Lines, Written at the Close of 1842
Hark! I hear the midnight bell,
Pealing forth its funeral knell;
Now its tones sound loud and clear
Now low and dirge-like, strike the ear,
Solemn and slow, they seem to fall,
Upon the listening ear of all.
And lo! extended on the ’bier,
The form of the departed year
Closely wrapt, in snowy shroud,
Hastening to join the sable crowd
Of years that passed before
the flood,
And left their pathway stained with blood;
For oh, what horrors must appear,
Written on each departed year?
The fearful tales each will disclose,
The God of Heaven only knows.
Ardent and bright this year arose,
Pictured its joys and hid its woes,
Painted gay paths bestrown with flowers,
And balmy skies, and sunny hours,
Promised some pleasures, ever new,
If pleasures’ path we would pursue.
But soon the path became uptorn,
Instead of flowers we find the thorn:
And yonder sky, so blue and deep,
Where golden stars their vigils keep,
Was soon by frowning clouds concealed;
And lightnings flash’d, and thunders
peal’d
The golden sun soon sank to rest,
Behind the curtains of the west,
And left to darkness his domain,
With midnight howling o’er the plain;
And those who followed her gay train,
Found pleasure’s path to end in
pain.
For who e’er drank without alloy,
From the painted cup of joy?
Just as we seize some radiant prize,
That long has danc’d before our
eyes,
And raise the goblet to our lip,
Its honied promises to sip.
Some lurking scorpion’s venom’d
dart
Sends poison rankling to the heart.
But now the year its race has run,
Its promises and labors done;
The grave has closed o’er its remains,
’Till the last trumpet breaks its
chains;
Then must its mysteries be unroll’d,
And all its hidden deeds be told.
How many hail’d last New Year’s
day,
That slumber now in fellow clay.
This too, perhaps, may be our doom
Before another year shall come.
The things of earth may fade away,
And we be turned to lifeless clay;
The roving eye forget the light,
And dreamless sleep in death’s dark
night.
The pallid lips may cease to speak:
The coffin worm feed on the cheek;
The grassy turf o’er us be spread,
While earth’s cold lap supports
the head:
And heav’ns own dews the hillock
lave,
And night winds sigh around our grave.
That narrow house may be our home,
Whose only mark is one grey stone.
But Christ by entering in the tomb,
Has dissipated all its gloom,
And shed a bright, benignant ray,
That opens on eternal day;
And those that sleep in His embrace,
Among the just shall find a place.