, 58.
Who heeds not experience, 265.
Who is as the Christian great, 37.
Who learns and learns, and acts not, 255.
Who liveth best? Not he whose sail, 180.
Who loves, no law can ever bind, 169.
Who ne'er has suffered, he has lived but half, 161.
Who never doubted never half believed, 186.
Who seeks for heaven alone, 76.
Whoever plants a leaf beneath the sod, 193.
Why comes temptation but for men to meet, 16.
Why fret thee, soul, 94.
Why not leave them all with Jesus, 242.
Why wakes not life the desert bare and lone, 265.
Why win we not at once what we in prayer require, 137.
With comrade Duty, in the dark, 31.
With fame in just proportion envy grows, 40.
With patient course thy path of duty run, 198.
With silence only as their benediction, 156.
With strength of righteous purpose, 196.
Without haste and without rest, 250.
Work for some good, be it ever so slowly, 65.
Worry and Fret were two little men, 197.
Wouldst thou from sorrow find a sweet relief, 161.
Wouldst thou go forth to bless, 65.
Yes, Lord, one great eternal yes, 194.
Yes, Lord. Yet some must, 54.
Yes, we do differ when we most agree, 184.
Yet I argue not Against thy hand, 175.
Yet, in the maddening maze of things, 197.
Yet Love will dream and Faith will trust, 275.
Yet sometimes glimmers on my sight, 173.
Ye who would have your features florid, 254.
You can never tell when you do an act, 59.
You say, "Where goest thou?" 267.
You will find that luck, 21.
INDEX TO FIRST LINES IN APPENDIX
A fire-mist and a planet, 283.
A good man never dies, 283.
A rose to the living is more, 287.
Anew we pledge ourselves to Thee, 287.
Be strong! We are not here to play, 278.
But let my due feet never fail, 286.
Canst thou see no beauty nigh? 287.
Count that day really worse than lost, 287.
Do you go to my school? 283.
Father of mercies, thy children, 282.
Feel glum? Keep mum, 287.
For radiant health I praise not, 285.
For the right against the wrong, 287.
Give me my scallop-shell of quiet, 282.
Give us men! strong and stalwart, 286.
How shall we tell an angel, 282.
I lay me down to sleep, 281.
I lift my head and walk my ways, 281.
I sent my soul through the Invisible, 287.
I will not doubt though, 286.
If by one word I help another, 287.
"If I have eaten my morsel alone," 284.
If I lay waste and wither up, 278.
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