PSALM 49 PART 1
86 v.6-14
C. M.
Pride and death; or, The vanity of life and riches.
PAUSE.
87 Why doth the man of riches grow To insolence and pride, To see his wealth and honors flow With every rising tide? | [Why doth he treat the poor with scorn, Made of the self-same clay, And boast as though his flesh was born Of better dust than they?] | Not all his treasures can procure His soul a short reprieve, Redeem from death one guilty hour, Or make his brother live. | [Life is a blessing can't be sold, The ransom is too high; Justice will ne'er be bribed with gold, That man may never die.] | He sees the brutish and the wise, The tim'rous and the brave, Quit their possessions, close their eyes, And hasten to the grave. | Yet 'tis his inward thought and pride,- My house shall ever stand And that my name may long abide, I'll give it to my land." | Vain are his thoughts, his hopes are lost, How soon his memory dies! His name is written in the dust Where his own carcass lies. | This is the folly of their way; And yet their sons, as vain, Approve the words their fathers say, And act their works again. | Men void of wisdom and of grace, If honor raise them high, Live like the beast, a thoughtless race, And like the beast they die. | [Laid in the grave like silly sheep, Death feeds upon them there, Till the last trumpet break their sleep In terror and despair.] | |