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C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917.

Keble

  • In silence,***
  • Steals on soft-handed Charity,
  • Tempering her gifts, that seem so free,
  • By time and place,
  • Till not a woe the bleak world see,
  • But finds her grace.
  • Sprinkled along the waste of years
  • Full many a soft green isle appears:
  • Pause where we may upon the desert road,
  • Some shelter is in sight, some sacred safe abode.
  • The loveliest flowers the closest cling to earth,
  • And they first feel the sun: so violets blue;
  • So the soft star-like primrose—drenched in dew—
  • The happiest of spring’s happy, fragrant birth.
  • The sun and every vassal star,
  • All space, beyond the soar of angel’s wings,
  • Wait on His word: and yet He stays His His car
  • For every sigh a contrite suppliant brings.
  • ’Tis sweet, as year by year we lose
  • Friends out of sight, in faith to muse
  • How grows in Paradise our store.
  • When the shore is won at last,
  • Who will count the billows past?
  • Why should we faint and fear to live alone,
  • Since all alone, so Heaven has will’d, we die,
  • Nor even the tenderest heart, and next our own,
  • Knows half the reasons why we smile and sigh.
  • The childlike faith that asks not sight, waits not for wonder or for sign, believes, because it loves, aright, shall see things greater, things divine.