Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Horatius BonarThe Book of God
T
Expressed in words divine,
The utterance of heavenly lips
In every sacred line.
Have reached us from afar,
Than the bright gold more golden they,
Purer than purest star.
Than the eternal hills;
Far sweeter and more musical
Than music of earth’s rills.
Than the fresh flowers of earth,
More fragrant than the fragrant climes
Where odors have their birth.
From the celestial mines,
A sunbeam from that holy heaven
Where holy sunlight shines.
In man’s poor human speech,
Telling of things unseen, unheard,
Beyond all human reach.
From this world’s wisdom vain;
No filling up from human wells,
Or sublunary rain.
Nor brilliance from its gold;
It sparkles with its own glad light,
As in the ages old.
With fiery force and strain,
Brought down on it in rage and hate,
Have struck this gem in vain.
Ten thousand storms their will
Of foam and rage have wildly spent;
It lifts its calm face still.
Without or change or age,
The word of majesty and light,
The church’s heritage.