Weary of the world,
and desirous of heaven
You souls who as did Simeon
For
heaven so are yearning,
Take leave of this world’s Babylon,
This
sin-cacked prison spurning,
Refuse not from this deep abyss
In peace to journey unto bliss,
When
God’s hour is approaching.
We are like some poor flock of owls
In
places of confusion,
Laboriously we roam and prowl
Where
rest is but illusion;
Here on this earth is no sure rest,
Nor is there any feathered nest.
In
Meshech we are strangers.
Oft must our life, so full of care,
Beneath
the cross be bowing,
Delight that once has been our share
Now
woe is disendowing;
Change after happiness would spy
Where tares among the wheat do lie
And
put a stop to gladness.
Some lustful souls do well withal,
Find
life a bed of roses,
While others are but sorrow’s thralls,
Bear
crowns of thorns, not posies;
Complaint, constraint and wounds full sore
Do through their restless skin now bore
Till
death the knot’s untying.
All sin and sorrow pass away,
The
grave has proof that’s soothing,
When finally the earth and clay
The
diggers’ spades are smoothing;
For then the body’s found its nest,
For then the soul at last knows rest,
And
all feuds have their ending.
So now, earth that laments and grieves,
That
is a trap of evil,
Good night! For heaven I now leave,
Rejoice
at this upheaval.
There shall eternal joy be mine,
There shall Hosannahs sweetly chime
Among
the hosts of angels.
In sin and grief mankind you chain,
Yea!
cause the soul’s frustration
Begone! Limed grave, stronghold of pain!
Sion’s
palace is my station.
By harmful sinful deeds dismayed,
The many stumbling blocks arrayed
That
block my pathway forwards.
Come, longed-for Death! Cut through life’s straw,
You
as your Lord’s gatekeeper
Shall open heaven’s mighty door
Though
you are too life’s reaper;
If God deems that my time is come,
That sufferings enough are done,
That
I can cease my weeping.
Almighty God! I cry aloud,
Our
time here you’ve allotted,
By blessed hour and burial shroud
All
agony is blotted;
From thralldom’s yoke by mercy freed,
With life’s course fully run indeed,
There
comes a final treasure
Help’s granted him who to the end
resists
the world’s beguiling.
A trustful helmsman will e’er fend
Against
the ocean’s wiling,
He’d rather drown in his dire need
Than let his hand the storm-waves heed
That
would the helm be seizing.
Oh, Jesus, by your death may I
From
this world now be leaving,
Let my soul to your bosom fly
From
sin and days of grieving;
My corpse grant space within my grave,
So I, without my pilgrim’s stave
May
at your side be resting.
When you on Judgment Day shall fetch
The
dead to life eternal,
Touch my grave too with
hand outstretched
And
grant me grace supernal,
May the last trump wake me from sleep
And you my body safely keep
Amongst
the blessèd chosen.
1 comment:
Very good - that rhyming took some doing for you!
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