Vanity of Life by John Newton
- The evils that beset our path
- Who can prevent or cure?
- We stand upon the brink of death
- When most we seem secure.
- If we today sweet peace possess,
- It soon may be withdrawn;
- Some change may plunge us in distress,
- Before tomorrow's dawn.
- Disease and pain invade our health
- And find an easy prey;
- And oft, when least expected, wealth
- Takes wings and flies away.
- A fever or a blow can shake
- Our wisdom's boasted rule;
- And of the brightest genius make
- A madman or a fool.
- The gourds, from which we look for fruit,
- Produce us only pain;
- A worm unseen attacks the root,
- And all our hopes are vain.
- I pity those who seek no more
- Than such a world can give;
- Wretched they are, and blind, and poor,
- And dying while they live.
- Since sin has filled the earth with woe,
- And creatures fade and die;
- Lord wean our hearts from things below,
- And fix our hopes on high.
This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.