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If thou hadst left us still to fear
Love's only heritage was here.
4 But calmly now we see them go
From out this world of pain and woe;
We follow to a home on high,
Where pure affections never die.

552.

7 & 6s. M.

Children in Heaven.

ANONYMOUS.

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1 IN the broad fields of heaven,
In the immortal bowers
By life's clear river dwelling,
Amid undying flowers,
There hosts of beauteous spirits,
Fair children of the earth,
Linked in bright bands celestial,
Sing of their human birth.

2 They sing of earth and heaven, –
Divinest voices rise

To God, their gracious Father,
Who called them to the skies :
They all are there, - in heaven,

Safe, safe, and sweetly blest;
No cloud of sin can shadow
Their bright and holy rest.

553.

7s. M. H. S. WASHBURN. The Pastor's Funeral.

1 FATHER, gathered round the bier,
Aid thy weeping children here;
All our stricken hearts deplore
Loss of him we meet no more.
2 Tender are the rites we pay,
Pastor, o'er thy sleeping clay;
We, who late the welcome gave,
Must we bear thee to thy grave?
3 Earth, unto thy faithful trust,
We commit this precious dust,
There, by pain no more oppressed,
Brother, thou wilt sweetly rest.
4 Glorious will that morning break,
When the dead in Christ shall wake;
Joy and grief our bosoms swell,
Brother, Pastor, Guide, farewell.

554.

P. M.

MILMAN.

Funeral Hymn.

́1 BROTHER, thou art gone before us,
And thy saintly soul is flown,
Where tears are wiped from every eye,
And sorrow is unknown:

From the burden of the flesh,

And from care and fear released,
Where the wicked cease from troubling
And the weary are at rest.

2 Brother, yes, thy course is finished;
Thou hast borne earth's heavy load,
But Christ has taught thy languid feet
To reach his blest abode :
Sweetly art thou sleeping now,

On thy Father's faithful breast,
Where the wicked cease from troubling
And the weary are at rest.

3 Sin no more can taint thy spirit,
Nor can doubt thy faith assail
Thy soul its welcome has received,
Thy strength shall never fail :
And thou 'rt sure to meet the good,
Whom on earth thou lovedst best,
Where the wicked cease from troubling
And the weary are at rest.

4 To thy grave we sadly bear thee,
There in dust we place thy head,
We lay the turf above thee now,
And seal thy narrow bed:
But thy spirit soars away,

Free, among the faithful blest,
Where the wicked cease from troubling

And the weary are at rest.

5 When the Lord shall send his summons
Unto us who 're left behind,
May we untainted by the world,
As sure a welcome find;
Each like thee depart in peace

To the kingdom of the blest,

Where the wicked cease from troubling
And the weary are at rest.

LIFE, DEATH, AND FUTURITY.

555.

C. M.

Brevity and Frailty of Life.

1 HOW short and hasty is our life!
How vast our soul's affairs!
Yet foolish mortals vainly strive
To lavish out their years.

2 Our days run thoughtlessly along,
Without a moment's stay;

Just like a story or a song,
We pass our lives away.

3 God from on high invites us home;
But we march heedless on,
And, ever hastening to the tomb,
Stoop downward as we run.

WATTS.

4 Draw us, O God, with sovereign grace,
And lift our thoughts on high,
That we may end this mortal race,
And see salvation nigh.

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Man hastening to the Grave.

1 LORD, what a feeble piece
Is this our mortal frame!

Our life, how poor a trifle 't is,
That scarce deserves the name!

2 Alas! 't was brittle clay

That formed our body first; And every month, and every day, 'T is mouldering back to dust,

3. Our moments fly apace;

Nor will our minutes stay;
Just like a flood our hasty days

Are sweeping us away.

4 Then, if our days must fly,

We'll keep their end in sight;

WATTS.

We 'll spend them all in wisdom's way,
And let them speed their flight.

5 They'll waft us sooner o'er
This life's tempestuous sea:
We soon shall reach the peaceful shore
Of blest eternity.

557.

C. M.

Life short, and Man frail.

WATTS.

1 TEACH me the measure of my days,
Thou Maker of my frame;

I would survey life's narrow space,
And learn how frail I am.

2 A span is all that we can boast;
How short the fleeting time!
Man is but vanity and dust,
In all his flower and prime.
3 Some walk in honor's gaudy show,
Some dig for golden ore;

They toil for heirs, they know not who,
And straight are seen no more.

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4 What should I wish, or wait for, then,
From creatures earth and dust?
They make our expectations vain,
And disappoint our trust.

5 Now I resign my earthly hope,
My fond desire recall;

I give my mortal interest up,
And make my God my all.

558.

7 & 6s. M.

Life rapidly passing away.

S. F. SMITH.

1 AS flows the rapid river,
With channel broad and free,
Its waters rippling ever,
And hasting to the sea,
So life is onward flowing,
And days of offered peace,
And man is swiftly going
Where calls of mercy cease.
2 As moons are ever waning,
As hastes the sun away,
As stormy winds, complaining,
Bring on the wintry day,

So fast the night comes o'er us,
The darkness of the grave;
And death is just before us :
God takes the life he gave.
3 Say, hath thy heart its treasure
Laid up in worlds above?
And is it all thy pleasure

559.

Thy God to praise and love?
Beware, lest death's dark river
Its billows o'er thee roll,
And thou lament for ever

The ruin of thy soul.

7 & 6s. (Peculiar.) J. BARTON. Life a Winter's Day.

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1 TIME is winging us away
To our eternal home;
Life is but a winter's day,
A journey to the tomb:
Youth and vigor soon will flee,
Blooming beauty lose its charms ;
All that's mortal soon shall be
Inclosed in death's cold arms.

2 Time is winging us away
To our eternal home;
Life is but a winter's day,
A journey to the tomb;
But the Christian shall enjoy
Health and beauty soon above,
Where no worldly griefs annoy,
Secure in Jesus' love.

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Reflections on past Generations.

1 HOW swift the torrent rolls,

That bears us to the sea!

WATTS.

The tide which hurries thoughtless souls
To vast eternity!

2 Our fathers! where are they,

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With all they called their own?

Their joys and griefs, and hopes and cares,
And wealth and honor?-gone!

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