176. The Night and the Morning

1 To dream a troubled dream, and then awaken
To the soft gladness of a summer sky;
To dream ourselves alone, unloved, forsaken,
And then to wake 'mid smiles and love and joy;
To look at evening on the storm's rude motion,
The cloudy tumult of the fretted deep;
And then at day burst upon that same ocean,
Sooth'd to the stillness of its stillest sleep.

2 So runs our course: so tells the Church her story,
So to the end shall it be ever told;
Brief shame on earth, but after shame the glory,
That wanes not, dims not, never waxes old.
Lord Jesus, come, and end this trouble dreaming!
Dark shadows vanish, rosy twilight break!
Morn of the true and real, burst forth, calm beaming,
Day of the beautiful, arise, awake!

Text Information
First Line: To dream a troubled dream, and then awaken
Title: The Night and the Morning
Publication Date: 1902
Source: Quarterly Journal of Prophecy (London)
Notes: Public Domain.
Tune Information
Name: [To dream a troubled dream, and then awaken]
Composer: F. S. Stanton, Mus. Lic.
Key: F Major
Notes: Public Domain.



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