When the spring tide of thy life shall
have passed away, with all its joyous anticipations
and budding hopes when Summer with the music
of its birds and the perfume of its flowers, and melancholy
Autumn, with its faded leaf and sighing winds, shall
have chased each other down the tide of time, and
the cold blasts of Winter have begun to chill the
life-blood in thy veins when the hand that
penned these lines shall be mouldering in dust, and
the friends of thy youth who journeyed with thee along
the pathway of life, and who cheered thee with the
music of their voices and the light of their smiles
have, perchance, one by one passed away, and left
thee to journey on in loneliness of heart, when the
light of thine own eye shall have become dimmed, and
thy sunny hair whitened by the frosts of age when
thy voice, which was wont to gush forth in melody
and song, entrancing the ear and cheering the heart
of the listener, has become weak and tremulous, and
care and sorrow have set their seal upon thy brow.
Oh, then may the recollection of no misspent hours,
of no neglected opportunities for doing good, or wasted
privileges, arise like dim meteors from the tomb to
haunt thee with their reproach, but may the smiles
of an approving conscience beam upon thee; may sweet
peace and hope administer the balm of consolation
to thy wounded spirit; may angels hover o’er
the couch of thy repose, and fan thee with their balmy
wings, and when thy tired spirit shall burst its prison
house of clay,
May they bear it to mansions of the blest,
There to repose on Jesus’ breast;
From every pain and sorrow free,
This is the boon I ask for thee.