The halls of heaven were full of joy,
The quivering air was blue
With incense, and with candles gay
The mansions of eternal day
Were gleaming through and through.
The Saints in Glory danced and sang
In robes of glittering white—
Till heaven with their music rang,
The Saints in Glory danced and sang,
And filled themselves with light.
Through groves of trees and lawns of flowers
They trod the mystic maze
Of many a sacred rigadoon,
Danced to a fiddling angel’s tune,
With endless roundelays.
One only walked apart and sighed,
In all that blissful horde,
Shrank from the revel, and alone
Poured from an aching heart his moan,
And He was Christ the Lord.
He leaned across the fiery gate
Which stands above the stars,
And from the fields where angels dwell
Shuts the red cemeteries of hell
With seven burning bars.
[Pg 24]
He leaned above the direful deep
Where tortured spirits lie,
He saw their helpless agonies,
He saw their wild and weeping eyes
Turned up towards the sky.
And all the sorrows of His heart
Were grinding in His breast,
He longed to comfort those poor sheep,
To give them drink, and let them sleep
On the green hills of rest.
Nought were to Him the heavenly fields,
The flocks His blood had bought,
He thought alone of His lost sheep,
Of those who toss, and starve, and weep,
Whom He had vainly sought.
And as the Saviour watched them there
In all their sweat and fear,
His love and longing rose so high,
That from His tender, pitying eye
There fell a holy Tear.
The tear rolled down, until it dropped
Into the blackest hell,
And straight there were strange things to see
Within that pit of misery
Where the pure token fell.
The Tear became a mighty sea,
Which raged, and roared, and rolled,
And filled each black and gaping gorge,
And quenched each red and belching forge,
And wrecked each towering hold.
[Pg 25]
And all the lost and sinning souls
Were borne upon its waves—
By that one Tear the Saviour wept
The doomed of ages all were swept
Out of their living graves.
And, carried on the heaving tide,
The lost souls rose to heaven,
Tumbling and drowning, hand in hand,
They reached the coolness of that land
Where all things are forgiven.
Women, and men, and children too,
All blasted, scorched, and red,
Were washed up to the Saviour’s feet,
By that one Tear of pity sweet
His loving eye had shed.
The Saints in Glory danced and sang,
They sang and danced so high
They saw not that their Lord was gone,
Or that His white and fiery throne
Stood empty in the sky.
They saw Him not as He stooped down
To lift each cowering slave,
They saw Him not, so great their bliss,
On each scarred forehead lay His kiss,
As sign that He forgave.
He could not take those guilty ones
To where the guiltless throng
Pealed forth their own salvation’s praise,
And through the everlasting days
Shouted their triumph song.
[Pg 26]
He led them to the wilderness,
Where stood the Holy Cross,
And from the timber of that Tree
He built a house of welcome, free
To those lame sons of loss.
The Saints in Glory feasted on
The honey-dews of heaven,
So all those sinners had for food
Was their Lord’s body and His blood,
To their great hunger given.
The Saints in Glory danced and sang,
Nor missed Him from their sport,
And so He made His dwelling-place
With the poor pensioners of grace
His pardoning love had bought.
And never to the halls of bliss
He lifts a longing eye,
The poor souls never hear Him groan,
Or sigh because His great white throne
Stands empty in the sky.
He leads them through the wilderness,
He makes their faces wet
With water from a desert steam,
The black past as an evil dream
He helps them to forget.
He is the comforter of those
Whom stormy seas have tossed,
He dries the eyes of those that weep,
He is the shepherd of lame sheep,
The Saviour of the Lost.