Poems by Miss H. F. Gould | ||
193
TREES FOR THE PILGRIM'S WREATH.
Knowing that tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience, and experience hope; and hope maketh not ashamed.
Romans v. 3–5.
Tribulation, if by loss,
Or by thorny gain, the cross,
Thou art not a barren tree;
Seeds of Patience drop from thee.
Or by thorny gain, the cross,
Thou art not a barren tree;
Seeds of Patience drop from thee.
Patience, bitter from thy root
Upward, till we reach the fruit,
Thou hast golden grains to sow,
Whence Experience full shall grow.
Upward, till we reach the fruit,
Thou hast golden grains to sow,
Whence Experience full shall grow.
Broad Experience, rank and dark;
Thick in leaves, and rough in bark;
Through thy dubious shade we grope,
Till we grasp the bough of Hope.
Thick in leaves, and rough in bark;
Through thy dubious shade we grope,
Till we grasp the bough of Hope.
Hope, we 're not ashamed, with thee
Showered by drops from Calvary,
When thy branches shoot and bloom
Through a Saviour's broken tomb.
Showered by drops from Calvary,
When thy branches shoot and bloom
Through a Saviour's broken tomb.
Trees, whereof the pilgrim weaves
For his crown the mingled leaves,
Wreaths of you are rich and bright;
Earth 's the shade, and heaven 's the light.
For his crown the mingled leaves,
Wreaths of you are rich and bright;
Earth 's the shade, and heaven 's the light.
Poems by Miss H. F. Gould | ||