THE TOMB

Ministry Archive Registry Entry

<table dir="ltr" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tr> <td valign="top"><blockquote> ====THE TOMB==== <br> by James Meikle<br> <br> My thoughts, recalled from every flattering scene,&nbsp;<br> Survey the tomb with pleasure&mdash;or with pain;<br> The tomb my bed&mdash;or my dark jail at last,<br> Where I imprisoned rot&mdash;or softly rest.<br> <br> How sad the thought! (sadder so few are sad!)<br> That for mere trifles the whole world runs mad!<br> And crowns are trifles, when we cast our eye<br> On crowns of glory and the seats on high.<br> <br> Life's but a journey, and the silent tomb&nbsp;<br> To every traveler is the destined home.<br> Methuselah, a human phoenix, rears<br> His head through near a thousand years;<br> But now all mankind seem as made in vain,<br> Scarce entered on the stage, God shuts the scene.<br> Thousands appear, and take a peep at light,<br> And then retire to rest in death's long night.<br> But, O! how mourn we when our friends called hence!<br> Yes, dare arraign the plan of Providence,<br> As if injustice to our house were done,<br> When death deprives us of an only son.<br> <br> But what must travelers mean, who can complain<br> Of a short journey, and respite from pain?<br> Why should the mariner calm seas deplore,<br> Or mourn, 'cause wafted quick from shore to shore?<br> So we, the sooner we arrive at rest,<br> While others toil, should own that we are blest.<br> This we would own, were that blessed rest but known;<br> But we'll avow it, when that rest's our own.<br> <br> Why, reader, stare and tremble at the tomb,<br> Where you, and I, and all must shortly come!<br> Ten thousand, who can boast a later birth,<br> Are there before us, while we tread the earth.<br> <br> Surely, worldly men are backward to believe<br> That their last lodging is the silent grave,<br> Where all is changed ah! what a midnight gloom<br> Hangs on the gay who glance the gaping tomb!<br> It spoils their mirth, and mars their sensual joys,<br> Kills their false hopes, their airy dreams destroys,<br> And raises a fierce tempest in the soul,<br> Akin to that where damned wretches howl!<br> <br> None but the saint with an unshaken faith,<br> Can storm the tomb, and thrust his head through death,<br> To the bright regions of eternal day,<br> Where endless glories seize the soul away<br> Through the dear regions of dread Deity,<br> Whose opening stores their every power supply.<br> <br> Strange! what a crowd assembles in the grave,<br> From mighty Caesar to the lowest slave!<br> The cunning statesman, and the simple swain,<br> The varied knave that's everything for gain;<br> The wretch that conscience and his country sold,<br> The rich, the poor, the timorous and the bold;<br> The wise, the fool, the feeble and the strong;<br> The good, the bad&mdash;all nations, old and young.<br> And I must amongst them shortly hide my head,<br> And go be numbered with the silent dead.<br> Farewell, false world, 'tis time to part with you,<br> And even bid darling relatives adieu.<br> <br> How comes it that funerals are a kind of show?<br> Or we find pleasure in another's woe?<br> See boys and girls, and even gray hairs convene,<br> To see, (but, Sirs, pray what is to be seen?)<br> A hearse or casket a lifeless corpse convey<br> To its long home, beyond the verge of day.<br> But when the sad procession comes along,<br> Instead of mingling with a thoughtless throng,<br> Retire to meditate on&nbsp;<strong>your</strong>&nbsp;last end,<br> And some few moments in your closet spend.<br> Since the same scene you in another view,<br> Shall soon be acted over again on you.<br> <br> Come, now, attend, and see a&nbsp;<strong>sinner</strong>&nbsp;lie<br> Stretched on a sick bed; see a sinner die.<br> Ah! 'tis a sad and melancholy scene!<br> Lo! every limb is racked with gnawing pain.<br> The purple drops (I feel, O fellow-worm!)<br> Rush down your veins like waves before a storm!<br> The tendons stretch, and every pulse beats high,<br> And gnawing anguish shoots from every eye!<br> Cold sweats bedew the pale disfigured face,<br> That lately shone with every manly grace.<br> His eyes grow dimmer, till they set in death;<br> He breathes, and breathes, till he can't draw a breath;<br> With quivering lips he gives the fatal groan,<br> And now the soul is gone, for ever gone!<br> <br> But what's the inward anguish of his soul,<br> While hell and flames before his eyes roll?<br> When all his sins, like marshaled legions rise,<br> And pour upon him terror and surprise;<br> When dark despair hangs gloomy on his brow<br> And endless ages open to his view;<br> When every sense is agonized with pain,<br> And wrath begins to kindle hell within;<br> When conscience seared, or, silent before,<br> Awakes, roars loud, and shall for ever roar.<br> Now there's no comfort for his drooping mind,<br> 'Mongst all his friends not one that can be kind.<br> He calls for mercy;&mdash;mercy is no more!<br> &nbsp;&mdash;On God, but lo! his day of grace is o'er!<br> 'Tis fear that cries, he cannot breathe a prayer,<br> Wrapt up in darkness, terror, and despair!<br> <br> Now, who can paint this skeleton of woe?<br> What heart conceive how fast his sorrows grow?<br> And what a hell gapes for the wretch below?<br> Attending fiends his parting spirit tear,<br> And plunge it deep; where, we dare not inquire!</p> <p>Thus dies the wicked!&mdash;turn away your eye,<br> And see a&nbsp;<strong>saint</strong>&nbsp;upon a death-bed lie,<br> Celestial joys and angels standing by!<br> His conflict's sharp, his comforts are divine;<br> The warfare's hot, but there is peace within.<br> He pants, he prays, he longs, and he believes,&nbsp;<br> Struggles, triumphs, and over his weakness grieves!<br> The peace of God is spread through every power,<br> And conscience smiles, whatever tempests roar.<br> Now he of every providence approves;<br> Even where the works fix pain, the Worker loves,<br> If he can speak, he speaks for God alone;<br> Commends true religion and the life unknown;<br> Commands, exhorts, persuades, implores, requests,<br> Friends and spectators, to make sure of Christ;<br> To seek their treasure not in things that fly,<br> "But lay your treasure up in heaven on high;<br> "For what," says he, "can the whole world avail,<br> "When you, like me, to other shores must sail?"<br> <br> The Savior's righteousness, through life his prop,<br> In his last moments is his only hope.<br> And when his sins, marshaled by Satan, rise,<br> To daunt his faith, he hither casts his eyes,<br> And sin, and hell, and every foe defies.<br> <br> 'Midst sharp disease, and unremitting pain,<br> His mind's composed, his countenance serene.<br> No tongue can tell his joys which inward rise;<br> Celestial transport sparkles in his eyes,<br> And day eternal brightens all his skies.<br> Now heaven expands, and glories teem from high,<br> Through every sense, and wafts his soul away<br> From time, to worship at the highest throne,<br> And feast on joys and ecstasies unknown!<br> <br> As fitting tenants look through every room<br> Of their new house&mdash;so would I view the tomb,<br> Which I must tenant soon; the solemn day<br> Approaches, when I must put off my clay.<br> It well becomes the old to write of death,<br> To speak of heaven with their expiring breath.<br> And death unstinged, and heaven in faith's bright view,<br> Will pour pure joys, and every pang subdue.<br> <br> Why are sepulchers thought a place of dread;<br> Though our dear friends lie mingling with the dead?<br> Of old the man who carried half a hell<br> Of fiends within, loud among the tombs did yell;<br> Lo! from the tombs he to the mountains flies,<br> And makes the hills to echo with his cries:<br> So, as we know that all the dead are gone,<br> Not into nothing, but to worlds unknown,<br> Weak minds may think their spirits visits pay<br> To their cold dust, and hover round their clay,<br> The place may, too, recall the mournful scene<br> Of parting friends, and fill the mind with pain:<br> But if to see one spirit so affright,<br> How shall we stand when thousands crowd our sight?<br> When legions without number, circling, rise<br> Around, and far beyond our wondering eyes&mdash;<br> The eye of our minds! But may my soul<br> Fly through the throng, regardless of the whole,<br> And fix on God, who all his hosts excels,<br> On God in whom infinite fullness dwells.<br> <br> Affliction's children often wish to lie<br> Within the tomb, till the sharp storms blow by:<br> "O hide me in the grave, (cries sorrow's son,)<br> "And keep me secret till my wrath be gone."<br> For there the mourner sheds no briny tears;<br> The oppressed no more the fierce oppressors fears;<br> The wicked cease to vex, the weary rest,<br> And even the slave's of liberty possessed.<br> Base sin no more the sleeping dust defiles,<br> Nor Satan vexes with infernal wiles.&nbsp;<br> Mingled in death, no human ties remain,<br> And kindred sinners give no farther pain;<br> The pious parent and abandoned boy<br> Together sleep, nor mutually annoy.<br> But those who sleep in Christ at last shall rise,<br> And, crowned with glory, mount to higher skies;<br> While the poor sinner, shrouded with despair,<br> Awakes to torments, and descends to fire!&nbsp;<br> <br> When I reflect on friends and neighbors gone,<br> Their lifeless dust reposed beneath the stone,<br> Their souls removed far, far to worlds unknown,<br> Somehow I dream their souls are fast asleep,<br> Or in a state of strange inaction keep;<br> Ah! but their souls are actively employed.<br> Sharp pangs endured&mdash;or boundless bliss enjoyed.<br> Yes, since the hour they were disrobed of clay,<br> No moment ever idly passed away;<br> Nor ever shall through everlasting day.<br> <br> Now I am writing, but I soon must go<br> To dwell with dust in the dark tomb below.<br> 'Tis serious, weighty, awful work to die,<br> And plunge at once into eternity!<br> Ah! who can tell me what 'tis to be there,<br> Ravished with joys&mdash;or tortured with despair!<br> Let others toil to rise, and to be great,<br> Be this my labor&mdash;to secure my state.<br> My state secured, what peace shall rule within,<br> In spite of sorrows, yes, in spite of sin!<br> But sad to live in an uncertainty!<br> And sadder still in dark suspense to die!<br> Why so much thought, since I'm so near my tomb,<br> About a life that has not much to come?<br> Is it prudent to employ life's latter end<br> In anxious cares that can't the matter mend?<br> When I reflect upon my periods past,<br> Whatever is future on your care I cast&nbsp;<br> With confidence, and claim your conduct still,<br> Through life's rough ways, and even in death's dark vale.<br> <br> See the&nbsp;<strong>young babe</strong>&nbsp;from the pregnant womb<br> Just peeps on time&mdash;and tumbles in the tomb!<br> How vain the world to it! how vain to all!<br> The life of any&mdash;is so very small.<br> For one short day&mdash;compared to eighty years,<br> Whatever we think, still some proportion bears;<br> But ages, numerous as the starry sky,<br> Bear no proportion to eternity.<br> Why, then, should parents bitterly deplore?<br> For hark you, Sirs, the child's but gone before,<br> Where you, and I, and all, must shortly come,<br> To our last state, to our eternal home!<br> <br> Here the sad&nbsp;<strong>widow</strong>, drowned in briny tears,<br> Bewails the husband of her youthful years<br> Torn from her arms; she casts her eyes around<br> On the young babes, and each renews the wound;<br> While every feature fixes on her mind,<br> Their father's image, now to dust consigned<br> But while she mourns her honored husband gone,<br> She finds another in her oldest son;<br> The pious youth supplies his father's place,<br> Supports his mother and her tender race.<br> This somewhat comfortable makes her lot,<br> 'Till by degrees, her loss and griefs forgot.<br> But ah! when some few moons have waxed and waned,<br> (Even to repeat it, how my breast is pained!)<br> The widow-mother loses her dear son;<br> He sickens, dies, and is for ever gone!<br> A widow twice; her husband's death returns,<br> And grief rekindled in her bosom burns!<br> She hangs her head amidst her weeping train!<br> Looks piteous round, and hangs her head again!<br> <br> See too sad&nbsp;<strong>parents</strong>&nbsp;to the stream repair;<br> The rumor spread, their son has perished there;<br> The pretty boy that played about the door<br> With his young brothers scarce an hour before!<br> How swift they fly to the unhappy place,<br> While various passions flush their anxious face!<br> Hope fain would think, perhaps he's yet alive,<br> While fear infers he never can revive.<br> But now the boy's laid lifeless on the shore,<br> And the sad parents their dear son deplore!<br> They gaze, and grieve, and groan with growing pain<br> Reflect, regret, and wish&mdash;but all in vain!&nbsp;<br> Their joints are loosed, and some kind neighbor's hand<br> Supports them, trembling, else they could not stand.<br> The sad procession slowly moves along,<br> Home with the corpse; the parents close the throng,&nbsp;<br> Who call for skill; in vain for skill they call,<br> The soul is fled, 'tis this that baffles all.<br> <br> A sadder scene presents itself to view,<br> (May scenes so sad, kind Lord, be always few!)<br> The lovely dear, beloved bosom-wife,<br> Grows discontent, and&nbsp;<strong>puts an end to her life</strong>;<br> Displays vast cunning in the wicked scene,<br> Lest friends break in, and make the attempt prove vain.<br> The husband first does the fair culprit find,<br> But words are lacking to describe his mind;<br> He cuts the cord! she drops, extreme distress!<br> He staggers, shakes, and groans, through an excess<br> Of grief and anguish; O how deep the wound!<br> And fierce reflections every thought confound!<br> He fears her state, nor dares give fancy flight,<br> But checks it, and in black oblivion's night<br> Wraps up the scene, which still returns again,<br> Like restless waves, and every wave strikes pain!<br> A few kind friends convey the corpse away;<br> No funeral-pomp must mark this funeral-day;<br> Concealed in night, or lighted by the moon,<br> To some wild spot where lands or counties join,<br> And there conceal her&mdash;Let us leave her there;<br> No common death can strike us so severe;<br> Where all the grief must gnaw on his own soul,<br> Because when met, 'twere cruel to condole,<br> Or call the deed to mind&mdash;then be forgot<br> Such death, though death be every mortal's lot.<br> <br> How many&nbsp;<strong>entering-places of the tomb</strong><br> Are filled round with sorrow's sable gloom!<br> One pants, and groans, and daily pines away,<br> Who for whole years has never seen a day.<br> The anguish of the mind makes light offend,<br> And clouds of sorrow on his day descend.<br> The gout, the gravel, or the torturing stone,<br> Compels him to complain, and loud bemoan<br> His lingering death! O how his throbbing breast<br> Would welcome death, and sink in downy rest!&nbsp;<br> <br> There lies a&nbsp;<strong>young man</strong>&nbsp;brought down by slow degrees,<br> While flattering symptoms the poor patient please.<br> He ails&mdash;and yet he knows not what ails,<br> But every day his constitution fails;<br> Meanwhile he dreams he daily grows some better,<br> Which fond delusion oft his thoughts doth fetter,<br> And distant sets his end: Alas! that man<br> Should build upon a bubble or a span!<br> How cruel oft the parent's conduct here!<br> No serious themes must grate the patient's ear!<br> The youth, though dying, must not hear of death,<br> As if the very word might stop his breath!<br> Strange charm! by banishing a world to come,<br> To break death's scythe, and bribe the gaping tomb!<br> O fools be wise, at length religion try,<br> No comforts like the comforts of the sky,<br> No death like theirs, who are prepared to die<br> But the disease upon him gains at last,<br> Attacks his lungs, and holds him prisoner fast.<br> Now remedies and medicines in vain are tried;<br> Riding, new climates, and voyages defied;<br> As that disease will every art defy,<br> Which comes enjoined&mdash;Go make yon mortal die!<br> <br> A&nbsp;<strong>young woman&nbsp;</strong>there complains of every pain<br> To call it imagination&mdash;is all in vain.<br> A troop of strange disorders through her rise,<br> Which gather strength, if you their strength despise,<br> Yes, what is imagined first, grows real at last,<br> The vaporish woman dies, while friends, aghast,<br> Stand gazing round, and shed a sudden tear,<br> Who never thought that death could be so near.<br> <br> In funeral-state see there a silent throng,<br> In whose sad train the husband walks along<br> Close by the casket where his Sophia lies,<br> A manly sorrow fixes in his eyes.<br> But who can tell the tumult of his breast,<br> While his loved spouse is entered on her rest.<br> The kind endearments of their married life<br> (To exceed in kindness was their mutual strife)<br> Roll through his mind, his mind can do no more,<br> But think the sad disaster o'er and o'er:<br> "Alas! my dear Sophia is no more!<br> "What tongue or pen can such a death deplore!<br> "How terrible the tumult of my breast!<br> "What power can bid my struggling passions rest<br> "This thought alone can the fierce tumult still,<br> "The hand that strikes will never do me ill!<br> "And Sophia's soul, set free from all annoy,<br> "Now swims in oceans of eternal joy."<br> <br> There comes a corpse round which sad friends attend,<br> But amongst them all I miss the nearest friend;<br> The aged father lies confined at home,<br> Nor can attend his&nbsp;<strong>daughter</strong>&nbsp;to the tomb;<br> But lies and views a once far distant land,<br> The world of spirits, that now seems near at hand,<br> How few attend us when we are undressed,<br> No matter, or by whom we're laid to rest;<br> The pious soul, whenever loosed from clay,<br> Is well attended on the fields of day.<br> <br> What fond delusion holds us one and all!<br> While 'midst our flowery schemes we mortals fall,<br> And rise no more! and yet our rising sun,<br> Proof against reproof; in the same course runs on,<br> <strong>How strange that we, though dying every day,<br> Are not prepared for putting off our clay!</strong><br> The men that seventy annual suns have told,<br> Not many are, and always counted old;&nbsp;<br> And but a few can boast ten seasons more,<br> While thousands, millions, myriads die before!<br> What noble would walk before the palace-gate<br> For weeks, when he might enter in, in state,<br> To converse with the royal persons there,<br> And largely in the royal favor share!<br> So, saints, for shame! is earth to you so dear,<br> And heaven not worth a wish, a prayer, a tear?<br> <br> Thrice happy souls, whose faith grim death can brave.<br> Because unstinged, and smile at the cold grave!<br> <br> What scenes of sorrow every day I see,<br> Of grief and anguish in variety!<br> No man's exempt, (not he who lives alone,)<br> From the poor cottage to the prince's throne.<br> The sovereign dies! the sovereign is no more!<br> And what avails it, that all lands deplore<br> His death? perhaps it was a hopeless death,<br> Beset with anguish and pursued with wrath.<br> The brightest grandeur of his transient reign<br> Affords no comfort to an&nbsp;<em>age</em>&nbsp;of pain;<br> An age? O no, a vast eternity!<br> And every thought is swallowed up of thee,<br> O dark abyss think deep, it waits for me!<br> <br> <strong>To look around, and see the eager chase<br> For fleeting trifles, amongst the human race,</strong><br> Would man believe it, proves mankind gone quite mad!<br> A truth, alas! as certain as 'tis sad!<br> The human soul can act herself no more,<br> For sin has poisoned every mental power;<br> Paints this world fair, conceals the world to come,<br> And among roses hides the gloomy tomb.<br> But O the anguish of that awful day,<br> When life declines, and roses fade away,<br> The tomb disclosed, a future world in view,<br> And all his pleasures bid a long adieu!<br> And now his soul encounters such a storm,<br> As none can picture but the suffering worm,<br> Who feels the vengeance of an angry God<br> Through ages all, in burning wrath's abode.<br> Yet among the frantic multitude I spy<br> A few wise people, in whose enlightened eye<br> Heaven glorious shines, and darkens all below,<br> Sweetens their comforts, mitigates their woe,<br> Supports their spirits, makes them long to fly,<br> Through death's dark passage to the realms on high.&nbsp;<br> <br> A&nbsp;<strong>widow</strong>&nbsp;there, who dwells at the next door,<br> Had buried all her family before,<br> But one; that one the object of her cares,<br> Companion of her life, and partner of her prayers.<br> For many a year, the mother and the maid,<br> On the same pittance with contentment fed,<br> Sat at one fire, and slept in the same bed.<br> Their lives entwined until they seemed but one,<br> At length the mother could not sleep alone.<br> Her daughter's welfare all her thoughts employs;<br> Her cares, her fears, her comforts, and her joys;<br> But cruel death lays siege, for many a day,<br> To her frail castle, to her house of clay,<br> And batters to the ground; the damsel dies!<br> The mother feels severest tempests rise<br> Through all her throbbing breast&mdash;a mournful scene!<br> No painting can do justice to her pain;<br> Her melted heart comes streaming through her eyes,<br> And her sad soul dissolves in groans and sighs!<br> <br> May my best comforts be in heaven above,<br> And my Comforter be&mdash;whose name is Love!<br> Blessed with his presence, I'll not dwell alone,<br> Although my dearest friends should all be gone.<br> My couch shall ease me while I sing his grace,<br> And see by faith his reconciled face.<br> Then wait with patience&mdash;happy day,<br> When death shall waft my longing soul away,<br> To join the hosts that stand before the throne,<br> Where death and sorrow never more are known.<br> <br> There&nbsp;<strong>two young hearts&nbsp;</strong>unite in virtuous love,<br> And all the friends the intended match approve;<br> The day is set that shall their wishes crown,<br> Which, though time flies, seems slowly to come on.<br> Bridegroom and bride do both invite their guests,<br> To honor them, and grace their marriage-feast;<br> The guests attend upon that very day&mdash;<br> Attend, but 'tis with tears in every eye!<br> The maid had sickened&mdash;to her bed he flies;<br> All help proves vain&mdash;in his fond arms she dies!<br> Now what he feels no language can convey;<br> But she is buried on their bridal-day!<br> Yet let the mourners still attend to this,<br> That there's a future world, a state of bliss<br> For pious souls, to balance all annoy,<br> And crown the afflicted with eternal joy,<br> The hapless pair shall meet in fields above<br> In nearer union, and a purer love.<br> <br> There sits a mother drowned in briny tears,<br> Still to her fancy her dead&nbsp;<strong>babe</strong>&nbsp;appears.<br> The pleasing frolics of her pretty child,<br> Who smiled and sucked, and sucked again and smiled,<br> Dance through her mind, and give her daily pain,<br> And clearly prove the whole creation vain!<br> Caressed and dandled, with a harmless glee,<br> He meets the fondness of his mother's eye;<br> Draws out his mother's love, his mother's heart<br> Is glued to him, she knows not how to part&mdash;<br> But part they must, and day and night returns<br> The rueful scene, and day and night she mourns.<br> <br> There the&nbsp;<strong>laborer</strong>&nbsp;has obeyed death's call,<br> Left a poor widow, and some children small;<br> A pregnant widow! O! the wound is sore,<br> To bear a child whose father is no more!<br> But there is comfort even in such a case&nbsp;<br> "Upon me leave your children fatherless,<br> "I'll them preserve alive, they safe shall be;<br> "And let your widows put their trust in me."<br> <br> There at his table one reclines his head&mdash;<br> To sleep? O no! to mingle with the dead!<br> The friendly meal just finished, and no more,<br> When all the guests the sudden stroke deplore!<br> He leaves this world in twinkling of an eye,<br> And to the land of spirits swift does fly.<br> Thrice happy he whose treasure is above,<br> And always ready for the last remove!<br> At death set free from every enemy,<br> He'll change his place, but not his company.<br> <br> There the&nbsp;<strong>adulteress</strong>&nbsp;flies her native place,<br> To shun her friends, and hide her foul disgrace.<br> A child is born! and death anon attends,<br> And on the parent lays his leaden hands!<br> She's daily worse, and feels she must die away,<br> But knows not how to meet her dying-day;<br> Her sins are ranged tremendous in her sight,<br> And Sinai's thunders make a dismal night;<br> Eternal ages fearful swell before&mdash;<br> Ages, and anguish ever growing more!<br> But O the riches of forgiving grace!<br> She sees a Savior only suits her case;<br> And by true faith she to the Savior flies,<br> And on him for her every need relies.<br> She dies, repentant of her foul offence,<br> Indignant at her ill-spent life; then hence<br> She wings, triumphing in redeeming love,<br> To join the heavenly multitudes above!<br> <br> Now to conclude, for 'tis, as mourners know,<br> An endless task to tell the tales of woe<br> That darken every day; and who can claim<br> Exemption from some sad disastrous theme?<br> How humbling and distressing to look round,<br> And glance the lifeless nations under ground!<br> Bankrupts and beggars, their's could nothing call,<br> Now they possess for ever all in all!<br> O how they feast before the throne above,<br> On all the wonders of redeeming love!<br> O how their breasts with sacred ardors glow,<br> While they the sweets of full communion know!<br> And neither sin nor sorrow, death nor pain,<br> Shall interrupt their heavenly bliss again!<br> <br> Yes, all mankind! why should I stay to name<br> Of every faith, of every age and frame.<br> For sea and land, and every mount and plain,<br> As true as strange, do lifeless crowds contain.<br> Thus earth's a burying-ground, each spot a grave,<br> And millions rot beneath the swelling wave.<br> <br> This is death's reign; but there's a glorious day,<br> When death, as vanquished, quite shall flee away.<br> At your dread call, incarnate God and King,<br> The numerous nations into life shall spring.<br> 'Tis true, the wicked shall with horror rise,<br> And wish to hide for ever from their eyes;<br> But all your saints triumphing shall attend<br> On your blessed throne; and, placed on your right-hand,<br> Shall sing defiance to the tyrant death,<br> And bless their Savior with new-kindled breath.&nbsp;<br> <br> The dead, when freed from their dreary home,<br> Like large swarms come teeming from the tomb.<br> Not one is lost, not one forgot behind,<br> Not one is left that sprung of human kind.<br> First the blessed saints to boundless glory rise,<br> Heaven in their face, and rapture in their eyes;<br> Their mind serene, and every transport strong,<br> Love flaming high, and Jesus all their song.<br> <br> But, wretched sinners! how the wicked rise!<br> Hell in their looks, and horror in their eyes!<br> And cruel furies all their steps attend,<br> Tormenting must be their miserable end!<br> Without a friend! the Friend they scorned before,<br> Is now their judge, and will befriend no more.<br> Loud in their ears he cries&mdash;You cursed depart<br> To flames&mdash;a word must pierce the stoutest heart.<br> In death and darkness, fire and flame, (I shiver!)<br> The wicked plunged, and bolted in for ever!<br> <br> The saints, who witness all this while the scene,<br> With ravished soul and countenance serene,<br> Ascend to bliss, and shout with rapturous breath,<br> Eternal victory over hell and death!<br> Amazing change! late tenants of the tomb,<br> Immortalized, and highest heaven their home<br> Lately harassed with Satan and with sin,<br> Now holy all, and not a stain within!</p> </blockquote></td> </tr> </table> <br> [[Category:Jesus]]