From a hymn by Mrs. A.R. Cousin and Samuel Rutherford:
The sands of time are sinking, The dawn of Heaven breaks,
The summer morn I’ve sighed for, The fair sweet morn awakes:
Dark, dark hath been the midnight, But dayspring is at hand,
And glory—glory dwelleth In Immanuel’s land.
Oh! well it is for ever, Oh! well for evermore,
My nest hung in no forest Of all this death-doom’d shore
Yea, let the vain world vanish, As from the ship the strand,
While glory—glory dwelleth In Immanuel’s land
The King there in His beauty, Without a veil, is seen:
It were a well-spent journey, Though seven deaths lay between.
The Lamb, with His fair army, Doth on Mount Zion stand,
And glory—glory dwelleth In Immanuel’s land.
Oh! Christ He is the Fountain, The deep sweet well of love!
The streams on earth I’ve tasted, More deep I’ll drink above:
There, to an ocean fulness, His mercy doth expand,
And glory—glory dwelleth In Immanuel’s land.