A Hidden Life

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THE WOMAN WHOM SATAN HAD BOUND.


For eighteen years, O patient soul,

  Thine eyes have sought thy grave; Thou seest not thy other goal,

  Nor who is nigh to save.

Thou nearest gentle words that wake

  Thy long-forgotten strength; Thou feelest tender hands that break

  The iron bonds at length.

Thou knowest life rush swift along

  Thy form bent sadly low; And up, amidst the wondering throng

  Thou risest firm and slow,

And seëst him. Erect once more

  In human right divine, Joyous thou bendest yet before

  The form that lifted thine.

O Saviour, Thou, long ages gone,

  Didst lift her joyous head: Now, many hearts are moaning on,

  And bending towards the dead.

They see not, know not Thou art nigh:

  One day thy word will come; Will lift the forward-beaming eye,

  And strike the sorrow dumb.

Thy hand wipes off the stains of time

  Upon the withered face; Thy old men rise in manhood's prime

  Of dignity and grace.

Thy women dawn like summer days

  Old winters from among; Their eyes are filled with youthful rays,

  The voice revives in song.

All ills of life will melt away

  Like cureless dreams of woe, When with the dawning of the day

  Themselves the sad dreams go.

O Lord, Thou art my saviour too:

  I know not what my cure; But all my best, Thou, Lord, wilt do;

  And hoping I endure.





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