The Rainbow and the Rose by E. (Edith) Nesbit
page 66 of 90 (73%)
page 66 of 90 (73%)
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But I have kept your gate this Easter Eve,
And now your house to heaven shines like a star To show the Angels where God's children are; And in this day your house has served God more Than in the praise and prayer of all its years before. "Yet I must leave you, though I fain would stay, For there are other gates I go to keep Of houses round whose walls, long day by day, Shut out of hope and love, poor sinners weep-- Barred folds that keep out God's poor wandering sheep-- I must teach these that gates where God comes in Must not be shut at all to pain, or want, or sin. "The voice of prayer is very soft and weak, And sorrow and sin have voices very strong; Prayer is not heard in heaven when those twain speak, The voice of prayer faints in the voice of wrong By the just man endured--oh, Lord, how long?-- If ye would have your prayers in heaven be heard, Look that wrong clamour not with too intense a word. "But when true love is shed on want and sin, Their cry is changed, and grows to such a voice As clamours sweetly at heaven to be let in-- Such sound as makes the saints in heaven rejoice; Pure gold of prayer, purged of the vain alloys Of idleness--that is the sound most dear Of all the earthly sounds God leans from heaven to hear. |
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