"Great and apparent dangers" are the words, None greater, more apparent, than these past; The glory of deliverance be the Lord's, Who gave us strength and made our strength to last. What have we learnt? Much more than knowledge tells That merely probes and calculates and spans; This universe employs its parables To teach us of God's goodnessyes, and Man's. For Man on earth was never an accident; He has that in him which no science weighs Faith's airy fire that makes him instrument Of purest purpose, how so dark his days. Are there not scales in Heaven? We live not here Unwatched, untended of Almighty power; Be Liberty and Justice of good cheer: This is the lesson of this fought-for hour. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THISTLE by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS AN EXPOSTULATION by ISAAC BICKERSTAFFE THE OLD VICARAGE, GRANTCHESTER by RUPERT BROOKE LAST WORDS TO A DUMB FRIEND by THOMAS HARDY LAYS OF FRANCE: SONG (2) by MARIE DE FRANCE |