“I GO TO PREPARE A PLACE FOR YOU.”

My Savior! is my place prepared,

And for my welcome hast thou cared,

When death shall call for me?

When I shall rest beneath the sod,

Shall angels bear my soul to God?

O, Savior! can it be?

Exceeding grace! I raise my eyes,

All wet with tear-drops, to the skies,

And bless thee for thy love;

I would not always dwell below,

Where death has torn my heartstrings so;

’Twill ne’er be thus above.

And yet, ’tis well—’tis well for me,

And well for those who’ve gone to thee,

That thou didst call them home;

I love those dear ones far too well,

To wish that they again should dwell

Where I in sadness roam.

I would not ask them now to change

Their peaceful home; they’d think it strange,

And ’twould be strange indeed

If I, who am a pris’ner here,

And daily shed the silent tear,

Should mourn when they are freed.

I feel not as an exile feels,

When lonely sadness o’er him steals,

And hope forsakes his breast;

I am not banish’d from my home;

I have not many days to roam

Ere I shall be—at rest.

O, blessed Savior! now I see

Great preparations made for me,

In mansions bright and fair;

For thou, with sweet attractive art,

To make Heaven dearer to my heart,

Hast placed my jewels there!

Boston, October 11, 1840.