Thou inevitable Day, When a voice to me shall say, 'Thou must rise and come away; | 'All thine other journeys past, Gird thee, and make ready fast For thy longest and thy last':-- | Day deep-hidden from our sight In impenetrable night, Who may guess of thee aright? | Art thou distant, art thou near? Wilt thou seem more dark or clear? Day with more of hope or fear? | Wilt thou come, unseen before Thou art standing at the door, Saying, light and life are o'er? | Or with such a gradual pace, As shall leave me largest space To regard thee face to face? 239 | Shall I lay my drooping head On some loved lap,--round my bed Prayer be made and tears be shed? | Or at distance from mine own, Name and kin alike unknown, Make my solitary moan? | Will there yet be things to leave, Hearts to which this heart must cleave, From which parting it must grieve? | Or shall life's best ties be o'er, And all loved ones gone before To that other happier shore? | Shall I gently fall on sleep, Death, like slumber, o'er me creep, Like a slumber sweet and deep? | Or the soul long strive in vain, To escape, with toil and pain, From its half-divided chain? | Little skills it where or how, If thou comest then or now, With a smooth or angry brow; | Come thou must, and we must die-- JESUS! Saviour! stand Thou by, When that last sleep seals our eye! | |