Page:FirstSeriesOfHymns.djvu/70

10 The flowers, beneath the evening star, Drink up the dewdrops of the night. The lambs are by their mothers laid, The lark is brooding o'er its nest; And when the evening prayer is made, E'en busy man will be at rest.

 

liv'd, as holy legends tell, A widow ag'd, infirm, and poor, Who hardly earn'd her daily bread By weaving at her cottage door.

And scanty is the meed that she Can for her toilsome work receive, For year by year, one little web Is all that she has strength to weave.

The year is past, the little web Lies stretch'd upon the cottage floor; And she, with hopeful trust and joy, Is musing on her promis'd store;

When fiercely to her lone abode A troop of soldiers bursts its way, And heedless of her prayers and tears, Has borne the little web away.

To seek the holy Oswyn's tomb, With tott'ring step, behold her speed, And beg the sainted martyr's prayer May help her in her hour of need.

But vain were all her sighs and tears, No sign of peace St. Oswyn shews; All answerless she turns away, And full of sadness homeward goes. 