Vigilate et Orate
Patient Watcher, worn and weary,
Waiting, waking
For the breaking
Of the God’s day, on the dreary
Eerie night of sin and care,
Vigilate,
Et orate,
Till the East with morning flare.
Watch and pray, with earnest asking,
With the anguish
Or work-language,
All thy soul and body tasking,
Basking in no sensuous glare;
Laborare
Est orare;
Work is worship’s worthiest prayer,
With the plow and ringing hammer,
With thy words-play,
And thy sword-away,
Keel and wheel, that in their clamor,
Stammer not, ring down despair:
Vigilate
Et orate,
Lest the foe come unaware.
Wrong is strong but right eternal;
Ever onward,
God-ward, sun-ward,
Gathering in fields supernal,
Vernal newness firm and fair,
Vigilate
Et orate,
Never swerving, do and darel
Smite the flinty conscience, sleeping,
Paralytic
In mephitic,
Sin-reek, till thy blows down-sweeping
Leaping fire-flakes fling in daring,
Laborate
Et orate;
Startling morning from its lair.
God works only with the Worker;
Idle begging,
Lets the lagging
World drift back, till ever murker,
Lurk her doom-clouds everywhere;
Vigilate,
Et orate,
Heaven and hell thy vigil share.
- Title
- Vigilate et Orate
- First Line
- Patient Watcher, worn and weary
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Small Scrapbook 115
- For the Hartford Republican
- Date
- Date tbd
- Subject
- Religion
- Labor
- Comments
- Title means "Watch and Pray" - from Matthew 26:41: "Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."
- The second stanza contains the couplet "Laborare est orare" which means "To work is to pray"
- In the fifth stanza, the word "daring" seems to have a hand-written correction by George S. Burleigh, but I (Rycenga) cannoot figure it out.
- Rating
- ★★★
- Media
-
Vigilate et Orate