Oh make Thou us, through centuries long,
In peace secure, in justice strong;
Around our gift of freedom draw
The safeguards of thy righteous law:
And, cast in some diviner mould,
Let the new cycle shame the old!
JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
* * * * *
HYMN OF THE WEST.[A]
WORLD’S FAIR, ST. LOUIS.
[Footnote A: Copyright 1904 by Robert Allan Reid.]
[1904.]
O Thou, whose glorious orbs on high
Engird the earth with splendor
round,
From out Thy secret place draw nigh
The courts and temples of
this ground;
Eternal
Light,
Fill
with Thy might
These domes that in Thy purpose
grew,
And lift a nation’s
heart anew!
Illumine Thou each pathway here,
To show the marvels God hath
wrought
Since first Thy people’s chief and
seer
Looked up with that prophetic
thought,
Bade
Time unroll
The
fateful scroll,
And empire unto Freedom gave
From cloudland height to tropic
wave.
Poured through the gateways of the North
Thy mighty rivers join their
tide,
And on the wings of morn sent forth
Their mists the far-off peaks
divide.
By
Thee unsealed,
The
mountains yield
Ores that the wealth of Ophir
shame,
And gems enwrought of seven-hued
flame.
Lo, through what years the soil hath lain,
At Thine own time to give
increase—
The greater and the lesser grain,
The ripening boll, the myriad
fleece!
Thy
creatures graze
Appointed
ways;
League after league across
the land
The ceaseless herds obey Thy
hand.
Thou, whose high archways shine most clear
Above the plenteous western
plain,
Thine ancient tribes from round the sphere
To breathe its quickening
air are fain;
And
smiles the sun
To
see made one
Their brood throughout Earth’s
greenest space,
Land of the new and lordlier
race!
EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN.
[The foregoing was the official hymn of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis in 1904. It was written upon invitation of the Exposition authorities, and was sung at the opening of the Fair by a chorus of five hundred voices, to music written for it, also upon official invitation, by Professor John K. Paine, of Harvard University. It fitly concludes the poems of Peace, in this volume of “National Spirit.”]