966. L. M. Miss Carey.

Light and Darkness.

1Our Father, when beside the tomb

We mourn the unconscious dead below,

Thy angels come amid the gloom,

With solace for our doubt and woe.

And looking through the shades of death

To that bright land where none can die,

How clearly then the eye of faith

Beholds the portals of the sky!

2And they whose lives serenely even

In pleasure's flowery way have kept,

Have never known the love of heaven,

As they whose souls have mourned and wept!

For stricken by the hand of woe,

The soul must seek a Father's love,

And they who weep can only know

What healing balm is found above!

3And one repentant hour of tears,

Of sweet communion and of prayer,

Is worth a thousand, thousand years

Where pleasure's thoughtless children are!

And O, if ever man below

Draws nearer to the eternal throne,

'Tis when his soul, subdued by woe,

Seeks refuge with its God above!