Wednesday, March 21, 2012

I Come to Thee with Empty Hands


Greetings,
A poem by Dora Greenwell (19th century), who has an interesting way of putting things.  I love the “and yet accepted, free” and “I come to thee with empty hands.”

When I have said my quiet say,
When I have sung my little song,

How sweetly, sweetly dies the day,
The valley and the hill along;
How sweet the summons, “Come away”,
That calls me from the busy throng!

I thought beside the water’s flow
Awhile to lie beneath the leaves,
I thought in Autumn’s harvest glow
To rest my head upon the sheaves;
But lo! methinks the day was brief
And cloudy; flower, nor fruit nor leaf
I bring and yet accepted, free
And blest, my Lord, I come to Thee.

What matter now for promise lost
Through blast of spring or summer rains!
What matter now for purpose crost,
For broken hopes and wasted pains!
What if the olive little yields!
What if the grape be blighted!  Thine
The corn upon a thousand fields,
Upon a thousand hills the vine.

My spirit bare before Thee stands;
I bring no gift, I ask no sign,
I come to Thee with empty hands,
The surer to be filled from Thine.


Yours & His,
DED

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