Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Poems (1836). V. Leaning on Her BelovedCharlotte Elliott (17891871)
L
My gracious Saviour! I am blest;
Though weary, Thou dost condescend
To be my rest.
Is cheered by a celestial ray:
Thy pitying smile dispels the gloom—
Turns night to day.
From earthly thoughts and earthly things;
On Thee concentrates her desires;
To Thee she clings.
To Thee the future I confide;
Each step of life’s untrodden path
Thy love will guide.
Though faint with languor, parched with heat
Thy will has now become my own—
Thy will is sweet.
With patience Thou my soul dost fill:
Thou whisperest, “What did I sustain?”
Then I am still.
The havoc slow disease may make;
Thou, who for me Thy blood hast shed,
Wilt ne’er forsake.
Too weak another voice to hear,
Thy heavenly accents comfort speak,
“Be of good cheer!”
Calmly I stand on death’s dark brink
I feel “the everlasting arms,”
I cannot sink.