SONG OF THE ANGELS.
CALM
YALM on the listening ear of night Come Heaven's melodious strains, Where wild Judæa stretches far Her silver-mantled plains!
Celestial choirs, from courts above, Shed sacred glories there; And angels, with their sparkling lyres, Make music on the air.
The answering hills of Palestine Send back the glad reply;
And greet, from all their holy heights, The dayspring from on high.
On the blue depths of Galilee There comes a holier calm, And Sharon waves, in solemn praise, Her silent groves of palm.
"Glory to God!" the sounding skies Loud with their anthems ring; Peace to the earth, good-will to men, From heaven's Eternal King!
Light on thy hills, Jerusalem! The Saviour now is born! And bright on Bethlehem's joyous plains Breaks the first Christmas morn.
Edmund Hamilton Sears.
N Bethlehem He first arose,
IN
From whom we draw our true life's breath; And Golgotha at last he chose,
Where his cross broke the power of death. I wandered from the Western strand, Through strange scenes of the Morning Laud; But naught so great did I survey As Bethlehem and Golgotha.
The ancient wonders of the world Here rose aloft, the mighty Seven; How was their transient glory hurled To earth before the might of Heaven!
In passing, I could see and tell How all their pride to ruin fell; There stood in quiet Gloria But Bethlehem and Golgotha.
Cease, Pyramids of Egypt, cease!
The toil that built you never gave The faintest thought of Death's great peace,- "T was but the darkness of a grave. Ye Sphinxes, in colossal stone! The riddle Life an unread one Ye left; the answer found its way Through Bethlehem and Golgotha.
O Rocknabad, earth's Paradise, Of all Shiraz the sweetest flower!
Ye Indian sea-coasts, breathing spice, Where groves of palm in beauty tower; I see o'er all your sunny plains The step of Death leave sable stains. Look up! There comes a deathless ray From Bethlehem and Golgotha.
Thou Caaba! black stone of the waste, At which the feet of half our line Yet stumble. Stand, now, proudly braced Beneath thy crescent's waning shine! The moon before the sun grows dim; Thou art shattered by the sign of Him, The conquering Prince. "Victoria!" Shout Bethlehem and Golgotha.
O Thou, who in a shepherd-stable An infant willingly hast lain,
And through the cross's pain wert able To give the victory over pain!
To pride the manger seems disgrace;
The cross a vile, unworthy place;
But what shall bring this pride down? Say! "Tis Bethlehem and Golgotha.
The Magi kings went forth to see
The Shepherd Stock, the Paschal Lamb; And to the cross on Calvary
The pilgrimage of nations came. Amidst the battle's stormy toss, All flew to splinters, but the Cross;
As East and West encamping lay Round Bethlehem and Golgotha.
O, march we not in martial band, But with the Spirit's flag unfurled! Let us subdue the Holy Land As Christ himself subdued the world. Let beams of light on every side Fly, like Apostles, far and wide, Till all men catch the beams that play O'er Bethlehem and Golgotha.
With pilgrim staff and scallop-shell
Through Eastern climes I sought to roam; This counsel have I found to tell, Brought from my travels to my home:- With staff and scallop do not crave To see Christ's cradle and his grave. Turn inward! there in clearest day View Bethlehem and Golgotha.
O heart! what helps it, that the knee Upon his natal spot is bended? What helps it, reverently to see The grave from which he soon ascended? Let him within thee find his birth; And do thou die to things of earth, And live him; let this be for aye Thy Bethlehem and Golgotha.
Friedrich Rückert. Tr. N. L. Frothingham.
RACHEL'S TOMB.
W top, and base of massy stone?
HAT mouldering pile near Ephrath stands alone,
Rude is the chamber where her bones repose, Yet here, 't is said, fair Rachel's pillar rose. Ah! sad her fate in Nature's pangs to die; To sorrowing friends I hear her parting sigh; I see her husband's woe, his streaming tear, His last fond kiss before he laid her here, His anguished brow, where smiles no more would be, For ne'er was wife, poor Rachel! loved like thee.
Nicholas Michell.
THE THREE KINGS.
THR
THREE Kings came riding from far away, Melchior and Gaspar and Baltasar;
Three Wise Men out of the East were they, And they travelled by night and they slept by day, For their guide was a beautiful, wonderful star.
The star was so beautiful, large, and clear, That all the other stars of the sky Became a white mist in the atmosphere, And by this they knew that the coming was near Of the Prince foretold in the prophecy.
Three caskets they bore on their saddle-bows, Three caskets of gold with golden keys;
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