379. Now hush your cries and shed no tear

1 NOW hush your cries and shed no tear,
On such death none should look with fear;
He died a faithful Christian man,
And with his death true life began.

2 Coffin and grave we deck with care,
His body reverently we bear,
It is not dead, but rests in God,
And softly sleeps beneath the sod.

3 It seems as all were over now,--
The heavy limbs, the souless brow,--
Yet through these rigid limbs once more
A nobler life, ere long, shall pour.

4 These bones now dead, again shall feel
New warmth and vigor through them steal,
And reunited they shall soar
On high to live for evermore.

5 This body, lying stiff and stark,
Shall soon rise upward from the dark,
And swiftly mount up through the skies,
Even as the spirit heavenwards flies,

6 The buried grain of wheat must die,
Withered and worthless long must lie,
Yet springs to light all sweet and fair,
And proper fruits shall richly bear.

7 Even so this body, made of dust,
To earth we once again entrust,
Where it shall slumber free from pain,
Till from the dead it rise again.

8 God breathed into this house of clay
The spirit that hath passed away;
The righteous mind, the noble heart,
The living faith did Christ impart.

9 Now earth has hid it from our eyes,
Till God shall bid it wake and rise,
Who ne'er the creature will forget,
On whom His image He hath set.

10 Ah! would that promised day were here,
When Christ shall once again appear,
And bring them to their heavenly home
Who have been buried in the tomb.

Text Information
First Line: Now hush your cries and shed no tear
Meter: L. M.
Language: English
Publication Date: 1893
Topic: Death and Burial
Notes: C. Winkworth, Tr. a.; Hoert auf mit Trauern und Klagen - N. Herman, 1542
Tune Information
(No tune information)



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