Let praise and song and psalmody In chorus rise to God on high! For He hath made this glorious day! Be glad! Rejoice! Hallelujah!
ROSH HASHANAH
Into the tomb of ages past Another year hath now been cast; Shall time unheeded take its flight, Nor leave one ray of higher light, That on man's pilgrimage may shine And lead his soul to spheres divine?
Ah! which of us, if self-reviewed, Can boast unfailing rectitude? Who can declare his wayward will More prone to righteous deed than ill? Or, in his retrospect of life,
No traces find of passion's strife?
With firm resolve your bosoms nerve The God of right alone to serve; Speech, thought, and act to regulate, By what His perfect laws dictate; Nor from His holy precepts stray, By worldly idols lured away.
Peace to the house of Israel! May joy within it ever dwell! May sorrow on the opening year, Forgetting its accustomed tear,
With smiles again fond kindred meet, With hopes revived the festal greet!
THE TWO VOICES
MEDITATION FOR THE NEW YEAR Between the past and future year We pause awhile in our career
Two voices to attend.
One speaks of life and light and bloom, One warns us of the unseen tomb To which all must descend.
Experience and hope thus stand Addressing all the human band, As on they swiftly speed. Young pilgrims but the promise hear, That time in every coming year
Will but to pleasure lead.
Few even of maturer age
Can that grave wisdom long engage
Which for reflection calls.
Still blind and rash, they forward pass, The last few minutes of their glass
Wasting in mirth's gay halls.
O, listen to the warning tone
In sorrow sent from mem'ry's throne, Ye children of the dust!
No falsehood rests upon the tongue That counsels both the old and young In God alone to trust.
Put off each ling'ring weakness now! Faith will your minds with strength endow Self-conquest to achieve ;-
Will give you fortitude to bear
The chastenings, frequent and severe,
You may on earth receive.
(From "The Day of Atonement") Lo! above the mournful chanting,
Rise the fuller-sounded wailings Of the soul's most solemn anthem. Hark! the strains of deep Kol Nidra- Saddest music ever mortal Taught his lips to hymn or sound!
Not the heart of one lone mortal
Told his anguish in that strain; All the sorrow, pain, and struggles Of a people in despair,
Gathered from the vale of weeping, Through the ages of distress.
'Tis a mighty cry of beings
Held in bondage and affliction; All the wailing and lamenting Of a homeless people, roaming O'er the plains and scattered hamlets Of a world, without a refuge;
All the sorrows, trials, bereavements,— Loss of country, home, and people,- In one mighty strain uniting,
Chant for every age its wail;
Make the suffering years re-echo
With the wounds and pains of yore; Give a voice to every martyr Ever hushed to death by pain; Every smothered shriek of daughter Burned upon the fagot's bier; Bring the wander-years and exile, Persecution's harsh assailment, Ghetto misery and hounding, To the ears of men to-day; Link the dark and dreary ages With the brighter future's glow; Weave the past and hopeful present; Bind the living with the sleeping; Even with the dead uniting,
When the soul would join with God.
Slowly creep the muffled murmurs.
As the leaves and flowers, conspiring,
Steal a breeze from summer's chamber, Hum and mumble as they stroke it, Smooth, caress, and gently coy it, So this murmur spreads the voices Of the praying Synagogue, As each lip repeats the sinning Of his selfish, godless living; By each murmur low recounting Every single sin and crime:- How he falsified his neighbor, Made a stumbling-block for blindness, Cursed the deaf, unstaid the cripple, Played his son and daughter wrong, Tattled of his wife's behavior, Made his father's age a load, Spoke belittling of his mother, Took advantage of the stupid, Made the hungry buy their bread, Turned the needy from his threshold, Shut the stranger from his fold, Never begged forgiveness, pardon For a wrong aimed at a foe, Never weighed the love or mercy Of the Father of the world. Low the lips are now repenting; Every murmur is a sob
Ebbing from the font of being.
Who has ever heard Kol Nidra Gushing from the breast of man;
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