Edward Cracroft Lefroy: His Life and Poems including a Reprint of Echoes from Theocritus: By Wilfred Austin Gill: With a Critical Estimate of the Sonnets by the late John Addington Symonds |
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![]() | Edward Cracroft Lefroy: His Life and Poems | ![]() |
116
XLIII
TWO THOUGHTS
When I reflect how small a space I fill
In this great teeming world of labourers,
How little I can do with strongest will,
How marred that little by most hateful blurs,—
The fancy overwhelms me, and deters
My soul from putting forth so poor a skill:
Let me be counted with those worshippers
Who lie before God's altar, and are still.
But then I think (for healthier moments come),
This power of will, this natural force of hand,—
What do they mean, if working be not wise?
Forbear to weigh thy work, O soul! Arise,
And join thee to that nobler sturdier band
Whose worship is not idle, fruitless, dumb.
![]() | Edward Cracroft Lefroy: His Life and Poems | ![]() |