THE HOUR OF PRAYER.

“Pregar, pregar, pregar,

Ch’ altro ponno i mortali al pianger nati?”   Alfieri.

Child, amidst the flowers at play,

While the red light fades away;

Mother, with thine earnest eye

Ever following silently;

Father, by the breeze of eve

Call’d thy harvest-work to leave—

Pray: ere yet the dark hours be,

Lift the heart and bend the knee!

Traveller, in the stranger’s land,

Far from thine own household band;

Mourner, haunted by the tone

Of a voice from this world gone;

Captive, in whose narrow cell

Sunshine hath not leave to dwell;

Sailor on the darkening sea—

Lift the heart and bend the knee!

Warrior, that from battle won

Breathest now at set of sun;

Woman, o’er the lowly slain

Weeping on his burial-plain;

Ye that triumph, ye that sigh,

Kindred by one holy tie,

Heaven’s first star alike ye see—

Lift the heart and bend the knee!