A Hidden Life and Other Poems by George MacDonald
page 83 of 339 (24%)
page 83 of 339 (24%)
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That passes heedless by!"
My soul replied: "A faintness soon Will shroud thee in its fold; The hours will go,--the fearful noon Rise, pass--and thou art cold. "And for thy suffering, what to thee Is that? or care of thine? Thou living branch upon the tree Whose root is the Divine! "'Tis His to care that thou endure; That pain shall grow or fade; With bleeding hands hang on thy cure, He knows what He hath made." And still, for all the inward wail, My foot was firmly pressed; For still the fear lest I should fail Was stronger than the rest. And thus I stood, until the strife The bonds of slumber brake; I felt as I had ruined life, Had fled, and come awake. Yet I was glad, my heart confessed, The trial went not on; Glad likewise I had stood the test, |
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