Hymns

When slumber seals our weary eyes,

by John Newton·1779·Meter 8.8.8.8 (LM)

Based on Isa 29:8

1

When slumber seals our weary eyes,
The busy fancy wakeful keeps;
The scenes which then before us rise,
Prove, something in us never sleeps.

2

As in another world we seem,
A new creation of our own;
All appears real, though a dream,
And all familiar, though unknown.

3

Sometimes the mind beholds again
The past days business in review;
Resumes the pleasure or the pain,
And sometimes all we meet is new.

4

What schemes we form, what pains we take!
We fight, we run, we fly, we fall;
But all is ended when we wake,
We scarcely then a trace recall.

5

But though our dreams are often wild,
Like clouds before the driving storm;
Yet some important may be styled,
Sent to admonish or inform.

6

What mighty agents have access,
What friends from heav'n, or foes from hell,
Our minds to comfort or distress,
When we are sleeping, who can tell?

7

One thing, at least, and 'tis enough,
We learn from this surprising fact;
Our dreams afford sufficient proof,
The soul, without the flesh, can act.

8

This life, which mortals so esteem,
That many choose it for their all,
They will confess, was but a dream,
When wakened by death's aweful call.

Creation