Moral Pieces, in Prose and Verse/Address to the Deity

ADDRESS TO THE DEITY.


THOU[1] at whose words the mighty storms obey,
The whirlwinds ravage, or the whirlwinds stay,
At whose dread call the thunder springs to birth,
The strong winds rack the firm and solid earth,
And lightnings glare, and ocean foams with ire,
And snow-clad rocks burst forth with flames of fire;
Yet whose least breath can hush the jarring strife,
And wake the severed atoms into life,
Send hark proud ocean from the trembling land,
And curb his power with a frail bound of sand,
Hush the wild whirlwind—bid the thunder cease,
And comfort nature with the smile of peace;
Canst thou, who vast eternity dost span;
Not change the heart, and turn the ways of man?

As the soft stream forsakes its winding course,
Yet ever speeds to its appointed source,
So canst thou mould his powers, and bend his will,
And fit him for thy sovereign purpose still;
In thee I trust—in this firm hope rejoice,
Lift upward to thy throne my grateful voice,
Bend to my prayers—thy needed strength impart,

Awake my slumbering powers, confirm my heart,
Renew my faith—restore my wonted rest,
And teach me what thy will decrees is best;
On this firm rock, Oh, let my feet be staid,
Until they tread that lone vale dark with shade,
'Till my faint heart shall feel its latest pain,
And throb no more, in this cold breast again,
'Till dying life to life eternal tend,
Hope spring to joy, and faith in vision end.





  1. not O THOU, see errata