Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Poems and Carols (1894). III. The Heavenly HostSelwyn Image (18491930)
D
Deep was the ice on the water-way;
Deus misericordiae!
On their frozen fingers the shepherds blew,
And the wolf-skins round them tighter drew.
God, how the wind cut! huddled low,
Herdsmen and herds lay shelt’ring so.
Deus misericordiae!
Venti furorem reprime,
Ne percamus frigore,
And the heaven’s aglow with golden flakes,
Archangelorum Domine!
As the quiv’ring tongues of a mighty fire;
From the midst whereof, in choir on choir,
What Sons of the Lord of heaven and earth
Are these, that herald a God’s birth?
Archangelorum Domine!
Mortalium quis intime
Spectabit, Lux tremenda, te?
O herdsmen and herds, what thought of harm?
Omnipotenti gloria!
On their knees they’re fallen: an angel cries,
“The winter’s over, O shepherds, rise!
Be not afraid; to Bethlehem Town
This night is the very God come down!”
Omnipotenti gloria!
Qui natus nobis omnia
Vertisti in pacifera.
A Child new-born, in a stable bare:
Jesu, Deus demississime!
A Child in a manger, a Mother-Maid,
By whom shall the terrors of hell be laid;
The proud fly scattered, the weak prevail!
Sweet Child and Mother, we cry you, Hail!
Jesu, Deus demississime!
Finito mundi tempore
In coeli domum accipe
Humiles nos, Rex altissime!
Amen.