Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Psalms and Hymns for the Church (1883). VIII. He loved his own unto the endWilliam Josiah Irons (18121883)
“H
And asked their love;
He said, “I call you each My friend,
And not My servant; and I send
One from above,
Who shall reveal such grace and truth to you
As in My sojourn here ye never knew.”
To leave us here?
Thou sayest that Thou dost love us still:
Can it be love if thus Thou fill
Our cup of fear?
O Master, Master, should’st Thou now depart
All sorrow needs must overwhelm our heart.
For could I stay,
Your earth-bound thoughts would never know
Love’s fullest mysteries, which flow
From Me alway;
My human heart might linger with you yet,
But now affections must on heaven be set.
My Spirit came
And taught the ways of righteousness,
How sin and judgment to confess,
How learn to blame
All clinging to inferior things of earth,
Blind to the glory of your heavenly birth.
As this world gives;
My Spirit comes to you, yet what
He teaches shows no earthly lot:
He ever lives,
The world must learn. I hear the Father’s call
Away from earth!—Awhile I leave you all.
And, as He spake,
Calmly He moved, as one who knows
The coming onset of his foes.
The night winds shake
With distant sounds, as through the olive grove
“Let us depart” is echoed from above.