Legends and Lyrics - Second Series
LIGHT AND SHADE

Adelaide A

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Thou hast done well to kneel and say,

"Since He who gave can take away,

And bid me suffer, I obey."

And also well to tell thy heart

That good lies in the bitterest part,

And thou wilt profit by her smart.

But bitter hours come to all:

When even truths like these will pall,

Sick hearts for humbler comfort call.

Then I would have thee strive to see

That good and evil come to thee,

As one of a great family.

And as material life is planned,

That even the loneliest one must stand

Dependent on his brother's hand;

So links more subtle and more fine

Bind every other soul to thine

In one great brotherhood divine.

Nor with thy share of work be vexed;

Though incomplete, and even perplex,

It fits exactly to the next.

What seems so dark to thy dim sight

May be a shadow, seen aright,

Making some brightness doubly bright.

The flash that struck thy tree,--no more

To shelter thee,--lets Heaven's blue floor

Shine where it never shone before.

Thy life that has been dropped aside

Into Time's stream, may stir the tide,

In rippled circles spreading wide.

The cry wrung from thy spirit's pain

May echo on some far-off plain,

And guide a wanderer home again.

Fail--yet rejoice; because no less

The failure that makes thy distress

May teach another full success.

It may be that in some great need

Thy life's poor fragments are decreed

To help build up a lofty deed.

Thy heart should throb in vast content,

Thus knowing that it was but meant

As chord in one great instrument;

That even the discord in thy soul

May make completer music roll

From out the great harmonious whole.

It may be, that when all is light,

Deep set within that deep delight

Will be to know WHY all was right;

To hear life's perfect music rise,

And while it floods the happy skies,

Thy feeble voice to recognise.

Then strive more gladly to fulfil

Thy little part. This darkness still

Is light to every loving will.

And trust,--as if already plain,

How just thy share of loss and pain

Is for another fuller gain.

I dare not limit time or place

Touched by thy life: nor dare I trace

Its far vibrations into space.

ONE only knows. Yet if the fret

Of thy weak heart, in weak regret

Needs a more tender comfort yet:

Then thou mayst take thy loneliest fears,

The bitterest drops of all thy tears,

The dreariest hours of all thy years;

And through thy anguish there outspread,

May ask that God's great love would shed

Blessings on one beloved head.

And thus thy soul shall learn to draw

Sweetness from out that loving law

That sees no failure and no flaw,

Where all is good. And life is good,

Were the one lesson understood

Of its most sacred brotherhood.

This book comes from:m.funovel.com。

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