1 My days, my weeks, my months, my years,
Fly rapid as the whirling spheres
Around the steady pole;
Time, like the tide, its motion keeps,
And I shall launch through endless deeps,
Where endless ages roll.
2 The grave is near the cradle seen,
How swift the moments pass between!
And whisper as they fly--
Unthinking man, remember this,
Thou, 'midst thy sublunary bliss,
Must groan, and gasp, and die!
3 But shall my soul be then extinct,
And cease to be, or cease to think?
Great God! it cannot be;
Thou, soul immortal! canst not die;
What wilt thou do, or whither fly,
When death shall set thee free?
4 My soul, attend the solemn call;
Thine earthly tents must quickly fall
And thou must take thy flight
Beyond the vast extensive blue,
To love and sing as angels do,
Or sink in endless night.
| Text Information | |
|---|---|
| First Line: | My days, my weeks, my months, my years |
| Meter: | C. P. M. |
| Language: | English |
| Publication Date: | 1867 |
| Topic: | Life: Its Brevity |
| Notes: | Public Domain. |