FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48  
49   50   51   52   53   54   55   >>  
ee just how sweet all is, how good, and be resigned To sit thus in the afternoon, alone and left behind. SAVOIR C'EST PARDONNER. Myriad rivers seek the sea, The sea rejects not any one; A myriad rays of light may be Clasped in the compass of one sun; And myriad grasses, wild and free, Drink of the dew which faileth none. A myriad worlds encompass ours; A myriad souls our souls enclose; And each, its sins and woes and powers, The Lord He sees, the Lord He knows, And from the Infinite Knowledge flowers The Infinite Pity's fadeless rose. Lighten our darkness, Lord, most wise; All-seeing One, give us to see; Our judgments are profanities, Our ignorance is cruelty, While Thou, knowing all, dost not despise To pardon even such things as we. MORNING. O word and thing most beautiful! Our yesterday was cold and dull, Gray mists obscured the setting sun, Its evening wept with sobbing rain; But to and fro, mid shrouding night, Some healing angel swift has run, And all is fresh and fair again. O, word and thing most beautiful! The hearts, which were of cares so full, The tired hands, the tired feet, So glad of night, are glad of morn,-- Where are the clouds of yesterday? The world is good, the world is sweet, And life is new and hope re-born. O, word and thing most beautiful! O coward soul and sorrowful, Which sighs to note the ebbing light Give place to evening's shadowy gray! What are these things but parables,-- That darkness heals the wrongs of day, And dawning clears all mists of night. O, word and thing most beautiful! The little sleep our cares to lull, The long, soft dusk and then sunrise, To waken fresh and angel fair, Lite all renewed and cares forgot, Ready for Heaven's glad surprise. So Christ, who is our Light, be there. A BLIND SINGER. In covert of a leafy porch, Where woodbine clings, And roses drop their crimson leaves, He sits and sings; With soft brown crest erect to hear, And drooping wings. Shut in a narrow cage, which bars His eager flight, Shut in the darker prison-house Of blinded sight, Alike to him are sun and stars, The day, the night. But all the fervor of high noon, Hushed, fragrant, strong, And all the peace of moonlit nights When nights a
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48  
49   50   51   52   53   54   55   >>  



Top keywords:

beautiful

 

myriad

 

Infinite

 

darkness

 

evening

 

nights

 
yesterday
 

things

 

sunrise

 
forgot

Christ

 

surprise

 

Heaven

 

renewed

 
clears
 

sorrowful

 
ebbing
 

coward

 

wrongs

 

dawning


parables
 

shadowy

 

blinded

 

prison

 

flight

 
darker
 

moonlit

 

strong

 

fragrant

 

fervor


Hushed

 

crimson

 

clings

 

woodbine

 

covert

 
leaves
 

drooping

 
narrow
 

SINGER

 

Lighten


Clasped

 
judgments
 

despise

 

pardon

 

knowing

 

profanities

 
ignorance
 

cruelty

 
fadeless
 
enclose