Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Verses on Various Occasions. V. David and JonathanJohn Henry Newman (18011890)
O
Thou flower of Jesse’s race!
What woe was thine, when thou and Jonathan
Last greeted face to face!
He doomed to die, thou on us to impress
The portent of a blood-stain’d holiness.
And crime’s encircling tide,
A spell was o’er thee, zealous one, to cool
Earth-joy and kingly pride;
With battle scene and pageant, prompt to blend
The pale calm spectre of a blameless friend.
Thy spirit keen and high
Sure it had snapp’d in twain love’s slender band,
So dear in memory;
Paul of his comrade reft, the warning gives.—
He lives to us who dies, he is but lost who lives.