WRITTEN AT THE DELAWARE WATER GAP.

Great and omnipotent that Power must be,

That wings the whirlwind and directs the storm,

That, by a strong convulsion, severed thee,

And wrought this wondrous chasm in thy form.

Man is a dweller, where, in some past day,

Thy rock-ribbed frame majestically rose;

The river rushes on its new-made way,

And all is life where all was once repose.

Pleased, as I gazed upon thy lofty brow

Where Nature seems her loveliest robes to wear,

I felt that Pride at such a scene must bow,

And own its insignificancy there.

Oh Thou, to whom directing worlds is play,

Thy condescension without bounds must be,

If man, the frail ephemera of a day,

Be graciously regarded still by Thee.

Here, as I ponder on Thy mighty deeds,

And marvel at Thy bounteousness to me,

While wrapt in solemn awe, my bosom bleeds,

Lest recklessly I may have wounded Thee,—

Wounded that Being who is fain to call

The heavy-laden and the wearied home;

The dear Redeemer! He who died that all

Might to his glorious in-gathering come.

1818. E. P. K.