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‘A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM.’
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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41

‘A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM.’

No, Preacher, no!
Cease further to entreat.
I will not go
Those thorns, those flints to meet;
They prick, they bruise my knees,
They wound my feet.
Let me alone!
That cruel, rough-hewn smart,
That solid groan,
Christ's Cross, makes me to start;
It tears my arms, my breast,
Pierces my heart.
Some men are so
That from them goodness flows
Easy as glow
From star, or scent from rose;
But I, alas, am not
At all like those.

42

Still am I young.
What! must my youth go waste?
To taste shall tongue
Be made, and yet not taste?
Arms to embrace, yet joys
Be unembraced?
With looks that please,
Allurement yonder stands;
And what are these
That hold me?—Woven sands
To be despised by eyes,
Brush'd off by hands!
Thus heart rebell'd
One day, and claim'd wild range.
But I beheld
A little child. How strange
Sin's sudden death! That sight
Wrought all the change.