Verses on Various Occasions

 1

 2

 3

 4

 5

 6

 7

 8

 9

 10

 11

 12

 13

 14

 15

 16

 17

 18

 19

 20

 21

 22

 23

 24

 25

 26

 27

 28

 29

 30

 31

 32

 33

 34

 35

 36

 37

 38

 39

 40

  41

  42

  43

 44

  45

  46

  47

 48

 49

 50

  51

  52

  53

  54

 55

 56

 57

 58

 59

 60

 61

 62

 63

 64

 65

 66

 67

 68

 69

 70

 71

 72

 73

 74

 75

 76

 77

 78

 79

 80

 81

 82

 83

 84

 85

 86

 87

 88

 89

 90

 91

 92

 93

 94

 95

 96

 97

 98

 99

 100

 101

 102

 103

 104

 105

 106

 107

 108

 109

 110

 111

 112

 113

 114

 115

 116

 117

 118

 119

 120

 121

 122

 123

 124

 125

 126

 127

 128

 129

 130

 131

 132

 133

 134

 135

 136

 137

 138

 139

 140

 141

 142

 143

 144

 145

 146

 147

 148

 149

 150

 151

 152

 153

 154

 155

 156

 157

 158

 159

 160

 161

 162

 163

 164

 165

 166

 167

 168

 169

 170

 171

 172

 173

 174

 175

 176

 Dream of Gerontius

 Appendix

164

 164. St. Philip Neri in his   Mission (A song.)  IN the far North our lot is cast,  Where faithful hearts are few; Still are we Philip's children dear,  And Peter's soldiers true.  Founder and Sire! to mighty Rome,  Beneath St. Peter's shade, Early thy vow of loyal love  And ministry was paid.  The solemn porch, and portal high,  Of Peter was thy home; The world's Apostle he, and thou  Apostle of his Rome.  And first in the old catacombs,  In galleries long and deep, Where martyr Popes had ruled the flock,  And slept their glorious sleep,  There didst thou pass the nights in prayer,  Until at length there came, Down on thy breast, new lit for thee,  The Pentecostal flame;  Then, in that heart-consuming love,  Didst walk the city wide, And lure the noble and the young  From Babel's pomp and pride;  And, gathering them within thy cell,  Unveil the lustre bright, And beauty of thy inner soul,  And gain them by the sight.  And thus to Rome, for Peter's faith  Far known, thou didst impart Thy lessons of the hidden life,  And discipline of heart.  And as the Apostle, on the hill  Facing the Imperial Town, First gazed upon his fair domain,  Then on the cross lay down,  So thou, from out the streets of Rome  Didst turn thy failing eye

 Unto that mount of martyrdom,

  Take leave of it, and die. [n.]  The Oratory .  1850.

 Note

 On the day of his death, Philip, "at the beginning  of his Mass, remained for some time looking  fixedly at the hill of St. Onofrio, which was visible  from the chapel, just as if he saw some great  vision. On coming to the Gloria in Excelsis, he  began to sing, which was a very unusual thing  for him, and he sang the whole of it with the  greatest joy and devotion," etc.  Bacci's Life.