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Death and war. 1778 by John Newton
- Hark! how time’s wide sounding bell
- Strikes on each attentive ear!
- Tolling loud the solemn knell
- Of the late departed year:
- Years, like mortals, wear away,
- Have their birth, and dying day;
- Youthful spring, and wintry age,
- Then to others quit the stage.
- Sad experience may relate
- What a year the last has been!
- Crops of sorrow have been great,
- From the fruitful seeds of sin:
- O! what numbers gay and blithe,
- Fell by death’s unsparing scythe?
- While they thought the world their own,
- Suddenly he mowed them down.
- See how war, with dreadful stride,
- Marches at the Lord’s command,
- Spreading desolation wide,
- Through a once much-favored land:
- War, with heart and arms of steel,
- Preys on thousands at a meal;
- Daily drinking human gore,
- Still he thirsts, and calls for more.
- If the God, Whom we provoke,
- Hither should His way direct;
- What a sin-avenging stroke
- May a land, like this, expect!
- They who now securely sleep,
- Quickly then, would wake and weep;
- And too late would learn to fear,
- When they saw the danger near.
- You are safe, who know His love,
- He will all His truth perform;
- To your souls a refuge prove
- From the rage of every storm:
- But we tremble for the youth;
- Teach them, Lord, Thy saving truth;
- Join them to Thy faithful few,
- Be to them a Refuge too.
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