It was a gleam to Memory dear,
And as I walk
and muse apart,
When all seems faithless round and
drear,
I would revive
it in my heart,
And watch how light can find its
way
To regions farthest from the fount of day.
Light flashes in the gloomiest sky,
And Music in the
dullest plain,
For there the lark is soaring high
Over her flat
and leafless reign,
And chanting in so blithe a tone,
It shames the weary heart to feel itself alone.
Brighter than rainbow in the north,
More cheery than
the matin lark,
Is the soft gleam of Christian worth,
Which on some
holy house we mark;
Dear to the pastor’s aching
heart
To think, where’er he looks, such gleam may
have a part;
May dwell, unseen by all but Heaven,
Like diamond blazing
in the mine;
For ever, where such grace is given,
It fears in open
day to shine,
Lest the deep stain it owns within
Break out, and Faith be shamed by the believer’s
sin.
In silence and afar they wait,
To find a prayer
their Lord may hear:
Voice of the poor and desolate,
You best may bring
it to His ear;
Your grateful intercessions rise
With more than royal pomp, and pierce the skies.
Happy the soul whose precious cause
You in the Sovereign
Presence plead —
“This is the lover of Thy
laws,
The friend of
Thine in fear and need,”
For to the poor Thy mercy lends
That solemn style, “Thy nation and Thy friends.”
He too is blest whose outward eye
The graceful lines
of art may trace,
While his free spirit, soaring high,
Discerns the glorious
from the base;
Till out of dust his magic raise
A home for prayer and love, and full harmonious praise,
Where far away and high above,
In maze on maze
the tranced sight
Strays, mindful of that heavenly
love
Which knows no
end in depth or height,
While the strong breath of Music
seems
To waft us ever on, soaring in blissful dreams.
What though in poor and humble guise
Thou here didst
sojourn, cottage-born?
Yet from Thy glory in the skies
Our earthly gold
Thou dost not scorn.
For Love delights to bring her best,
And where Love is, that offering evermore is blest.
Love on the Saviour’s dying
head
Her spikenard
drops unblamed may pour,
May mount His cross, and wrap Him
dead
In spices from
the golden shore;
Risen, may embalm His sacred name
With all a Painter’s art, and all a Minstrel’s
flame.
Worthless and lost our offerings
seem,
Drops in the ocean
of His praise;
But Mercy with her genial beam
Is ripening them
to pearly blaze,
To sparkle in His crown above,
Who welcomes here a child’s as there an angel’s
love.