aims to join th' angelic choirs,
And sweetly sing.
May rosy Health with speed return,?And all your wonted ardour burn,?And sickness buried in his urn,
Sleep many years!?So, countless friends who loudly mourn,
Shall dry their tears!
Your wailing flock will all rejoice?To hear their much-loved shepherd's voice,?And long will bless the happy choice
Their hearts have made,?And tuneful mirth will swell the noise
Through grove and glade.
Your dearer half will join with me?To celebrate the jubilee,?And praise the Great Eternal Three
With throbbing joy,?And taste those pleasures pure and free
Which never cloy.
THE HAPPY COTTAGERS.
One sunny morn of May,
When dressed in flowery green?The dewy landscape, charmed
With Nature's fairest scene,
In thoughtful mood
I slowly strayed?O'er hill and dale,
Through bush and glade.
Throughout the cloudless sky
Of light unsullied blue,?The larks their matins raised,
Whilst on my dizzy view,
Like dusky motes,
They winged their way?Till vanished in
The blaze of day.
The linnets sweetly sang
On every fragrant thorn,?Whilst from the tangled wood
The blackbirds hailed the morn;
And through the dew
Ran here and there,?But half afraid,
The startled hare.
The balmy breeze just kissed
The countless dewy gems?Which decked the yielding blade
Or gilt the sturdy stems,
And gently o'er
The charmed sight?A deluge shed
Of trembling light.
A sympathetic glow
Ran through my melting soul,?And calm and sweet delight
O'er all my senses stole;
And through my heart
A grateful flood?Of joy rolled on
To Nature's God.
Time flew unheeded by,
Till wearied and oppressed,?Upon a flowery bank
I laid me down to rest;
Beneath my feet
A purling stream?Ran glittering in
The noontide beam.
I turned me round to view
The lovely rural scene;?And, just at hand, I spied
A cottage on the green;
The street was clean,
The walls were white,?The thatch was neat,
The window bright.
Bold chanticleer, arrayed
In velvet plumage gay,?With many an amorous dame,
Fierce strutted o'er the way;
And motley ducks
Were waddling seen,?And drake with neck
Of glossy green.
The latch I gently raised,
And oped the humble door;?An oaken stool was placed
On the neat sanded floor;
An aged man
Said with a smile,?"You're welcome, sir:
Come rest a while."
His coarse attire was clean,
His manner rude yet kind:?His air, his words, and looks
Showed a contented mind;
Though mean and poor,
Thrice happy he,?As by our tale
You soon shall see.
But don't expect to hear
Of deeds of martial fame,?Or that our peasant mean
Was born of rank or name,
And soon will strut,
As in romance,?A knight and all
In armour glance.
I sing of real life;
All else is empty show--?To those who read a source
Of much unreal woe:
Pollution, too,
Through novel-veins,?Oft fills the mind
With guilty stains.
Our peasant long was bred
Affliction's meagre child,?Yet gratefully resigned,
Loud hymning praises, smiled,
And like a tower
He stood unmoved,?Supported by
The God he loved.
His loving wife long since
Was numbered with the dead?His son, a martial youth,
Had for his country bled;
And now remained
One daughter fair,?And only she,
To soothe his care.
The aged man with tears
Spoke of the lovely maid;?How earnestly she strove
To lend her father aid,
And as he ran
Her praises o'er,?She gently oped
The cottage-door.
With vegetable store
The table soon she spread,?And pressed me to partake;
Whilst blushes rosy-red
Suffused her face--
The old man smiled,?Well pleased to see
His darling child.
With venerable air
He then looked up to God,?A blessing craved on all,
And on our daily food;
Then kindly begged
I would excuse?Their humble fair,
And not refuse.--
The tablecloth, though coarse,
Was of a snowy white,?The vessels, spoons, and knives
Were clean and dazzling bright;
So down we sat
Devoid of care,?Nor envied kings
Their dainty fare.
When nature was refreshed,
And we familiar grown;?The good old man exclaimed,
"Around Jehovah's throne,
Come, let us all
Our voices raise,?And sing our great
Redeemer's praise!"
Their artless notes were sweet,
Grace ran through every line;?Their breasts with rapture swelled,
Their looks were all divine:
Delight o'er all
My senses stole,?And heaven's pure joy
O'erwhelmed my soul.
When we had praised our God,
And knelt around His throne,?The aged man began
In deep and zealous tone,
With hands upraised
And heavenward eye,?And prayed loud
And fervently:
He prayed that for His sake,
Whose guiltless blood was shed?For guilty ruined man,
We might that day be fed
With that pure bread
Which cheers the soul,?And living stream,
Where pleasures roll.
He prayed long for all,
And for his daughter dear,?That she, preserved from ill,
Might lead for many a year
A spotless life
When he's no more;?Then follow him
To Canaan's shore.
His faltering voice then fell,
His tears were dropping fast,?And muttering praise to God
For all His mercies past,
He closed his prayer
Midst heavenly joys,?And tasted bliss
Which never cloys.
In sweet discourse we spent
The fast declining day:?We spoke of Jesus' love,
And of that narrow way
Which leads, through care
And toil below,?To streams where joys
Eternal flow.
The wondrous plan of Grace,
Adoring, we surveyed,?The birth of heavenly skill--
In Love Eternal laid--
Too deep for clear
Angelic ken,?And far beyond
Dim-sighted men.
To tell you all that passed
Would far exceed my power;?Suffice it, then, to say,
Joy winged the passing hour,
Till, ere we knew,
The setting day?Had clad the world
In silver grey.
I kindly took my leave,
And blessed the happy lot?Of those I left behind
Lodged in their humble cot;
And pitied some
In palace walls,?Where pride torments,
And pleasure palls.
The silver moon now shed
A flood of trembling light?On tower, and tree, and stream;
The twinkling stars shone bright,
Nor misty stain
Nor cloud was seen?O'er all the deep
Celestial green.
Mild was the lovely night,
Nor stirred a whispering breeze.?Smooth was the glassy lake,
And still the
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