FOR years eighteen she, patient soul, Her eyes had graveward sent; Her earthly life was lapt in dole, She was so bowed and bent. What words! To her? Who can be near? What tenderness of hands! Oh! is it strength, or fancy mere? New hope, or breaking bands? The pent life rushes swift along Channels it used to know; Up, up, amid the wondering throng, She rises firm and slow To bend again in grateful awe For will is power at length In homage to the living Law Who gives her back her strength. Uplifter of the down-bent head! Unbinder of the bound! Who seëst all the burdened Who only see the ground! Although they see thee not, nor cry, Thou watchest for the hour To lift the forward-beaming eye, To wake the slumbering power! Thy hand will wipe the stains of time From off the withered face; Upraise thy bowed old men, in prime Of youthful manhood's grace! Like summer days from winter's tomb, Shall rise thy women fair; Gray Death, a shadow, not a doom, Lo, is not anywhere! All ills of life shall melt away As melts a cureless woe, When, by the dawning of the day Surprised, the dream must go. I think thou, Lord, wilt heal me too, Whate'er the needful cure; The great best only thou wilt do, And hoping I endure. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE GUARDIAN OF THE RED DISK (SPOKEN BY A CITIZEN OF MALTA - 1300) by EMMA LAZARUS MANHATTAN, 1609 by EDWIN MARKHAM ANDREA DEL SARTO (CALLED THE FAULTLESS PAINTER) by ROBERT BROWNING LEISURE by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES THE MASTER-PLAYER by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR TO MR. GAY, WHO WROTE HIM A CONGRATULATORY LETTER ON FINISHING HOUSE by ALEXANDER POPE TO MICHAL: SONNETS AFTER MARRIAGE: 8. AFTER RONSARD by CHARLES WILLIAMS |