THE RIVERS.

Go! trace th’ unnumber’d streams, o’er earth

That wind their devious course,

That draw from Alpine heights their birth,

Deep vale, or cavern-source.

Some by majestic cities glide,

Proud scenes of man’s renown;

Some lead their solitary tide

Where pathless forests frown.

Some calmly roll o’er golden sands,

Where Afric’s deserts lie;

Or spread, to clothe rejoicing lands

With rich fertility.

These bear the bark, whose stately sail

Exulting seems to swell;

While these, scarce rippled by a gale,

Sleep in the lonely dell.

Yet on, alike, though swift or slow

Their various waves may sweep,

Through cities or through shades, they flow

To the same boundless deep.

Oh! thus, whate’er our path of life,

Through sunshine or through gloom,

Through scenes of quiet or of strife,

Its end is still the tomb.

The chief whose mighty deeds we hail,

The monarch throned on high,

The peasant in his native vale—

All journey on to die!

But if Thy guardian care, my God!

The pilgrim’s course attend,

I will not fear the dark abode

To which my footsteps bend.

For thence thine all-redeeming Son,

Who died the world to save,

In light, in triumph, rose, and won

The victory from the grave!