When Saints of Old
by Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton
When saints of old sad vigil kept 
Beside the brooks of Babylon, 
And swathed in sackcloth, silent wept 
Because the light of Heaven was gone, 
Some prophet old, in desert dress. 
Would raise his rugged voice and cry: 
''Why sit ye here in such distress if 
Ye ask deliverance, it is nigh, 
Ye crave a monarch who shall show 
Compassion for the suffering poor. 
That sceptred king ye soon shall know. 
His chariot wheels are at the door. 
One starlit night a little child. 
The King so long expected, came. 
To still the sea of passion wild. 
The sins that darken life to shame, 
Deep in the conscience of the race 
To light red judgment fires, whose gleam 
Should penetrate the darkest place 
Of human thought, or deed, or dream. 
His throne was laid in law and love. 
The crown he wore was righteousness. 
Of the symbolic sacred dove 
His signet had the sole impress. 
Thus came he once, but every age 
Beholds that sovereign come again. 
The war with wrong afresh to wage. 
The love to seek of sorrowing men. 
And while we sit in vigil sad 
Beside our brooks of Babylon, 
And mourn because the world is mad. 
And Truth's majestic empire done, 
God's prophets, as in ages old 
In Judah and in Galilee, 
Proclaim that lust and love of gold 
Shall not enthroned forever be, 
But humbled to their rightful place 
Of thralls and subject powers, shall stand 
Subdued and meek before his face 
Who sits at last in sole command; 
That all the lies men love shall flee 
Like ghosts that dread the approaching sun, 
Whene'er the king in majesty 
Declares the. reign of error done; 
That redder judgment fires shall glow, 
And yet sweet love increase in power, 
Till Time's mixed trumpets cease to blow 
And earth has reached its final hour.