Pleasant Memories of Pleasant Lands 1842/A Sabbath at Sea

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A SABBATH AT SEA.


Swift o'er the tossing deep,
    As woke the Sabbath day,
With favoring breeze and swelling sails
    A bark pursued its way;
When lo! a gush of music sweet
    Came from its lonely breast,
A holy voice of hymns, that lulled
    The wrathful wave to rest.

Upon the sheltered deck
    Was held a sacred rite,
The worship of old Ocean's King,
    The Lord of power and might,
Who with a simple line of sand
    Doth curb its monstrous tide,
And lay his finger on its mane,
    To quell its fiercest pride.

High words of solemn prayer
    Each listening spirit stir,
And by the fair young babe knelt down
    The bronzed mariner;

On couch and mattress ranged around,
    The sick forgot their grief,
And drank the healing lore of heaven,
    As dew the thirsty leaf.

Poor Erin's ardent sons
    Up from the steerage came,
And in their rude response invoked
    Jehovah's awful name;
And little children gathered near,
    Blest in their guileless years,
Hands folded close, and lips apart,
    And thoughts that moved to tears.

Filled with the scene sublime,
    The priestly heart grew bold,
To speak with eloquence of Him,
    Who the great deep controlled;
And loftier was his youthful brow,
    And deep his tuneful voice,
That warned the sinner to repent,
    And bade the saint rejoice.

A spell was on the heart,
    That bowed the proudest head,
Above us the eternal skies,
    Beneath our feet the dead;
The dead who knew no burial rite,
    Save storm, or battle cry,

Whose tombs are where the coral grows,
    And the sea-monsters lie.

It is a blessed thing
    In God's own courts to stand,
And hear the pealing organ swell,
    And join the prayerful band;
Yet who in full dependence feels
    That One above can save,
Until his fleeting life he throws
    Upon the faithless wave?

It is a blessed thing
    To heed the Sabbath chime,
And on 'neath summer foliage walk
    To keep the holy time;
Yet who hath all devoutly praised
    Him, who his breath hath kept,
Until the strong unpitying surge
    Raged round him while he slept?

Earth, the indulgent nurse,
    With love her son doth guide,
His safety on her quiet breast
    Begets an inborn pride;
But Ocean, king austere,
    Doth mock his trusting gaze,
And try the fabric of the faith,
    By which on Heaven he stays.


Again that tuneful sound
    Swells o'er the watery plain;
How passing sweet are Zion's songs
    Amid the stranger main.
Our vessel taught them to the winds
    Along her venturous way,
And bade the lawless billows hush
    In their tremendous play.

Throughout the broad expanse
    No living thing is seen,
Except the stormy petrel's wing,
    That flecks the blue serene.
Praise! Praise! methinks the hoariest surge
    Might learn that lesson well,
Which even the infant zephyr's breath
    To earth's frail flowers doth tell.

What though the tender thought
    Of loved ones far away
Steals lingering to the moistened eye,
    Mid prayer and chanting lay;
Yet trust in a Redeemer's word,
    And hopes that blossom free,
And hallowed memories cling around
    This Sabbath on the sea.

Sunday, August 9, 1840.