| Henry Charles Beeching, ed. (18591919). Lyra Sacra: A Book of Religious Verse. 1903. | | | | The Voice of Nature | | By John Keble (17921866) |
| | | SIN is with man at morning break, | |
| And through the livelong day | |
| Deafens the ear that fain would wake | |
| To Natures simple lay. | |
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| But when eves silent footfall steals | 5 |
| Along the eastern sky, | |
| And one by one to earth reveals | |
| Those purer fires on high, | |
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| When one by one each human sound | |
| Dies on the awful ear, | 10 |
| Then Natures voice no more is drownd, | |
| She speaks, and we must hear. | |
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| Then pours she on the Christian heart | |
| That warning still and deep, | |
| At which high spirits of old would start | 15 |
| Even from their Pagan sleep, | |
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| Just guessing, through their murky blind | |
| Few, faint, and baffling sight, | |
| Streaks of a brighter heaven behind, | |
| A cloudless depth of light. | 20 | | | |
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