滴水开始,故事的源头就是从那里开始从生命的源头开始,那个宇宙中合成第一滴水的开始第一滴纯净的水开始,那个梦的开始那个让我魂牵梦绕的开始那个让我从梦里醒来的开始~~……。罗宽是最强大的呵呵呵,哈哈哈。!!!
  • 中国近代诗歌史

    中国近代诗歌史

    本书通过代表性诗人、诗派的特征及其相互关系的探讨,研究了清代道、咸、同、光四期诗史,力图显示出当时诗歌发展的总风貌,阐发其在中国诗史上的地位。主要内容包括:古典诗歌的历史建构与定型、强大传统引力场控制下艰难的新建构、传统内反叛与艺术遗传中的局部变异等。
  • 我曾在深夜痛哭,想和你聊聊人生

    我曾在深夜痛哭,想和你聊聊人生

    这是一本把青春写得很真实的小说。此去经年,摸爬滚打,向生活投降,柴米油盐,满面尘霜。有没有一个瞬间,让你忽然心生悲凉?耗尽我们所有的爱与孤独,温柔和心碎,用一本书,来怀念和收藏我们最好的时光。字里行间,似曾相识,某个瞬间,你可以看到曾经的自己,某些久违的兄弟,和某个念念不忘的爱人。那些共同经历的美好岁月,或笑或哭,历历在目。
  • 鼎尊

    鼎尊

    修仙,有时候是一种寂寞;杀戮,有时候是一种无奈!当天再也遮不住我的眼,我要洪荒逆转唯我独尊!
  • 艺概词概

    艺概词概

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。