'Mid fleeting joys of sense and time, Still free from earthly leaven, Its purest hopes, its joys sublime, Should own no home but heaven!
PRIDE, self-adoring Pride, was primal cause Of all sin past, all pain, all woe to come. Unconquerable Pride! first, eldest Sin,
Great fountain-head of evil! highest source, Whence flow'd rebellion 'gainst the Omnipotent, Whence hate of man to man, and all else ill. Pride at the bottom of the human heart Lay, and gave root and nourishment to all That grew above. Great ancestor of vice, Hate, unbelief, and blasphemy of God; Envy and slander, malice and revenge, And murder, and deceit, and every birth Of damned sort, was progeny of pride. It was the ever-moving, acting force, The constant aim, and the most thirsty wish Of every sinner unrenew'd, to be
A god; in purple or in rags, to have Himself adored. Whatever shape or form His actions took, whatever phrase he threw About his thoughts, or mantled o'er his life, To be the highest was the inward cause Of all; the purpose of the heart to be
Set up, admired, obey'd. But who would bow The knee to one who served, and was dependent? Hence man's perpetual struggle, night and day, To prove he was his own proprietor, And independent of his God, that what
He had might be esteem'd his own, and praised As such. He labour'd still, and tried to stand Alone, unpropp'd, to be obliged to none; And in the madness of his pride, he bade His God farewell, and turn'd away to be A god himself; resolving to rely, Whatever came, upon his own right hand.
O desperate frenzy! madness of the will! And drunkenness of the heart! that nought could
But floods of wo, poured from the sea of wrath,
Behind which, mercy sat! to think to turn
The back on life original, and live! The Creature to set up a rival throne In the Creator's realm! to deify
A woman! and in the sight of God be proud! To lift an arm of flesh against the shafts Of the Omnipotent, and, 'midst his wrath, To seek for happiness!-insanity
[worlds Most mad! guilt most complete! seest thou those That roll at various distance round the throne Of God, innumerous, and fill the calm
Of heaven with sweetest harmony, when saints And angels sleep ?-As one of these, from love Centripetal withdrawing, and from light,
And heat, and nourishment cut off, should rush Abandon'd o'er the line that runs between Create and increate, from ruin driven
To ruin still, through the abortive waste; So Pride from God drew off the bad; and so, Forsaken of him, he lets them ever try
Their single arm against the second death; Amidst vindictive thunders lets them try The stoutness of their heart, and lets them try To quench their thirst amidst the unfading fire, And to reap joy where he has sown despair; To walk alone, unguided, unbemoan'd, Where evil dwells, and death, and moral night In utter emptiness, to find enough;
In utter dark find light; and find repose Where God with tempest plagues for evermore : For so they wished it, so did Pride desire.
THERE is a God," all nature cries;
A thousand tongues proclaim
His arm almighty, mind all-wise,
And bid each voice in chorus rise
To magnify his name.
Thy name, great Nature's Sire divine,
Assiduous we adore,
Rejecting godheads at whose shrine Benighted nations blood and wine In vain libations pour.
Yon countless worlds, in boundless space, Myriads of miles each hour
Their mighty orbs as curious trace
As the blue circlet studs the face Of that enamell'd flower.
But thou too mad'st that floweret gay To glitter in the dawn;
The hand that fired the lamp of day, The blazing comet launch'd away,
'As falls a sparrow to the ground, Obedient to thy will,"
By the same law those globes wheel round, Each drawing each, yet all still found
In one eternal system bound,
One order to fulfil.
ANTICIPATION OF FUTURE HAPPINESS.
AH! why this disconsolate frame ? Though earthly enjoyments decay, My Jesus is ever the same,
A sun in the gloomiest day. Though molten a while in the fire,
'Tis only the gold to refine;
And be it my simple desire,
Though suffering, not to repine.
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