SSHE seemed so young, so young to die!Life, like a dawning, rosy day,Stretched from her fair young feet away,And beams from the just-risen sunBeckoned and wooed and urged her on.She met the light with happy eyes,Fresh with the dews of Paradise,And held her sweet hands out to graspThe joys that crowded to her clasp,Each a surprise, and all so dear:How could we guess that night was near?She seemed so young, so young to die!When the old go, we sadly say,’Tis Nature’s own appointed way;The ripe grain gathered in must be,The ripe fruit from the laden tree,The sear leaf quit the bare, brown bough;Summer is done, ’tis autumn now,God’s harvest-time; the sheaves among,His angels raise the reaping-song,And though we grieve, we would not stayThe shining sickles on their way.She seemed so young, so young to die!We question wearily and vainWhat never answer shall make plain:“Can it be this the good Lord meantWhich frustrates his benign intent?Why was she planted like a flowerIn mortal sun and mortal shower,And left to grow, and taught to bloom,To gather beauty and perfume;Why were we set to train and tendIf only for this bootless end?”She seemed so young, so young to die!But age and youth,—what do they meanMeasured by the eternal schemeOf God, and sifted out and laidIn his unerring scales and weighed?How may we test their sense or worth,—These poor glib phrases, born of earth,False accents of a long exile,—Or know the angels do not smile,Holding out truth’s immortal gauge,To hear us prate of youth and age?She seemed so young, so young to die!So needed here by every one,Nor there; for heaven has need of none.And yet, how can we tell or say?Heaven is so far, so far away!How do we know its blissful storeIs full and needeth nothing more?It may be that some tiny spaceLacked just that little angel face,Or the full sunshine missed one rayUntil our darling found the way.
SSHE seemed so young, so young to die!Life, like a dawning, rosy day,Stretched from her fair young feet away,And beams from the just-risen sunBeckoned and wooed and urged her on.She met the light with happy eyes,Fresh with the dews of Paradise,And held her sweet hands out to graspThe joys that crowded to her clasp,Each a surprise, and all so dear:How could we guess that night was near?She seemed so young, so young to die!When the old go, we sadly say,’Tis Nature’s own appointed way;The ripe grain gathered in must be,The ripe fruit from the laden tree,The sear leaf quit the bare, brown bough;Summer is done, ’tis autumn now,God’s harvest-time; the sheaves among,His angels raise the reaping-song,And though we grieve, we would not stayThe shining sickles on their way.She seemed so young, so young to die!We question wearily and vainWhat never answer shall make plain:“Can it be this the good Lord meantWhich frustrates his benign intent?Why was she planted like a flowerIn mortal sun and mortal shower,And left to grow, and taught to bloom,To gather beauty and perfume;Why were we set to train and tendIf only for this bootless end?”She seemed so young, so young to die!But age and youth,—what do they meanMeasured by the eternal schemeOf God, and sifted out and laidIn his unerring scales and weighed?How may we test their sense or worth,—These poor glib phrases, born of earth,False accents of a long exile,—Or know the angels do not smile,Holding out truth’s immortal gauge,To hear us prate of youth and age?She seemed so young, so young to die!So needed here by every one,Nor there; for heaven has need of none.And yet, how can we tell or say?Heaven is so far, so far away!How do we know its blissful storeIs full and needeth nothing more?It may be that some tiny spaceLacked just that little angel face,Or the full sunshine missed one rayUntil our darling found the way.
SSHE seemed so young, so young to die!Life, like a dawning, rosy day,Stretched from her fair young feet away,And beams from the just-risen sunBeckoned and wooed and urged her on.She met the light with happy eyes,Fresh with the dews of Paradise,And held her sweet hands out to graspThe joys that crowded to her clasp,Each a surprise, and all so dear:How could we guess that night was near?
S
SHE seemed so young, so young to die!
Life, like a dawning, rosy day,
Stretched from her fair young feet away,
And beams from the just-risen sun
Beckoned and wooed and urged her on.
She met the light with happy eyes,
Fresh with the dews of Paradise,
And held her sweet hands out to grasp
The joys that crowded to her clasp,
Each a surprise, and all so dear:
How could we guess that night was near?
She seemed so young, so young to die!When the old go, we sadly say,’Tis Nature’s own appointed way;The ripe grain gathered in must be,The ripe fruit from the laden tree,The sear leaf quit the bare, brown bough;Summer is done, ’tis autumn now,God’s harvest-time; the sheaves among,His angels raise the reaping-song,And though we grieve, we would not stayThe shining sickles on their way.
She seemed so young, so young to die!
When the old go, we sadly say,
’Tis Nature’s own appointed way;
The ripe grain gathered in must be,
The ripe fruit from the laden tree,
The sear leaf quit the bare, brown bough;
Summer is done, ’tis autumn now,
God’s harvest-time; the sheaves among,
His angels raise the reaping-song,
And though we grieve, we would not stay
The shining sickles on their way.
She seemed so young, so young to die!We question wearily and vainWhat never answer shall make plain:“Can it be this the good Lord meantWhich frustrates his benign intent?Why was she planted like a flowerIn mortal sun and mortal shower,And left to grow, and taught to bloom,To gather beauty and perfume;Why were we set to train and tendIf only for this bootless end?”
She seemed so young, so young to die!
We question wearily and vain
What never answer shall make plain:
“Can it be this the good Lord meant
Which frustrates his benign intent?
Why was she planted like a flower
In mortal sun and mortal shower,
And left to grow, and taught to bloom,
To gather beauty and perfume;
Why were we set to train and tend
If only for this bootless end?”
She seemed so young, so young to die!But age and youth,—what do they meanMeasured by the eternal schemeOf God, and sifted out and laidIn his unerring scales and weighed?How may we test their sense or worth,—These poor glib phrases, born of earth,False accents of a long exile,—Or know the angels do not smile,Holding out truth’s immortal gauge,To hear us prate of youth and age?
She seemed so young, so young to die!
But age and youth,—what do they mean
Measured by the eternal scheme
Of God, and sifted out and laid
In his unerring scales and weighed?
How may we test their sense or worth,—
These poor glib phrases, born of earth,
False accents of a long exile,—
Or know the angels do not smile,
Holding out truth’s immortal gauge,
To hear us prate of youth and age?
She seemed so young, so young to die!So needed here by every one,Nor there; for heaven has need of none.And yet, how can we tell or say?Heaven is so far, so far away!How do we know its blissful storeIs full and needeth nothing more?It may be that some tiny spaceLacked just that little angel face,Or the full sunshine missed one rayUntil our darling found the way.
She seemed so young, so young to die!
So needed here by every one,
Nor there; for heaven has need of none.
And yet, how can we tell or say?
Heaven is so far, so far away!
How do we know its blissful store
Is full and needeth nothing more?
It may be that some tiny space
Lacked just that little angel face,
Or the full sunshine missed one ray
Until our darling found the way.