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orrow to the grave! But, hark! the preacher's voice, his accents bland, Behold his kindled look, his lifted hand; What holy fervour wakes at his command! He speaks of faith, of mercy from above, Of heavenly hope, of a Redeemer's love! 30 Hence every thought, but that which shows fair youth Advancing in the paths of peace and truth! Which shows thy light, O pure religion! shed, Like a faint glory, on a daughter's head, Who shall each parent's love, through life, repay, And add a transport to their dying day! I saw an old man, on his staff reclined, Who seemed to every human change resigned:-- He, with white locks, and long-descending beard, A patriarch of other years appeared: 40 And thine, O aged, solitary man! 41 Was life's enchanted way, when life began, The sunshine on each mountain, and the strain Of some sweet melody, in every plain; Thine was illusive fortune's transient gleam, And young love's broken, but delicious dream; Those mocking visions of thy youth are flown, And thou dost bend on death's dark brink alone The light associates of thy vernal day, 49 Where are they? Blown, like the sere leaves, away; And thou dost seem a trunk, on whose bare head The gray moss of uncounted days is spread! I know thee not, old man! yet traits like these, Upon thy time-worn features fancy sees. Another, or another year, for thee, Haply, "the silver cord shall loosed be!" Then listen, whilst warm eloquence portrays That "better country" to thy anxious gaze, Who art a weary, way-worn "pilgrim here," And soon from life's vain masque to disappear. 60 O aged man! lift up thine eyes--behold What brighter views of distant light unfold; What though the loss of strength thou dost deplore, Or broken loves, or friends that are no more? What though gay youth no more his song renews, And summer-light dies, like the rainbow hues? The Christian hails the ray that cheers the gloom, And throws its heavenly halo round the tomb. Who bade the grave its mouldering vault unclose? "Christ--Christ who died; yea, rather, Christ who rose!" Hope lifts from earth her tear-illumined eye, 71 She sees, dispersed, the world's last tempest fly;
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