Poems of Felicia Hemans in The Amulet, 1826/Christ in the Garden

2925202Poems of Felicia Hemans in The Amulet, 1826Christ in the Garden1825Felicia Hemans


CHRIST IN THE GARDEN.

BY MRS. HEMANS.


He knelt—the Saviour knelt and pray'd,
    When but His Father's eye
Look'd thro' the lonely Garden's shade,
    On that dread agony!
The Lord of All above, beneath,
Was bow'd with sorrow unto death.

The sun set in a fearful hour;
    The heavens might well grow dim,
When this mortality had power,
    So to o'ershadow Him!
That He who gave man's breath might know
The very depths of human woe.

He knew them all!—the doubt, the strife,
    The faint perplexing dread;
The mists that hang o'er parting life,
    All darken'd round His head;
And the Deliverer knelt to pray—
Yet pass'd it not, that cup, away!


It pass'd not—tho' the stormy wave
    Had sunk beneath His tread;
It pass'd not—tho' to Him the grave
    Had yielded up its dead.
But there was sent Him, from on high,
A gift of strength, for man to die!

And was His mortal hour beset
    With anguish and dismay?
How may we meet our conflict yet
    In the dark, narrow way?
How, but thro' Him, that path who trod?—
Save, or we perish, Son of God!