THE TRAVELLER’S EVENING SONG.

Father! guide me! Day declines,

Hollow winds are in the pines;

Darkly waves each giant bough

O’er the sky’s last crimson glow:

Hush’d is now the convent’s bell,

Which erewhile with breezy swell

From the purple mountains bore

Greeting to the sunset-shore.

Now the sailor’s vesper-hymn

Dies away.

Father! in the forest dim,

Be my stay!

In the low and shivering thrill

Of the leaves that late hung still;

In the dull and muffled tone

Of the sea-wave’s distant moan;

In the deep tints of the sky,

There are signs of tempests nigh.

Ominous, with sullen sound,

Falls the closing dusk around.

Father! through the storm and shade

O’er the wild,

Oh! be Thou the lone one’s aid—

Save thy child!

Many a swift and sounding plume

Homewards, through the boding gloom,

O’er my way hath flitted fast

Since the farewell sunbeam pass’d

From the chestnut’s ruddy bark,

And the pools, now lone and dark,

Where the wakening night-winds sigh

Through the long reeds mournfully.

Homeward, homeward, all things haste—

God of might!

Shield the homeless midst the waste!

Be his light!

In his distant cradle-nest,

Now my babe is laid to rest;

Beautiful its slumber seems

With a glow of heavenly dreams—

Beautiful, o’er that bright sleep.

Hang soft eyes of fondness deep,

Where his mother bends to pray

For the loved and far away.

Father! guard that household bower,

Hear that prayer!

Back, through thine all-guiding power,

Lead me there!

Darker, wilder grows the night;

Not a star sends quivering light

Through the massy arch of shade

By the stern, old forest made.

Thou! to whose unslumbering eyes

All my pathway open lies,

By thy Son who knew distress

In the lonely wilderness,

Where no roof to that bless’d head

Shelter gave—

Father! through the time of dread,

Save—oh, save!