And unto and not of the Lamb
Shall be the sacrifice.—Festus.
| In many strange and Gentile lands | Micah v. 8. |
| Where Jacob’s scattered sons are driven, | Jer. xxiii. 8. |
| With longing eyes and lifted hands, | Lam. i. 17. |
| They wait Messiah’s sign from heaven. | Matth. xxiv. 30 |
| The cup of fury they have quaffed, | Isa. li. 17. |
| Till fainted like a weary flock; | Isa. li. 20. |
| But Heaven will soon withdraw the draught, | Isa. li. 22. |
| And give them waters from the rock. | Exod. xvii. 6. |
| What though their bodies, as the ground, | Isa. li. 23. |
| Th’ Assyrian long has trodden o’er! | Isa. lii. 4. |
| Zion, a captive daughter bound, | Isa. lii. 2. |
| Shall rise to know her wrong no more. | Isa. liv. 3, 4. |
| The veil is passing from her eyes, | 2 Cor. iii. 16. |
| The King of Nations she shall see; | Zech. xiv. 9. |
| Judea! from the dust arise! | Isa. lii. 2. |
| Thy ransomed sons return to thee! | Jer. xxxi. 17. |
| How gorgeous shall thy land appear, | Isa. liv. 12. |
| When, like the jewels of a bride, | Isa. xlix. 18. |
| Thy broken bands, all gathered there, | Zech. xi. 14. |
| Shall clothe thy hills on every side! | Isa. xlix. 18. |
| When on thy mount, as prophets taught, | Isa. xxiv. 23. |
| Shall shine the throne of David’s Son; | Ezek. xxxvii. 22. |
| The Gospel’s latest triumphs brought | Micah iv. 2. |
| Where first its glorious course begun. | Luke xxiv. 47. |
| Gentiles and Kings, who thee oppressed, | Isa. lx. 14. |
| Shall to thy gates with praise repair; | Isa. lx. 11. |
| A fold of flocks shall Sharon rest, | Isa. lxv. 10. |
| And clustered fruits its vineyard bear. | Joel ii. 22. |
| Then shall an Eden morn illume | Isa. li. 3. |
| Earth’s fruitful vales, without a thorn: | Isa. lv. 13. |
| The wilderness rejoice and bloom, | Isa. xxxv. 1. |
| And nations in a day be born. | Zech. ii. 11. |
| The Lord his holy arm makes bare; | Isa. lii. 10. |
| Zion! thy cheerful songs employ! | Zeph. iii. 14. |
| Thy robes of bridal beauty wear, | Isa. lii. 1. |
| And shout, ye ransomed race, for joy! | Isa. lii. 9. |
Macaronic Verse.
“A TREATISE OF WINE.”
The following specimen of macaronic verse, from the commonplace book of Richard Hilles, who died in 1535, is probably the best of its kind extant. The scriptural allusions and the large intermixture of Latin evidently point to the refectory of some genial monastery as its source:—
The best tree if ye take intent,
Inter ligna fructifer,
Is the vine tree by good argument,
Dulcia ferens pondera.