Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Songs of Day and Night. VII. Angelic MinistryAlexander B. Grosart (18351899)
L
A-flame are seen the azure skies,
With seraphim and cherubim—
Who noon-day’s utmost blaze bedim;
On wings of whiteness, lo! they fly
’Twixt our dark world and fields on high;
Heirs of salvation bringing home,
To gain the joyous welcome “Come.”
As tho’ angelic feet did pass;
There is a splendour ’midst the trees,
As he sees who the unseen sees;
Amongst the hollows of the hills,
A hush of awe as all else stills;
O God! Thy Spirit on me lies,
Lifting me up in ecstasies.
Why is it now ye will not grant
E’en unto F
Your seal of silence to remove?
Speaking as once ye used to speak,
To weary hearts and like to break;
Glad tidings of glad souls set free,
That e’en in glory fresh joy see.
I know ye there, ye undefil’d;
To guide, to guard, to bless, to keep,
With love that knows not how to sleep;
And wheresoe’er a sinner turns
And for the sinner’s Saviour burns;
But O to catch a whisper’d word,
That not in vain I serve the Lord.
Our part, as servants to believe;
To labour and still labour on
Until the world for Christ is won;
In faith, that unto us is given
Abundantly to people Heav’n;
That souls by day, by night repent,
And angels still their names present.