RESIGNATION, PATIENCE, COMPENSATION
CONTENTMENT
Father, I know that all my
life
Is portioned out
for me,
And the changes that are sure
to come
I do not fear
to see;
I ask Thee for a patient mind,
Intent on pleasing
thee.
I ask Thee for a thoughtful
love,
Through constant
watching wise,
To meet the glad with joyful
smiles,
And wipe the weeping
eyes,
And a heart, at leisure from
itself,
To soothe and
sympathize.
I would not have the restless
will
That hurries to
and fro,
Seeking for some great thing
to do,
Or secret thing
to know;
I would be treated as a child,
And guided
where I go.
Wherever in this world I am,
In whatsoe’er
estate,
I have a fellowship with hearts
To keep and cultivate,
And a work of lowly love to
do
For the Lord on
whom I wait.
So I ask Thee for the daily
strength
To none that ask
denied
And a mind to blend with outward
life,
While keeping
at thy side,
Content to fill a little
space,
If thou be glorified.
And if some things I do not
ask
In my cup of blessing
be,
I would have my spirit filled
the more
With grateful
love to thee;
More careful not to serve
thee much,
But to please
thee perfectly.
There are briers besetting
every path,
Which call for
constant care;
There is a cross in every
lot,
And an earnest
need for prayer;
But a lowly heart, that leans
on Thee,
Is happy everywhere.
In a service which Thy love
appoints
There are no bonds
for me,
For my secret heart has learned
the truth
Which makes thy
children free,
And a life of self-renouncing
love
Is a life of liberty.
Anna Letitia Waring.
TWO PICTURES
An old farm house with meadows
wide,
And sweet with clover on each
side;
A bright-eyed boy, who looks
from out
The door with woodbine wreathed
about,
And wishes his one thought
all day:
“O if I could but fly
away!
From this dull spot the world
to see,
How happy, happy,
happy,
How happy I should
be!”
Amid the city’s constant
din,
A man who round the world
has been,
Who, ’mid the tumult
and the throng,
Is thinking, thinking all
day long:
“O could I only tread
once more
The field-path to the farm-house
door,
The old green meadow could
I see,
How happy, happy,
happy,
How happy I should
be!”
Annie Douglas
Robinson.
Happy the man, of mortals
happiest he,
Whose quiet mind from vain
desires is free;
Whom neither hopes deceive
nor fears torment,
But lives in peace, within
himself content;
In thought, or act, accountable
to none
But to himself, and unto God
alone.
Henry P. F. Lansdowne.
CONTENT I LIVE
My mind to me a kingdom is;
Such perfect joy
therein I find
As far exceeds all earthly
bliss
That God or nature
hath assigned:
Though much I want that most
would have,
Yet still my mind forbids
to crave.
Content I live; this is my
stay
I seek no more
than may suffice.
I press to bear no haughty
sway;
Look, what I lack
my mind supplies.
Lo, thus I triumph like a
king,
Content with what my mind
doth bring.
I laugh not at another’s
loss,
I grudge not at
another’s gain;
No worldly wave my mind can
toss;
I brook that as
another’s bane.
I fear no foe, nor fawn on
friend.
I loathe not life, nor dread
mine end.
My wealth is health and perfect
ease;
My conscience
clear my chief defense;
I never seek by bribes to
please
Nor by desert
to give offense.
Thus do I live, thus will
I die;
Would all did so, as well
as I.
Edward Dyer.
Alt. by William Byrd (1540-1625).
JUST AS GOD LEADS
Just as God leads me I would
go;
I would not ask
to choose my way;
Content with what he will
bestow,
Assured he will
not let me stray.
So, as he leads, my path I
make,
And step by step I gladly
take
A child, in him
confiding.
Just as God leads I am content;
I rest me calmly
in his hands;
That which he has decreed
and sent
That which his
will for me commands
I would that he should all
fulfill,
That I should do his gracious
will
In living or in
dying.
Just as God leads, I all resign;
I trust me to
my Father’s will;
When reason’s rays deceptive
shine,
His counsel would
I yet fulfill;
That which his love ordained
as right
Before he brought me to the
right
My all to him
resigning.
Just as God leads me, I abide
In faith, in hope,
in suffering true;
His strength is ever by my
side
Can aught my hold
on him undo?
I hold me firm in patience,
knowing
That God my life is still
bestowing
The best in kindness
sending.
Just as God leads I onward
go,
Out amid thorns
and briers keen;
God does not yet his guidance
show
But in the end
it shall be seen.
How, by a loving Father’s
will,
Faithful and true, he leads
me still.
And so my heart
is resting.
From the German.
SWEET CONTENT
O Thou, by long experience
tried,
Near whom no grief can long
abide;
My Lord, how full of sweet
content
I pass my years of banishment!
All scenes alike engaging
prove
To souls impressed with sacred
love!
Where’er they dwell
they dwell in Thee
In heaven, in earth, or on
the sea.
To me remains nor place nor
time,
My country is in every clime;
I can be calm and free from
care
On any shore, since God is
there.
While place we seek, or place
we shun,
The soul finds happiness in
none;
But with a God to guide our
way
’Tis equal joy to go
or stay.
Could I be cast where Thou
art not,
That were indeed a dreadful
lot;
But regions none remote I
call,
Secure of finding God in all.
Madame Guyon.
CONTENT AND RICH
My conscience is my crown,
Contented thoughts
my rest;
My heart is happy in itself,
My bliss is in
my breast.
Enough I reckon wealth;
A mean, the surest
lot;
That lies too high for base
contempt,
Too low for envy’s
shot.
My wishes are but few,
All easy to fulfill;
I make the limits of my power
The bounds unto
my will.
I feel no care of coin;
Well doing is
my wealth;
My mind to me an empire is,
While grace affordeth
health.
I clip high-climbing thoughts,
The wings of swelling
pride;
Their fall is worst that from
the height
Of greatest honor
slide.
Since sails of largest size
The storm doth
soonest tear,
I bear so low and small a
sail
As freeth me from
fear.
I wrestle not with rage
While fury’s
flame doth burn;
It is in vain to stop the
stream
Until the tide
doth turn.
But when the flame is out,
And ebbing wrath
doth end,
I turn a late enraged foe
Into a quiet friend.
And, taught with often proof,
A tempered calm
I find
To be most solace to itself,
Best cure for
angry mind.
No change of fortune’s
calms
Can cast my comforts
down;
When Fortune smiles I smile
to think
How quickly she
will frown.
And when in froward mood
She proves an
angry foe,
Small gain I found to let
her come,
Less loss to let
her go.
Robert Southwell,
1561-95. (One of the Jesuit Fathers who were
cruelly executed by Queen
Elizabeth.)
Don’t lose Courage!
Spirit brave
Carry with you to the grave.
Don’t lose Time in vain
distress!
Work, not worry, brings success.
Don’t lose Hope! who
lets her stray
Goes forlornly all the way.
Don’t lose Patience,
come what will!
Patience ofttimes outruns
skill.
Don’t lose Gladness!
every hour
Blooms for you some happy
flower.
Though be foiled your dearest
plan,
Don’t lose Faith in
God and man!
A CONTRAST
Two men toiled side by side
from sun to sun,
And both were
poor;
Both sat with children, when
the day was done,
About their door.
One saw the beautiful in crimson
cloud
And shining moon;
The other, with his head in
sadness bowed,
Made night of
noon.
One loved each tree and flower
and singing bird,
On mount or plain;
No music in the soul of one
was stirred
By leaf or rain.
One saw the good in every
fellow-man
And hoped the
best;
The other marvelled at his
Master’s plan,
And doubt confessed.
One, having heaven above and
heaven below,
Was satisfied;
The other, discontented, lived
in woe,
And hopeless died.
Sarah Knowles
Bolton.
WHO BIDES HIS TIME
Who bides his time, and day
by day
Faces defeat full
patiently,
And lifts a mirthful roundelay
However poor his
fortunes be
He will not fail in any qualm
Of poverty; the
paltry dime
It will grow golden in his
palm
Who bides his
time.
Who bides his time he
tastes the sweet
Of honey in the
saltest tear;
And though he fares with slowest
feet
Joy runs to meet
him drawing near;
The birds are heralds of his
cause,
And like a never-ending
rhyme
The roadsides bloom in his
applause
Who bides his
time.
Who bides his time, and fevers
not
In a hot race
that none achieves,
Shall wear cool wreathen laurel,
wrought
With crimson berries
in the leaves;
And he shall reign a goodly
king
And sway his hand
o’er every clime,
With peace writ on his signet
ring,
Who bides his
time.
James Whitcomb
Riley.
CARELESS CONTENT
I am content; I do not care;
Wag as it will
the world for me;
When Fuss and Fret was all
my fare
It got no ground,
as I could see.
So when away my caring went
I counted cost and was content.
With more of thanks and less
of thought
I strive to make
my matters meet;
To seek, what ancient sages
sought,
Physic and food
in sour and sweet.
To take what passes in good
part,
And keep the hiccups from
the heart.
With good and gentle-humored
hearts
I choose to chat,
whene’er I come,
Whate’er the subject
be that starts;
But if I get among
the glum
I hold my tongue, to tell
the truth,
And keep my breath to cool
my broth.
For chance or change of peace
or pain;
For fortune’s
favor or her frown;
For luck or glut, for loss
or gain,
I never dodge,
nor up nor down:
But swing what way the ship
shall swim,
Or tack about with equal trim.
I suit not where I shall not
speed,
Nor trace the
turn of every tide;
If simple sense will not succeed,
I make no bustling,
but abide;
For shining wealth, or scoring
woe,
I force no friend, I fear
no foe.
I love my neighbor as myself;
Myself like him
too, by his leave;
Nor to his pleasure, power,
or pelf
Came I to crouch,
as I conceive;
Dame Nature doubtless has
designed
A man the monarch of his mind.
Now taste and try this temper,
sirs;
Mood it and brood
it in your breast;
Or if ye ween, for worldly
stirs,
That man does
right to mar his rest,
Let me be left, and debonair;
I am content; I do not care.
John Byrom (1692-1763).
Some of your hurts you have
cured,
And the sharpest
you still have survived,
But what torments of grief
you endured
From the evils
which never arrived.
Ralph Waldo Emerson.
HAPPY ANY WAY
Lord, it belongs not to my
care
Whether I die
or live;
To love and serve thee is
my share,
And this thy grace
must give.
If life be long, I will be
glad
That I may long
obey;
If short, yet why should I
be sad
To soar to endless
day?
Christ leads me through no
darker rooms
Than he went through
before;
He that into God’s kingdom
comes
Must enter by
his door.
Come, Lord, when grace hath
made me meet
Thy blessed face
to see;
For, if thy work on earth
be sweet,
What will thy
glory be?
Then I shall end my sad complaints,
And weary, sinful
days,
And join with the triumphant
saints
Who sing Jehovah’s
praise.
My knowledge of that life
is small;
The eye of faith
is dim;
But ’tis enough that
Christ knows all,
And I shall be
with him.
Richard Baxter.
THE THINGS I MISS
An easy thing, O Power Divine,
To thank thee for these gifts
of thine!
For summer’s sunshine,
winter’s snow,
For hearts that kindle, thoughts
that glow;
But when shall I attain to
this:
To thank thee for the things
I miss?
For all young fancy’s
early gleams,
The dreamed-of joys that still
are dreams.
Hopes unfulfilled, and pleasures
known
Through others’ fortunes,
not my own,
And blessings seen that are
not given,
And ne’er will be, this
side of heaven.
Had I, too, shared the joys
I see,
Would there have been a heaven
for me?
Could I have felt thy presence
near
Had I possessed what I held
dear?
My deepest fortune, highest
bliss,
Have grown, perchance, from
things I miss.
Sometimes there comes an hour
of calm;
Grief turns to blessing, pain
to balm;
A Power that works above my
will
Still leads me onward, upward
still;
And then my heart attains
to this:
To thank thee for the things
I miss.
Thomas Wentworth
Higginson.
THE HERITAGE
The rich man’s son inherits
lands,
And piles of brick
and stone and gold,
And he inherits soft, white
hands,
And tender flesh
that fears the cold,
Nor dares to wear
a garment old;
A heritage, it seems to me,
One scarce would wish to hold
in fee.
The rich man’s son inherits
cares;
The bank may break,
the factory burn,
A breath may burst his bubble
shares,
And soft white
hands could hardly earn
A living that
would serve his turn;
A heritage, it seems to me,
One scarce would wish to hold
in fee.
The rich man’s son inherits
wants,
His stomach craves
for dainty fare;
With sated heart he hears
the pants
Of toiling hinds
with brown arms bare,
And wearies in
his easy-chair;
A heritage, it seems to me,
One scarce would wish to hold
in fee.
What doth the poor man’s
son inherit?
Stout muscles
and a sinewy heart;
A hardy frame, a hardier spirit,
King of two hands,
he does his part
In every useful
toil and art;
A heritage, it seems to me,
A king might wish to hold
in fee.
What doth the poor man’s
son inherit?
Wishes o’erjoyed
with humble things,
A rank adjudged by toil-won
merit,
Content that from
employment springs,
A heart that in
his labor sings;
A heritage, it seems to me,
A king might wish to hold
in fee.
What doth the poor man’s
son inherit?
A patience learned
of being poor,
Courage, if sorrow come, to
bear it,
A fellow-feeling
that is sure
To make the outcast
bless his door;
A heritage, it seems to me,
A king might wish to hold
in fee.
O rich man’s son! there
is a toil
That with all
others level stands;
Large charity doth never soil,
But only whiten
soft, white hands;
This is the best
crop from thy lands,
A heritage, it seems to me,
Worth being rich to hold in
fee.
O poor man’s son! scorn
not thy state;
There is worse
weariness than thine
In merely being rich and great;
Toil only gives
the soul to shine,
And makes rest
fragrant and benign;
A heritage, it seems to me,
Worth being poor to hold in
fee.
Both, heirs to some six feet
of sod,
Are equal in the
earth at last;
Both, children of the same
dear God,
Prove title to
your heirship vast
By record of a
well-filled past;
A heritage, it seems to me,
Well worth a life to hold
in fee.
James Russell
Lowell.
I AM CONTENT
I am content. In trumpet
tones
My song let people
know;
And many a mighty man with
thrones
And scepter is
not so.
And if he is I joyful cry,
Why, then he’s just
the same as I.
My motto is Content
with this;
Gold place I
prize not such.
That which I have my measure
is:
Wise men desire
not much.
Men wish and wish, and have
their will,
And wish again as hungry still.
And gold and honor are besides
A very brittle
glass;
And time, in his unresting
tides
Makes all things
change and pass:
Turns riches to a beggar’s
dole;
Sets glory’s race an
infant’s goal.
Be noble that is
more than wealth;
Do right that’s
more than place;
Then in the spirit there is
health
And gladness in
the face:
Then thou art with thyself
at one
And, no man hating, fearest
none.
George Macdonald.
MADAME LOFTY
Mrs. Lofty keeps a carriage,
So do I;
She has dappled grays to draw it,
None have I.
She’s no prouder of her coachman
Than am I
With my blue-eyed laughing baby
Trundling by.
I hide his face, lest she should see
The cherub boy and envy me.
Her fine husband has white fingers,
Mine has not;
He can give his bride a palace,
Mine a cot.
Hers comes home beneath the starlight,
Ne’er cares she;
Mine comes in the purple twilight,
Kisses me,
And prays that He who turns life’s sands
Will hold his loved ones in his hands.
Mrs. Lofty has her jewels,
So have I;
She wears hers upon her bosom,
Inside I.
She will leave hers at Death’s portals,
By and by;
I shall bear the treasures with me
When I die
For I have love, and she has gold;
She counts her wealth, mine can’t be told.
She has those who love her station,
None have I,
But I’ve one true heart beside me;
Glad am I;
I’d not change it for a kingdom,
No, not I;
God will weigh it in a balance,
By and by;
And then the difference he’ll define
’Twixt Mrs. Lofty’s wealth and mine.
So long as life’s hope-sparkle
glows, ’tis good;
When death delivers from life’s woes, ’tis
good.
Oh praise the Lord who makes all good, and will;
Whether he life or death bestows, ’tis good.
THE WIND THAT BLOWS, THAT WIND IS BEST
Whichever way the wind doth
blow,
Some heart is glad to have
it so;
Then blow it east or blow
it west,
The wind that blows, that
wind is best.
My little craft sails not
alone;
A thousand fleet from every
zone
Are out upon a thousand seas;
And what for me were favoring
breeze
Might dash another with the
shock
Of doom upon some hidden rock.
And so I do not dare to pray
For winds to waft me on my
way;
But leave it to a Higher Will
To stay or speed me, trusting
still
That ill is well, and sure
that He
Who launched my bark will
sail with me
Through storm and calm, and
will not fail,
Whatever breezes may prevail,
To land me, every peril past,
Within his sheltering heaven
at last.
Then, whatsoever wind doth
blow,
My heart is glad to have it
so;
And, blow it east or blow
it west,
The wind that blows, that
wind is best.
Caroline Atherton
Mason.
THE DIFFERENCE
Some murmur, when their sky
is clear
And wholly bright
to view,
If one small speck of dark
appear
In their great
heaven of blue.
And some with thankful love
are filled
If but one streak
of light,
One ray of God’s good
mercy, gild
The darkness of
their night.
In palaces are hearts that
ask,
In discontent
and pride,
Why life is such a dreary
task
And all things
good denied.
Yet hearts in poorest huts
admire
How love has in
their aid
(Love that not ever seems
to tire)
Such rich provision
made.
Richard Chenevix
Trench.
Give what Thou canst; without
thee we are poor;
And with thee rich, take what
thou wilt away.
William Cowper.
RICHES AND POWER
Cleon has a million acres,
Ne’er a
one have I;
Cleon dwelleth in a palace,
In a cottage I.
Cleon hath a dozen fortunes,
Not a penny I;
Yet the poorer of the twain
is
Cleon, and not
I.
Cleon, true, possesseth acres,
But the landscape
I;
Half the charms to me it yieldeth,
Money cannot buy.
Cleon harbors sloth and dullness,
Freshening vigor
I;
He in velvet, I in fustian,
Richer man am
I.
Cleon is a slave to grandeur,
Free as thought
am I;
Cleon fees a score of doctors,
Need of none have
I.
Wealth-surrounded, care-environed,
Cleon fears to
die.
Death may come, he’ll
find me ready.
Happier man am
I.
Cleon sees no charm in nature,
In a daisy I;
Cleon hears no anthem ringing
In the sea and
sky;
Nature sings to me forever,
Earnest listener
I!
State for state, with all
attendants,
Who would change?
Not I.
Charles Mackay.
ENOUGH
I am so weak, dear Lord, I
cannot stand
One moment without
thee;
But oh, the tenderness of
thine enfolding,
And oh, the faithfulness of
thine upholding,
And oh, the strength of thy
right hand!
That strength
is enough for me.
I am so needy, Lord, and yet
I know
All fullness dwells
in thee;
And hour by hour that never-failing
treasure
Supplies and fills in overflowing
measure,
My last, my greatest need.
And so
Thy grace
is enough for me.
It is so sweet to trust THY
WORD alone!
I do not ask to
see
The unveiling of thy purpose,
or the shining
Of future light or mysteries
untwining;
The promise-roll is all my
own,
Thy word
is enough for me.
The human heart asks love.
But now I know
That my heart
hath from Thee
All real, and full, and marvelous
affection
So near, so human! yet Divine
perfection
Thrills gloriously the mighty
glow!
Thy love
is enough for me.
There were strange soul depths,
restless, vast and broad
Unfathomed as
the sea.
An infinite craving for some
infinite stilling;
But now Thy perfect love is
perfect filling!
Lord Jesus Christ, my Lord,
my God,
Thou, thou art
enough for me!
Frances Ridley
Havergal.
FULLY CONTENT
I know not, and I would not
know,
Content, I leave
it all with Thee;
’Tis ever best it should
be so;
As thou wilt have
it let it be.
But this I know: that
every day
And every step
for me is planned;
I surely cannot lose the Way
While He is holding
fast my hand.
And surely, whatsoe’er
betide,
I never shall
be left alone:
Thou standest ever by my side;
To thee my future
all is known.
And wheresoe’er my lot
may fall
The way before
is marked by Thee;
The windings of my life are
all
Unfoldings of
thy Love to me.
What matter will it be, O
mortal man, when thou art dying,
Whether upon a throne or on
the bare earth thou art lying?
From the Persian.
CONTENT WITH ALL
Content that God’s decree
Should order all for thee.
Content with sickness or with
health
Content with poverty or wealth
Content to walk in humble
guise,
And as He wills it sink or
rise.
Content to live alone
And call no place thine own.
No sweet reunions day by day.
Thy kindred spirits far away.
And, since God wills to have
it so,
Thou wouldst not change for
weal or woe.
Content that others rise
Before thy very eyes.
How bright their lot and portion
here!
Wealth fills their coffers friends
are near.
Behold their mansions tall
and fair!
The timbrel and the dance
are there.
Content to toil or rest
God’s peace within thy
breast
To feel thy times are in His
hand
Who holds all worlds in his
command
Thy time to laugh thy
time to sigh
Thy time to live thy
time to die.
And is it so indeed
Thou art with God agreed?
Content ’mid all the
ills of life?
Farewell, then, sorrow, pain
and strife!
Such high content is heaven
begun.
The battle’s fought,
the victory won!
Mary Ann W. Cook.
A BLESSED LESSON
Have I learned, in whatsoever
State to be content?
Have I learned this blessed
lesson
By my Master sent
And with joyous acquiescence
Do I greet His
will
Even when my own is thwarted
And my hands lie
still?
Surely it is best and sweetest
Thus to have Him
choose,
Even though some work I’ve
taken
By this choice
I lose.
Folded hands need not be idle
Fold them but
in prayer;
Other souls may toil far better
For God’s
answer there.
They that “reap”
receive their “wages,”
Those who “work”
their “crown,”
Those who pray throughout
the ages
Bring blest answers
down;
In “whatever state”
abiding
Till the Master
call,
They at eventide will find
Him
Glorified in all.
What though I can do so little
For my Lord and
King,
At His feet I sit and listen,
At His feet I
sing.
And, whatever my condition,
All in love is
meant;
Sing, my soul, thy recognition,
Sing, and be content!
IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN
Led by kindlier hand than
ours,
We journey through
this earthly scene,
And should not, in our weary
hours,
Turn to regret
what might have been.
And yet these hearts, when
torn by pain,
Or wrung by disappointment
keen,
Will seek relief from present
cares
In thoughts of
joys that might have been.
But let us still these wishes
vain;
We know not that
of which we dream.
Our lives might have been
sadder yet
God only knows
what might have been.
Forgive us, Lord, our little
faith;
And help us all,
from morn to e’en,
Still to believe that lot
were best
Which is not
that which might have been.
And grant we may so pass the
days
The cradle and
the grave between,
That death’s dark hour
not darker be
For thoughts of
what life might have been.
George Z. Gray.
Hushing every muttered murmur,
Let your fortitude the firmer
Gird your soul
with strength.
While, no treason near her
lurking,
Patience in her perfect working,
Shall be Queen
at length.
BE CONTENT
Be thou content; be still
before
His face at whose
right hand doth reign
Fullness of joy for evermore,
Without whom all
thy toil is vain;
He is thy living spring, thy
sun, whose rays
Make glad with life and light
thy dreary days.
Be thou content.
In him is comfort, light,
and grace,
And changeless
love beyond our thought;
The sorest pang, the worst
disgrace,
If he is there,
shall harm thee not.
He can lift off thy cross
and loose thy bands,
And calm thy fears; nay, death
is in His hands.
Be thou content.
Or art thou friendless and
alone
Hast none in whom
thou canst confide?
God careth for thee, lonely
one
Comfort and help
he will provide.
He sees thy sorrows, and thy
hidden grief,
He knoweth when to send thee
quick relief;
Be thou content.
Thy heart’s unspoken
pain he knows,
Thy secret sighs
he hears full well;
What to none else thou darest
disclose
To him thou mayest
with boldness tell.
He is not far away, but ever
nigh,
And answereth willingly the
poor man’s cry:
Be thou content.
MANNA
’Twas in the night the
manna fell
That fed the hosts of Israel.
Enough for each day’s
fullest store
And largest need; enough,
no more.
For willful waste, for prideful
show,
God sent not angels’
food below.
Still in our nights of deep
distress
The manna falls our heart
to bless.
And, famished, as we cry for
bread,
With heavenly food our lives
are fed,
And each day’s need
finds each day’s store
Enough. Dear Lord, what
want we more!
Margaret Elizabeth
Sangster.
BLESSINGS NEAR AT HAND
We look too far for blessings;
We seek too far
for joys;
We ought to be like children
Who find their
chiefest toys
Ofttimes in nearest attic,
Or in some dingy
lane
Their aprons full of weeds
or flowers
Gathered in sun
or rain.
Within the plainest cottage
Unselfish love
may grow;
The sweetest, the divinest
gift,
Which mortals
ever know.
We ought to count our joys,
not woes;
Meet care with
winsome grace;
For discontent plows furrows
Upon the loveliest
face.
Hope, freedom, sunlight, knowledge,
Come not to wealth
alone;
He who looks far for blessings
Will overlook
his own.
Sarah Knowles
Bolton.
I WOULDN’T
A sprig of mint by the wayward
brook,
A nibble of birch
in the wood,
A summer day, and love, and
a book,
And I wouldn’t
be a king if I could.
John Vance Cheney.
The way to make thy son rich
is to fill
His mind with
rest before his trunk with riches:
For wealth without contentment
climbs a hill
To feel those tempests which
fly over ditches.
George Herbert.
THE JEWEL
There is a jewel which no
Indian mine can buy,
No chemic art
can counterfeit;
It makes men rich in greatest
poverty,
Makes water wine, turns wooden
cups to gold,
The homely whistle to sweet
music’s strain;
Seldom it comes, to few from
heaven sent,
That much in little, all in
naught Content.
FINDING CONTENT
I could not find the little
maid Content,
So out I rushed,
and sought her far and wide;
But not where
Pleasure each new fancy tried,
Heading the maze of rioting
merriment,
Nor where, with restless eyes
and bow half bent,
Love in the brake
of sweetbriar smiled and sighed,
Nor yet where
Fame towered, crowned and glorified,
Found I her face, nor wheresoe’er
I went.
So homeward back I crawled,
like wounded bird,
When lo!
Content sate spinning at my door;
And when I asked
her where she was before
“Here all the time,”
she said; “I never stirred;
Too eager in thy
search, you passed me o’er,
And, though I called you,
neither saw nor heard.”
Alfred Austin.
DAILY STRENGTH
Day by day the manna fell;
O to learn this lesson well;
Still by constant mercy fed,
Give me, Lord, my daily bread.
“Day by day,”
the promise reads;
Daily strength for daily needs;
Cast foreboding fears away;
Take the manna of to-day.
Lord, my times are in thy
hand.
All my sanguine hopes have
planned
To thy wisdom I resign,
And would make thy purpose
thine.
Thou my daily task shalt give;
Day by day to Thee I live;
So shall added years fulfill
Not my own my Father’s
will.
Fond ambition, whisper not;
Happy is my humble lot;
Anxious, busy cares away;
I’m provided for to-day.
O to live exempt from care
By the energy of prayer;
Strong in faith, with mind
subdued,
Yet elate with gratitude.
Josiah Conder.
GOD IS ENOUGH
God is enough! thou, who in
hope and fear
Toilest through
desert sands of life, sore tried,
Climb, trustful, over death’s
black ridge, for near
The bright wells
shine; thou wilt be satisfied.
God doth suffice! O thou,
the patient one,
Who puttest faith
in him, and none beside,
Bear yet thy load; under the
setting sun
The glad tents
gleam; thou wilt be satisfied
By God’s gold Afternoon!
peace ye shall have;
Man is in loss
except he live aright,
And help his fellow to be
firm and brave,
Faithful and patient;
then the restful night.
Edwin Arnold,
from the Arabian.
THE TRULY RICH
They’re richer who diminish
their desires,
Though their possessions
be not amplified,
Than monarchs, who in owning
large empires,
Have minds that
never will be satisfied.
For he is poor who wants what
he would have,
And rich who, having naught,
doth nothing crave.
T. Urchard.
THY ALLOTMENT
Thou cam’st not to thy
place by accident,
It is the very place God meant
for thee;
And shouldst thou there small
scope for action see
Do not for this give room
to discontent,
Nor let the time thou owest
God be spent
In idle dreaming how thou
mightest be,
In what concerns thy spiritual
life, more free
From outward hindrance or
impediment.
For presently this hindrance
thou shalt find
That without which all goodness
were a task
So slight that virtue never
could grow strong;
And wouldst thou do one duty
to His mind
The Imposer’s over-burdened
thou shalt ask,
And own thy need of, grace
to help ere long.
Richard Chenevix
Trench.
THE HAPPIEST HEART
Who drives the horses of the
sun
Shall lord it
but a day;
Better the lowly deed were
done,
And kept the humble
way.
The rust will find the sword
of fame,
The dust will
hide the crown;
Aye, none shall nail so high
his name
Time will not
tear it down.
The happiest heart that ever
beat
Was in some quiet
breast
That found the common daylight
sweet,
And left to Heaven
the rest.
John Vance Cheney.
WELCOME THE SHADOWS
Welcome the shadows; where
they blackest are
Burns through
the bright supernal hour;
From blindness of wide dark
looks out the star,
From all death’s
night the April flower.
For beauty and for gladness
of the days
Bring but the
meed of trust;
The April grass looks up from
barren ways,
The daisy from
the dust.
When of this flurry thou shalt
have thy fill,
The thing thou
seekest, it will seek thee then:
The heavens repeat themselves
in waters still
And in the faces
of contented men.
John Vance Cheney.
THE DAILY COURSE
New every morning is the love
Our wakening and uprising
prove;
Through sleep and darkness
safely brought,
Restored to life, and power,
and thought.
New mercies each returning
day
Hover around us while we pray;
New perils past, new sins
forgiven,
New thoughts of God, new hopes
of heaven.
If on our daily course our
mind
Be set to hallow all we find,
New treasures still, of countless
price,
God will provide for sacrifice.
Old friends, old scenes, will
lovelier be
As more of heaven in each
we see;
Some softening gleam of love
and prayer
Shall dawn on every cross
and care.
We need not bid, for cloistered
cell,
Our neighbor and our work
farewell,
Nor strive to wind ourselves
too high
For sinful man beneath the
sky.
The trivial round, the common
task,
Will furnish all we ought
to ask:
Room to deny ourselves a road
To bring us daily nearer God.
Seek we no more; content with
these,
Let present rapture, comfort,
ease,
As Heaven shall bid them,
come and go;
The secret, this, of rest
below.
Only, O Lord, in thy dear
love
Fit us for perfect rest above;
And help us this and every
day,
To live more nearly as we
pray.
John Keble.
GOD ENOUGH
Let nothing disturb thee,
Nothing affright thee;
All things are passing;
God never changeth;
Patient endurance
Attaineth to all things;
Who God possesseth
In nothing is wanting;
Alone God sufficeth.
St. Teresa, tr.
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
THE GOLDEN MEAN
He that holds fast the golden
mean
And lives contentedly between
The little and
the great,
Feels not the wants that pinch
the poor,
Nor plagues that haunt the
rich man’s door,
Embittering all
his state.
WITHOUT AND WITHIN
If every man’s internal
care
Were written on
his brow,
How many would our pity share
Who raise our
envy now?
The fatal secret, when revealed,
Of every aching
breast,
Would prove that only while
concealed
Their lot appeared
the best.
Pietro Metastasio.
Let us be content in work
To do the thing we can, and
not presume
To fret because it’s
little.
Elizabeth Barrett
Browning.
If none were sick and none
were sad,
What service could
we render?
I think if we were
always glad,
We scarcely could
be tender.
If sorrow never claimed our
heart,
And every wish
were granted,
Patience would die and hope
depart
Life would be
disenchanted.
A pilgrim, bound to Mecca,
quite away his sandals wore,
And on the desert’s
blistering sand his feet grew very sore.
“To let me suffer thus,
great Allah, is not kind nor just,
While in thine service I confront
the painful heat and dust.”
He murmured in complaining
tone; and in this temper came
To where, around the Kaaba,
pilgrims knelt of every name;
And there he saw, while pity
and remorse his bosom beat,
A pilgrim who not only wanted
shoes, but feet.
From the Persian,
tr. by William Rounseville Alger.
Be still, sad heart! and cease
repining;
Behind the clouds is the sun
still shining;
Thy fate is the common fate
of all,
Into each life some rain must
fall,
Some days must
be dark and dreary.
Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow.
Strength for to-day is all
that we need,
As there never
will be a to-morrow;
For to-morrow will prove but
another to-day
With its measure
of joy or of sorrow.
Don’t think your lot
the worst because
Some griefs your
joy assail;
There aren’t so very
many saws
That never strike
a nail.
Nixon Waterman.
When it drizzles and drizzles,
If we cheerfully
smile,
We can make the weather,
By working together,
As fair as we
choose in a little while.
For who will notice that clouds
are drear
If pleasant faces are always
near,
And who will remember that
skies are gray
If he carries a happy heart
all day?