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Poems of the Heart and Home Part 29

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The babe so fondly cherished Once 'neath a parent's eye, Now laid her down in anguish Midst the drifting snows to die!

"Papa!--papa!"--she murmured, "The night is cold and drear, And I'm freezing!--Oh, I'm freezing!

In the storm and darkness here;-- My naked feet are stiff'ning, And my little hands are numb,-- Papa, can I not come to thee, And warm myself at home?

"Mamma! mamma!"--more wildly, The little suff'rer cried-- Forgetting, in her anguish, How her stricken mother died-- "Oh, take me to your bosom, And warm me on your breast, Then lay me down and kiss me, In my little bed to rest!"

Poor child!--the sleep that gathers Thy stiffened eyelids o'er, Will know no weary waking To a life of anguish more.

Sleep on!--the snows may gather O'er thy cold and pulseless form-- Thou art resting, calmly resting, In the wild, dark, midnight storm

THE NAMES OF JESUS

[Footnote: This poem is designed to form a part of a volume of strictly religious poetry, which the Author has in course of preparation; and is inserted here in deference to the expressed wish of a large number of friends. Its appearance here will not, however, prevent its appearing in its appropriate connection.]

I SING the NAMES of JESUS!--matchless names!

Highest and holiest Earth or Heaven claims!

By which alone we may approach to Him Before whose faintest ray the sun grows dim, And all the brightest glory of the skies Like twilight's feeble glimmer fades and dies.

MESSIAH, CHRIST!--G.o.d's high, Anointed One!

The Eternal Father's well-beloved Son!

On whom the mystic oil of Heaven was shed, What time, descending on His sacred head, The Consecrating Spirit from above Set Him apart to holiest deeds of love; Anointed Prophet, from that favored hour To teach His Father's will, to wield His power,-- Anointed Priest, for His own people's sake, Himself a sacrifice for sin to make,-- Anointed King, unrivalled and alone To reign on universal Empire's throne,-- To whose high majesty and regal worth All crowns shall bend in Heaven and in Earth,-- All Powers to Him their cheerful tribute bring, And all above, below, confess Him King.

OUR Pa.s.sOVER! 'Twas night on Egypt's coast, And all were hushed to rest save Israel's host;-- They, silent, wakeful, harnessed as for flight, Each in his own hushed dwelling watched that night Through the slow, fateful hours of deepening gloom, The coming of G.o.d's Messenger of doom, Whose piercing eye, through the deep, awful shade By Judgment's stern uplifted pinions made, The blood-mark on each dwelling should descry Of the slain lamb, and, seeing, pa.s.s it by.

Thus, thus, O Soul! in that more awful hour When the last Judgment's darker shadows lower, And, swift and stern, G.o.d's messengers go forth To reap the harvest of this fated Earth,-- If then, on thee is found no crimson stain Of G.o.d's own Lamb on b.l.o.o.d.y Calvary slain,-- If thou art resting not beneath the blood Of that one sacrifice ordained of G.o.d, Where wilt thou fly?--where hide thyself away From the dread reck'ning of the Judgment day?-- If resting 'neath the blood for sinners spilt, Look up!--the judge Himself has borne thy guilt'

Justice and Judgement claim thy life in vain, Since Christ, thy Pa.s.sover, Himself is slain!

IMMANUEL!--G.o.d with us. _With us_, O Soul!

Of this brief utt'rance canst thou grasp the whole?-- Nay, comprehend one attribute of G.o.d, The Maker, Sovereign, Him who at a nod Can hurl all worlds to wreck, and with a breath Can wake a Universe from night and death, And clothe in Beauty's robes of richest bloom Ten thousand worlds s.n.a.t.c.hed from chaotic gloom?

If not, couldst grasp the thought that such as He, Clothed in frail, human flesh, a _man_ should be?

Of us and with us, veiled his dazzling ray Of awful G.o.dhead, and at home in clay, A living, dying man? Heaven, Earth, and h.e.l.l The mystery fail to solve, Immanuel!-- And yet, Faith lays her hand in thine, And whispers low,--"Immanuel is mine!"

But He has other Names, it may be less Bewildering in their deep mysteriousness, O'er which we oftener linger, which we bear Oftener to Heaven upon the breath of prayer,-- Sweet, hallowed home-names,--dearer, it may be, Because first learned beside a mother's knee;-- The tender names of Father, Brother, Friend,-- Names that with all sweet recollections blend,-- Names full of high significancy, given To Him who intercedes for us in Heaven.

FATHER!--dear name, to thought and feeling dear Thrice-precious ever in the Christian's ear!

An earthly father, trials may estrange; THE EVERLASTING FATHER knows no change!-- With tireless patience and unslumbering care, Watching wherever His earth-children are, Nor failing e'en the faintest cry to hear, By His weak children breathed into His ear.

BROTHER!--our Eldest, FIRST-BORN FROM THE DEAD, Of all the glorified the Living HEAD!

Yet condescending to the youngest child, With tenderest looks and accents sweet and mild;-- Who feels a wrong done to the feeblest one, Keenly, as though unto Himself 'twere done;-- Who, sees no kindness to the humblest shown, But 'lisas though 'twere to Himself alone;-- And who will judge the wrong, the kindness bless, With all a brother's truth and tenderness;-- Nay, more: an earthly brother faints and dies, Or faithless oft, forgets affections ties;-- His love, enduring as the eternal throne, No change, decay, or loss have ever known.

FRIEND!--there is music in that simple word, Which through all time the human heart has stirred.

Earth cannot be a desert, joy-bereft, To any heart, if but one friend is left;-- Yet friends oft change, and friends.h.i.+p proves a name, And death at last must ever quench its flame.

Yet He's a friend, than brother closer far;-- One whose affection changes cannot mar;-- One tempted, tried, and grieved, as you have been;-- Long a lone wanderer through this world of sin;-- Himself without a friend whose steadfast heart In His deep cup of anguish shared a part.

Friendless He knelt in dark Gethsamane;-- Unfriended hung on Calvary's b.l.o.o.d.y tree;-- And all for what?--His matchless love to prove For man, His enemy! O, matchless love!-- O, wondrous Friends.h.i.+p!--O, unchanging Friend!-- Who, loving thus, should love unto the end, That, evermore, the ransomed soul might rest Its weary head upon His faithful breast, And feel, 'mid all vicissitudes and pains, That one, true, constant, loving friend remains.

Friend, Brother, Father!--Could we ask for more?

Yet these dear names exhaust not half the store.

REDEEMER!--SAVIOUR!--Lo! a captive, bound With chains and fetters, wrapped in night profound, In helpless, hopeless bondage, dark I lay, When He, in pitying mercy, pa.s.sed that way.

He saw me hugging close my heavy chain, Loving my bonds, despite their bitter pain, Deaf to the music of the songs of Heaven, Blind to the light His pitying love had given, Sick unto death, yet boastful of my health, Clothed in foul rags, yet vaunting of my wealth.

Was _that_ a thing to love or pity?--Nay!-- Yet He did stoop, on me, His hand to lay; Touched my dark eyes, and lo! the light was mine; Ope'd my dull ears to harmony divine; Showed me my rags, my wretchedness, my grief, My deadly sickness, and then gave relief; Paid my full ransom-price, warmed, cleansed, and red, And clothed in spotless raiment, me He led Forth from the dungeon of impurity, To the pure air of heaven, made whole, set free!

Henceforth my all in life or death is thine, And thou, Redeemer, Saviour,--thou art mine!

Nor yet, with these, the exultant song should cease; for this Redeemer is the PRINCE OF PEACE!

To be redeemed by earthly Prince, would be High honor, lasting joy to him set free; Yet earthly princes, emulous of fame, Oft win their way to power by sword and flame, And leave the path by which they reach a throne, Red with slain victims in their rage o'erthrown, And rudely crushed beneath the maddened tread Of fiery Conquest, reckless of his dead.

But oh, how diff'rent is the Prince of Peace!

He comes to bid the rage of conflict cease; He lifts His hand above the stormy sea Of human pa.s.sion, surging wrathfully, And lo! its maddened waves in peace subside,-- Hushed is the tempest-roar of power and pride,-- The desert and the wilderness rejoice, And life awakes at His creative voice,-- Peace spans with rainbow arch the weeping sky, And angels smile from their pure homes on high!

And yet our Prince is more. He is a PRIEST, In whom signs, symbols, offrings all have ceased; For, more than Priest, a SACRIFICE He stands, With streaming side, and b.l.o.o.d.y feet and hands, Bearing to Heaven, not blood of bullocks slain, Nor victims' ashes sprinkling the unclean, But His own blood, an offering to Heaven That G.o.d might thus be just and man forgiven, Himself, at once, Prince, Priest, and Sacrifice, Man mediatorial, Lord of Earth and Skies,-- Angels in vain the myst'ry would explore, And men and angels mutually adore!

Yet, as though these were not enough, we find Him stooping still, to meet the human mind, Under still other names His boundless grace And love to symbolize for Adams race.

See yonder flock upon the mountain bare Is there no hand to guide or tend them there?

When the wild beast comes prowling from his den, Who will protect the helpless creatures then?

Who, when the pastures fail, and springs are dry, Will lead them forth where greener pastures lie?

What pitiest thou the helpless flock?--so He, Thy watchful friend, in pity thinks of thee "I the GOOD SHEPHERD am, and ye the sheep, With tenderest care my little flock I keep, No ravenous beast shall prey upon my own, They know my voice, and follow me alone"

Is yonder sun a welcome sight to thee, As up the east he rides exultingly?-- Do the hills wake to beauty as he comes, And valleys blush with countless opening blooms?

Do the streams sparkle, and the woodlands ring With the sweet lays the happy warblers sing?

He is a SUN, and where His radiance streams Beauty and gladness waken in His beams, The soul expands to perfect leaf and flower, And ripening fruitage waits the vintage hour,-- Songs of rejoicing float upon the air, And 'neath His rays 'tis Summer everywhere.

Is yonder vine a pleasant, goodly thing, As upward still its laden branches spring, As its ripe cl.u.s.ters woo the longing sight To linger still with ever new delight?

"I'm the TRUE VINE," saith Christ, "the branches ye,-- The living Vine, abide ye still in me; Thus shall my life to every branch be given, Thus shall each branch bring forth the fruit of Heaven!"

See, yonder traveller in a desert land, Toils day by day o'er tracks of burning sand, A lurid sky above--beneath, around, The dreary desert spreads its wastes profound.

With blistered feet, and aching, blood-shot eye, Long dimly strained some fountain to descry, Onward he toils, while hope, as days depart, Grows feebler, fainter, at his weary heart

On the horizon's verge he sees at length A shadowy line, and lo, his failing strength In a full tide returns!--His weary feet Speed gladly on, by courage rendered fleet: He gains the fount, he drinks, and toil and care, And dread and danger, all forgotten are!

So, to life's weary pilgrim, Christ is made In the drear desert a refres.h.i.+ng SHADE!

A FOUNT OF LIVING WATER, never dry, To all the thirsty yielding full supply,-- A WELL OF WATER ever springing up To Life Eternal--fount of joy and hope!

Student of nature! dost thou love, at morn, To tread where earliest flowers the wild adorn?-- To view the lowly blossoms of the field, In shady nooks half-hidden, half-revealed-- The wild rose, scenting all the dewy air, The graceful lily bending meekly there?

Then think as with admiring eye you trace Those meek, sweet dwellers in each lonely place, That He, of whom I sing well knowing how The heart to Natures lovely gifts, would bow, Would lead your thoughts with gentle, winning force Up from created Beauty to its Source

He is the ROSE OF SHARON--fairest flower That perfume breathed through Eden's hallowed bower The LILY OF THE VALLEY, pensive, fair, With heavenly sweetness flooding all the air,-- Thrice sacred symbol, breathing evermore Of Him whom angels cease not to adore!

Thou man of Science, who, with practised eye And glance untiring sweep'st the starry sky, Speeding in thought along those trackless ways, Where planets burn and constellations blaze, Leaving uncounted worlds behind thee far,-- Listen--"I am THE BRIGHT AND MORNING STAR!"

He says--and does not thought more gladly stray, Where the meek herald of the rising day Sits like a peaceful vestal bearing high Her radiant urn on the soft eastern sky?-- Thence, rising, seek the Morning Star of Heaven, Who to Night's myriad suns their light has given, And, bowing low Light's sacred Fount before, In wondering, reverential awe adore?

Soul, ever groping through the mists of time, To find the path which leads to the sublime, Still heights of G.o.d!--weak are thy steps and slow, Yet there's a path no fowl of heaven doth know,-- No lion's whelp that secret way hath found,-- No eagle marked it from the heights profound,-- No human art, unhelped, discerned the road That leadeth up to happiness and G.o.d!

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