She brought her box of,240.She stood before a chosen few,63.Ships that pass in the night,266.Show me thy face,228.Shut your mouth, and open your eyes,261.Since all the riches of this world,263.Since first thy word awaked my heart,86.Since thy Father's arm sustains thee,187.Sit still, my child,88.Slightest actions often meet,56.Slowly fashioned, link by link,260.Small service is true service while it lasts,65.So he died for his faith,2.So live that when the mighty caravan,266.So live that, when thy summons comes,265.So long as life's hope-sparkle glows,108.So much to do; so little done,261.So nigh is grandeur to our dust,49.So, when a great man dies,77.Some evil upon Rabia fell,157.Some murmur, when their sky is clear,108.Some of your hurts you have cured,106.Some souls there are beloved of God,231.Somebody did a golden deed,26.Sometimes a light surprises,193.Sometime, when all life's lessons have been learned,191.Somewhere I have read of an aged monk,60.Sound an anthem in your sorrows,145.Source of my life's refreshing springs,151.Sow thou sorrow and thou shalt reap it,141.Sow thou thy seed,61.Speak thou the truth. Let others fence,17.Speak to him, thou, for he hears,232.Stainless soldier on the walls,6.Stand upright, speak thy thought,21.Stern daughter of the voice of God,41.Still hope! still act!158.Still raise for good the supplicating voice,134.Still shines the light of holy lives,67.Still, still with thee,223.Still will we trust,196.Stone walls do not a prison make,24.Strength for to-day is all that we need,114,255.Strong are the walls around me,82.Such power there is in clear-eyed self-restraint,165.Sunset and evening star,273.Surrounded by unnumbered foes,166.Sweet is the pleasure,92.Sweet is the solace of thy love,217.Sweet-voiced Hope, thy fine discourse,71.Take the joys and bear the,268.Take thine own way with me,210.Take time to be holy,136.Take my life and let it be,82.Talk Faith. The world is better off,186.Talk happiness each chance you get,148.Talk happiness. The world is sad enough,142.Talk not of wasted affection,169.Teach me, dear Lord, what thou wouldst have me know,125.Teach me, my God and King,223.Teach me the truth, Lord,8.Teach me to answer still,208.Teach me to live! 'Tis easier far,260.Tell me about the Master,241.Tender-handed stroke a nettle,21.That best portion of a good man's life,65.That life is long which answers life's great end,255.That love for one from which there doth not spring,167.That man is great, and he alone,28.That man may last, but never lives,38.That plenty but reproaches me,70.That thou mayst injure no man,266.That which he knew he uttered,6.The aim, if reached or not,40.The best men doing their best,65.The best will is our Father's will,220.The bird let loose in Eastern skies,118.The body sins not, 'tis the will,186.The brave man is not he who feels no fear,17.The camel at the close of day,136.The chamber where the good man meets his fate,277.The child leans on its parent's breast,193.The childish smile is fair,151.The chivalry that dares the right,21.The clouds which rise with thunder,196.The common problem, yours, mine, everyone's,31.The cross on Golgotha can never save,186.The crowd of cares, the weightiest cross,186.The cry of man's anguish went up,160.The day is long and the day is hard,229.The dearest thing on earth to me,247.The deed ye do is the prayer ye pray,127.The deeds which selfish hearts approve,42.The end's so near,272.The eye with seeing is not filled,38.The fountain of joy is fed by tears,162.The glory is not in the task,37.The good are better made by ill,162.The grave itself is but a covered bridge,274.The hero is not fed on sweets,11.The Holy Supper is kept indeed,65.The homely words—how often read,125.The hours are viewless angels,256.The hours of rest are over,256.The inner side of every cloud,148.The kindly word unspoken,78.The King of love my Shepherd is,247.The king's proud favorite,34.The knightly legend on thy shield,25.The light of love is round his feet,207.The lily's lips are pure and white,264.The little sharp vexations,137.The longer on this earth we live,48.The look of sympathy, the gentle word,57.The Lord our God is clothed,211.The man is happy, Lord,169.The man is thought a knave or fool,6.The man who idly sits and thinks,265.The Man who Loved the Names of Things,95.The man whom God delights to bless,161.The Master came one evening to the gate,73.The mean of soul are sure,40.The miller feeds the mill,265.The mist denies the mountains,176.The Moving Finger writes,253.The night is mother of the day,174.The path of sorrow, and that path alone,159.The poem hangs on the berry bush,266.The poem of the universe,33.The rich man's son inherits lands,107.The sands of time are sinking,274.The ship may sink,276.The simple, silent, selfless man,40.The sky is clouded, the rocks are bare,211.The smallest bark on life's,77.The Son of God goes forth to war,5.The soul contains a window,140.The star of the unconquered will,2.The stars shall fade away,251.The stars shine over the earth,258.The stormy blast is strong,94.The sun gives ever; so the earth,56.The thought of God, the thought of thee,224.The time for toil is past,101.The time is short,265.The toil of brain, or heart, or hand,61.The twilight falls, the night is near,200.The unpolished pearl can never shine,155.The way to make thy son rich,111.The wind that flows can,210.The winds that once the Argo bore,10.The wisest man could ask no more,38.The woman singeth at her spinning wheel,127.The word is great, and no deed is greater,21.The world is full of beauty,48.The world is growing better,175.The world is wide in time and tide,188.The world wants men,8.Thee will I love, my strength,87.Then draw we nearer day by day,26.Then, fainting soul, arise and sing,180.Then gently scan your brother man,68.Then let us smile when skies are gray,141.Then O my soul, be ne'er afraid,198.There are deep things of God,121.There are hearts which never falter,29.There are hermit souls that live, withdrawn,66.There are in this loud, stunning tide,231.There are loyal hearts, there are spirits brave,257.There are so many helpful things to do,52.There are three lessons,175.There are two words of light divine,202.There is a jewel which no Indian mine,112.There is a morning star, my soul,175.There is a safe and secret place,190.There is a tide in the affairs of men,265.There is an ancient story told,168.There is an eye that never sleeps,128.There is never a day so dreary,198.There is no death! the stars go down,269.There is no duty patent,21.There is no faith in seeing,186.There is no flock, however watched and tended,149.There is no great nor small,212.There is no human being,148.There is no love like the love of Jesus,235.There is no sense, as I can see,216.Thereisno vacant chair,276.There is peace in power; the men who speak,92.There lives and works a soul in all,223.There once was a man who bore a grudge,78.There was of old a Moslem saint,218.There was once a man who smiled,140.There was a man who prayed,131.There's a divinity that shapes our ends,206.There's a wideness in God's mercy,165.There's many a trouble,147.There's never a day so sunny,173.There's never a rose in all the world,57.There's not a craving in the mind,234.They are slaves who fear to speak,17.They do me wrong who say I come no more,259.They have no place in storied page,34.They never fail who die in a great cause,1.They outtalked thee, hissed thee, tore thee,1.They're richer who diminish their desires,112.They seemed to die on battle-field,11.They stand, the regal mountains,146.Think, and be careful, what thou art within,122.Think gently of the erring,68.Think not alone to do right,262.This above all: to thine own self be true,27.This be my prayer, from,122.This body is my house—it is not I,275.This for the day of life,54.This I beheld, or dreamed it,261.This is my creed,25.This is the gospel of labor,53.This is the highest learning,99.This is the ship of pearl,116.This one sits shivering in Fortune's smile,146.This world's no blot for us,266.Thou broadenest out with every year,119.Thou cam'st not to thy place,113.Thou grace divine, encircling all,164.Thou knowest, Lord, the,205.Thou must be true thyself,26.Thou shalt not rob me, thievish time,267.Thou sweet, beloved will of God,211.Thou sweet hand of God,160.Thou that in life's crowded city,46.Thou who art touched with,207.Though life is made up of,259.Though love repine, and reason chafe,27.Though the mills of God grind slowly,218.Though thy name be spread abroad,40.Though time may dig the grave of creeds,179.Though troubles assail and dangers affright,184.Though trouble-tossed and torture-torn,153.Though world on world in myriad myriads roll,32.Thought is deeper than all,265.Three centuries before the Christian age,37.Three doors there are in,129.Three men went out one summer night,261.Through love to light,168.Through night to light,142.Through thee, meseems, the very rose,231.Through wish, resolve, and act,102.Thunder, lightning, fire, and rain,198.Thus far the Lord hath led us,182.Thy home is with the humble, Lord,95.Thy life's a warfare, thou a soldier,17.Thy name to me, thy nature grant,118.Thy nature be my law,121.Thy presence, Lord, the place doth fill,232.Thy thoughts and feelings shall not die,268.Thy voice is heard through rolling drum,168.Thy way, not mine, O Lord,83.Thy will, O God, is joy to me,209.Time is indeed a precious boon,253.Time to me this truth hath taught,70.Time was I shrank from what was right,15.'Tis a lifelong toil till our lump be leaven,39.'Tis Being, and Doing, and Having,148.'Tis finally, the man who, lifted high,3.'Tis greatly wise to talk with our past hours,232.'Tis he whose every thought,26.'Tis impious in a good man to be sad,147.'Tis life whereof our nerves are scant,266.'Tis not alone in the sunshine,160.'Tis not the grapes of Canaan that repay,186.'Tis not the wealth that makes a king,31.'Tis not what man does,40.'Tis phrase absurd to call a villain great,32.'Tis sorrow builds the shining ladder up,161.'Tis the Almighty's gracious plan,68.To a darning-needle once,73.To be sincere. To look,264.To be the thing we seem,27.To change and change is life,171.To do or not to do; to have,79.To do the tasks of life,12.To halls of heavenly truth,169.To heaven approached a Sufi saint,227.To keep my health,25.To live by law, acting the law,27.To live, to live, is life's great joy,232.To long with all our longing powers,131.To love some one more dearly,51.To make rough places plain,134.To me 'tis equal whether love ordain,87.To play through life a perfect part,29.To stretch my hand and touch him,128.To thee, O dear, dear Saviour,244.To those who prattle of despair,264.To try each day his will to know,143.Tost on a sea of troubles,92.True happiness (if understood),148.True love shall trust, but selfish love must die,163.True wisdom is in leaning,241.True worth is in being, not seeming,38."Trust is truer than our fears,"192.Trust to the Lord to hide thee,263.Truth will prevail,8.Truths that wake to perish never,277.Truths would you teach,36.'Twas August, and the fierce sun,234.'Twas in the night the manna fell,111.'Twere sweet indeed to close our eyes,12.Two gifts God giveth, and he saith,276.Two men toiled side by side,105.Two went to pray? O, rather,133.Two worlds are ours; 'tis only,232.Unanswered yet the prayer your lips have pleaded,124.Unblemished let me live,40.Unheard, because our ears are dull,232.Unless above himself he can,13.Unveil, O Lord, and on us shine,86.Up and away, like the dew of the morning,100.Veiled the future comes,174.Vice is a monster of so hateful mien,73.Vulgar souls surpass a rare one,40.Walking along the shore one morn,150.Walking with Peter, Christ,43.We all acknowledge both thy power and love,203.We are building every day,259.We are living, we are dwelling,18.We are not angels, but we may,231.We bless thee for thy peace,94.We cannot kindle when we will,7.We cannot make bargains for blisses,146.We live in deeds, not years,264.We look along the shining ways,161.We look too far for blessings,111.We may question with wand of science,132.We must live through the weary winter,161.We say, and we say, and we say,264.We scatter seeds with careless hand,67.We see not, know not; all our way,216.We shape ourselves the joy or fear,264.We take our share of fretting,145.We thank thee, gracious Father,270.We who have lost the battle,30.We will speak on,18.We would fill the hours with the sweetest things,254.We would see Jesus—for the shadows lengthen,243.We would see Jesus! we have longed to see him,246.We would see Jesus when our hopes are brightest,248.Wearing the white flower of a blameless life,40.Welcome the shadows; where they blackest are,113.Well to suffer is divine,20.What can it mean? Is it aught to him,207.What grace, O Lord, and beauty shone,241.What I am, what I am not,25.What if some morning, when the stars are paling,267.What imports Fasting or feasting,264.What is life? 'Tis not to,266.What is the use of worrying,94.What is the world? A wandering maze,59.What makes a hero? not success, not fame,7.What matter will it be, O mortal man,109.What might be done if men were wise,74.What most you wish and long for,197.What pleaseth God with joy receive,215.What secret trouble stirs,93.What shall I do lest life in silence pass,28.What shall I pack up to carry,258.What shall I sing for thee,238.What shall thine "afterward" be,152.What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted,49.What though the dark close round,258.What various hindrances we meet,126.What weight of woe we owe to thee,121.What will it matter in a little while,64.Whate'er God wills, let,216.Whate'er my God ordains is right,188.Whatever dies, or is forgot,55.Whatever road I take, it joins the street,232.Whatever you are—be that,27.When courage fails and,44.When courting slumber,231.When falls the hour of evil chance,17.When God afflicts thee, think he hews a rugged stone,162.When He who, sad and weary,64.When I have time so many things I'll do,257.When in the storm it seems to thee,180.When is the time for prayer,126.When it drizzles and drizzles,114.When on my day of life the night is falling,270.When on the fragrant sandal tree,167.When prayer delights thee least127.When, spurred by tasks unceasing or undone,91.When success exalts thy lot,32.When the storm of the mountains,243.When the sun of joy is hidden,176.When thou art fain to trace,102.When thou hast thanked thy God,160.When thou turnest away from all,219.When thou wakest in the morning,246.When thy heart with joy o'erflowing,71.When wilt thou save the people,75.When winds are raging o'er the upper ocean,88.Whene'er a noble deed is wrought,12.Where cross the crowded ways of life,76.Where'er I look one Face alone I see,232.Whether we climb, whether we plod,13.Whichever way the wind doth blow,108.While I sought happiness she fled,49.While thus to love he gave his days,13.Who bides his time, and day by day,105.Who counts himself as nobly born,35.Who does the best his circumstance allows,44.Who drives the horses of the sun,113.Who gives, and hides the giving hand,58.Who heeds not experience,265.Who is as the Christian great,37.Who learns and learns, and acts not,255.Who liveth best? Not he whose sail,180.Who loves, no law can ever bind,169.Who ne'er has suffered, he has lived but half,161.
She brought her box of,240.
She stood before a chosen few,63.
Ships that pass in the night,266.
Show me thy face,228.
Shut your mouth, and open your eyes,261.
Since all the riches of this world,263.
Since first thy word awaked my heart,86.
Since thy Father's arm sustains thee,187.
Sit still, my child,88.
Slightest actions often meet,56.
Slowly fashioned, link by link,260.
Small service is true service while it lasts,65.
So he died for his faith,2.
So live that when the mighty caravan,266.
So live that, when thy summons comes,265.
So long as life's hope-sparkle glows,108.
So much to do; so little done,261.
So nigh is grandeur to our dust,49.
So, when a great man dies,77.
Some evil upon Rabia fell,157.
Some murmur, when their sky is clear,108.
Some of your hurts you have cured,106.
Some souls there are beloved of God,231.
Somebody did a golden deed,26.
Sometimes a light surprises,193.
Sometime, when all life's lessons have been learned,191.
Somewhere I have read of an aged monk,60.
Sound an anthem in your sorrows,145.
Source of my life's refreshing springs,151.
Sow thou sorrow and thou shalt reap it,141.
Sow thou thy seed,61.
Speak thou the truth. Let others fence,17.
Speak to him, thou, for he hears,232.
Stainless soldier on the walls,6.
Stand upright, speak thy thought,21.
Stern daughter of the voice of God,41.
Still hope! still act!158.
Still raise for good the supplicating voice,134.
Still shines the light of holy lives,67.
Still, still with thee,223.
Still will we trust,196.
Stone walls do not a prison make,24.
Strength for to-day is all that we need,114,255.
Strong are the walls around me,82.
Such power there is in clear-eyed self-restraint,165.
Sunset and evening star,273.
Surrounded by unnumbered foes,166.
Sweet is the pleasure,92.
Sweet is the solace of thy love,217.
Sweet-voiced Hope, thy fine discourse,71.
Take the joys and bear the,268.
Take thine own way with me,210.
Take time to be holy,136.
Take my life and let it be,82.
Talk Faith. The world is better off,186.
Talk happiness each chance you get,148.
Talk happiness. The world is sad enough,142.
Talk not of wasted affection,169.
Teach me, dear Lord, what thou wouldst have me know,125.
Teach me, my God and King,223.
Teach me the truth, Lord,8.
Teach me to answer still,208.
Teach me to live! 'Tis easier far,260.
Tell me about the Master,241.
Tender-handed stroke a nettle,21.
That best portion of a good man's life,65.
That life is long which answers life's great end,255.
That love for one from which there doth not spring,167.
That man is great, and he alone,28.
That man may last, but never lives,38.
That plenty but reproaches me,70.
That thou mayst injure no man,266.
That which he knew he uttered,6.
The aim, if reached or not,40.
The best men doing their best,65.
The best will is our Father's will,220.
The bird let loose in Eastern skies,118.
The body sins not, 'tis the will,186.
The brave man is not he who feels no fear,17.
The camel at the close of day,136.
The chamber where the good man meets his fate,277.
The child leans on its parent's breast,193.
The childish smile is fair,151.
The chivalry that dares the right,21.
The clouds which rise with thunder,196.
The common problem, yours, mine, everyone's,31.
The cross on Golgotha can never save,186.
The crowd of cares, the weightiest cross,186.
The cry of man's anguish went up,160.
The day is long and the day is hard,229.
The dearest thing on earth to me,247.
The deed ye do is the prayer ye pray,127.
The deeds which selfish hearts approve,42.
The end's so near,272.
The eye with seeing is not filled,38.
The fountain of joy is fed by tears,162.
The glory is not in the task,37.
The good are better made by ill,162.
The grave itself is but a covered bridge,274.
The hero is not fed on sweets,11.
The Holy Supper is kept indeed,65.
The homely words—how often read,125.
The hours are viewless angels,256.
The hours of rest are over,256.
The inner side of every cloud,148.
The kindly word unspoken,78.
The King of love my Shepherd is,247.
The king's proud favorite,34.
The knightly legend on thy shield,25.
The light of love is round his feet,207.
The lily's lips are pure and white,264.
The little sharp vexations,137.
The longer on this earth we live,48.
The look of sympathy, the gentle word,57.
The Lord our God is clothed,211.
The man is happy, Lord,169.
The man is thought a knave or fool,6.
The man who idly sits and thinks,265.
The Man who Loved the Names of Things,95.
The man whom God delights to bless,161.
The Master came one evening to the gate,73.
The mean of soul are sure,40.
The miller feeds the mill,265.
The mist denies the mountains,176.
The Moving Finger writes,253.
The night is mother of the day,174.
The path of sorrow, and that path alone,159.
The poem hangs on the berry bush,266.
The poem of the universe,33.
The rich man's son inherits lands,107.
The sands of time are sinking,274.
The ship may sink,276.
The simple, silent, selfless man,40.
The sky is clouded, the rocks are bare,211.
The smallest bark on life's,77.
The Son of God goes forth to war,5.
The soul contains a window,140.
The star of the unconquered will,2.
The stars shall fade away,251.
The stars shine over the earth,258.
The stormy blast is strong,94.
The sun gives ever; so the earth,56.
The thought of God, the thought of thee,224.
The time for toil is past,101.
The time is short,265.
The toil of brain, or heart, or hand,61.
The twilight falls, the night is near,200.
The unpolished pearl can never shine,155.
The way to make thy son rich,111.
The wind that flows can,210.
The winds that once the Argo bore,10.
The wisest man could ask no more,38.
The woman singeth at her spinning wheel,127.
The word is great, and no deed is greater,21.
The world is full of beauty,48.
The world is growing better,175.
The world is wide in time and tide,188.
The world wants men,8.
Thee will I love, my strength,87.
Then draw we nearer day by day,26.
Then, fainting soul, arise and sing,180.
Then gently scan your brother man,68.
Then let us smile when skies are gray,141.
Then O my soul, be ne'er afraid,198.
There are deep things of God,121.
There are hearts which never falter,29.
There are hermit souls that live, withdrawn,66.
There are in this loud, stunning tide,231.
There are loyal hearts, there are spirits brave,257.
There are so many helpful things to do,52.
There are three lessons,175.
There are two words of light divine,202.
There is a jewel which no Indian mine,112.
There is a morning star, my soul,175.
There is a safe and secret place,190.
There is a tide in the affairs of men,265.
There is an ancient story told,168.
There is an eye that never sleeps,128.
There is never a day so dreary,198.
There is no death! the stars go down,269.
There is no duty patent,21.
There is no faith in seeing,186.
There is no flock, however watched and tended,149.
There is no great nor small,212.
There is no human being,148.
There is no love like the love of Jesus,235.
There is no sense, as I can see,216.
Thereisno vacant chair,276.
There is peace in power; the men who speak,92.
There lives and works a soul in all,223.
There once was a man who bore a grudge,78.
There was of old a Moslem saint,218.
There was once a man who smiled,140.
There was a man who prayed,131.
There's a divinity that shapes our ends,206.
There's a wideness in God's mercy,165.
There's many a trouble,147.
There's never a day so sunny,173.
There's never a rose in all the world,57.
There's not a craving in the mind,234.
They are slaves who fear to speak,17.
They do me wrong who say I come no more,259.
They have no place in storied page,34.
They never fail who die in a great cause,1.
They outtalked thee, hissed thee, tore thee,1.
They're richer who diminish their desires,112.
They seemed to die on battle-field,11.
They stand, the regal mountains,146.
Think, and be careful, what thou art within,122.
Think gently of the erring,68.
Think not alone to do right,262.
This above all: to thine own self be true,27.
This be my prayer, from,122.
This body is my house—it is not I,275.
This for the day of life,54.
This I beheld, or dreamed it,261.
This is my creed,25.
This is the gospel of labor,53.
This is the highest learning,99.
This is the ship of pearl,116.
This one sits shivering in Fortune's smile,146.
This world's no blot for us,266.
Thou broadenest out with every year,119.
Thou cam'st not to thy place,113.
Thou grace divine, encircling all,164.
Thou knowest, Lord, the,205.
Thou must be true thyself,26.
Thou shalt not rob me, thievish time,267.
Thou sweet, beloved will of God,211.
Thou sweet hand of God,160.
Thou that in life's crowded city,46.
Thou who art touched with,207.
Though life is made up of,259.
Though love repine, and reason chafe,27.
Though the mills of God grind slowly,218.
Though thy name be spread abroad,40.
Though time may dig the grave of creeds,179.
Though troubles assail and dangers affright,184.
Though trouble-tossed and torture-torn,153.
Though world on world in myriad myriads roll,32.
Thought is deeper than all,265.
Three centuries before the Christian age,37.
Three doors there are in,129.
Three men went out one summer night,261.
Through love to light,168.
Through night to light,142.
Through thee, meseems, the very rose,231.
Through wish, resolve, and act,102.
Thunder, lightning, fire, and rain,198.
Thus far the Lord hath led us,182.
Thy home is with the humble, Lord,95.
Thy life's a warfare, thou a soldier,17.
Thy name to me, thy nature grant,118.
Thy nature be my law,121.
Thy presence, Lord, the place doth fill,232.
Thy thoughts and feelings shall not die,268.
Thy voice is heard through rolling drum,168.
Thy way, not mine, O Lord,83.
Thy will, O God, is joy to me,209.
Time is indeed a precious boon,253.
Time to me this truth hath taught,70.
Time was I shrank from what was right,15.
'Tis a lifelong toil till our lump be leaven,39.
'Tis Being, and Doing, and Having,148.
'Tis finally, the man who, lifted high,3.
'Tis greatly wise to talk with our past hours,232.
'Tis he whose every thought,26.
'Tis impious in a good man to be sad,147.
'Tis life whereof our nerves are scant,266.
'Tis not alone in the sunshine,160.
'Tis not the grapes of Canaan that repay,186.
'Tis not the wealth that makes a king,31.
'Tis not what man does,40.
'Tis phrase absurd to call a villain great,32.
'Tis sorrow builds the shining ladder up,161.
'Tis the Almighty's gracious plan,68.
To a darning-needle once,73.
To be sincere. To look,264.
To be the thing we seem,27.
To change and change is life,171.
To do or not to do; to have,79.
To do the tasks of life,12.
To halls of heavenly truth,169.
To heaven approached a Sufi saint,227.
To keep my health,25.
To live by law, acting the law,27.
To live, to live, is life's great joy,232.
To long with all our longing powers,131.
To love some one more dearly,51.
To make rough places plain,134.
To me 'tis equal whether love ordain,87.
To play through life a perfect part,29.
To stretch my hand and touch him,128.
To thee, O dear, dear Saviour,244.
To those who prattle of despair,264.
To try each day his will to know,143.
Tost on a sea of troubles,92.
True happiness (if understood),148.
True love shall trust, but selfish love must die,163.
True wisdom is in leaning,241.
True worth is in being, not seeming,38.
"Trust is truer than our fears,"192.
Trust to the Lord to hide thee,263.
Truth will prevail,8.
Truths that wake to perish never,277.
Truths would you teach,36.
'Twas August, and the fierce sun,234.
'Twas in the night the manna fell,111.
'Twere sweet indeed to close our eyes,12.
Two gifts God giveth, and he saith,276.
Two men toiled side by side,105.
Two went to pray? O, rather,133.
Two worlds are ours; 'tis only,232.
Unanswered yet the prayer your lips have pleaded,124.
Unblemished let me live,40.
Unheard, because our ears are dull,232.
Unless above himself he can,13.
Unveil, O Lord, and on us shine,86.
Up and away, like the dew of the morning,100.
Veiled the future comes,174.
Vice is a monster of so hateful mien,73.
Vulgar souls surpass a rare one,40.
Walking along the shore one morn,150.
Walking with Peter, Christ,43.
We all acknowledge both thy power and love,203.
We are building every day,259.
We are living, we are dwelling,18.
We are not angels, but we may,231.
We bless thee for thy peace,94.
We cannot kindle when we will,7.
We cannot make bargains for blisses,146.
We live in deeds, not years,264.
We look along the shining ways,161.
We look too far for blessings,111.
We may question with wand of science,132.
We must live through the weary winter,161.
We say, and we say, and we say,264.
We scatter seeds with careless hand,67.
We see not, know not; all our way,216.
We shape ourselves the joy or fear,264.
We take our share of fretting,145.
We thank thee, gracious Father,270.
We who have lost the battle,30.
We will speak on,18.
We would fill the hours with the sweetest things,254.
We would see Jesus—for the shadows lengthen,243.
We would see Jesus! we have longed to see him,246.
We would see Jesus when our hopes are brightest,248.
Wearing the white flower of a blameless life,40.
Welcome the shadows; where they blackest are,113.
Well to suffer is divine,20.
What can it mean? Is it aught to him,207.
What grace, O Lord, and beauty shone,241.
What I am, what I am not,25.
What if some morning, when the stars are paling,267.
What imports Fasting or feasting,264.
What is life? 'Tis not to,266.
What is the use of worrying,94.
What is the world? A wandering maze,59.
What makes a hero? not success, not fame,7.
What matter will it be, O mortal man,109.
What might be done if men were wise,74.
What most you wish and long for,197.
What pleaseth God with joy receive,215.
What secret trouble stirs,93.
What shall I do lest life in silence pass,28.
What shall I pack up to carry,258.
What shall I sing for thee,238.
What shall thine "afterward" be,152.
What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted,49.
What though the dark close round,258.
What various hindrances we meet,126.
What weight of woe we owe to thee,121.
What will it matter in a little while,64.
Whate'er God wills, let,216.
Whate'er my God ordains is right,188.
Whatever dies, or is forgot,55.
Whatever road I take, it joins the street,232.
Whatever you are—be that,27.
When courage fails and,44.
When courting slumber,231.
When falls the hour of evil chance,17.
When God afflicts thee, think he hews a rugged stone,162.
When He who, sad and weary,64.
When I have time so many things I'll do,257.
When in the storm it seems to thee,180.
When is the time for prayer,126.
When it drizzles and drizzles,114.
When on my day of life the night is falling,270.
When on the fragrant sandal tree,167.
When prayer delights thee least127.
When, spurred by tasks unceasing or undone,91.
When success exalts thy lot,32.
When the storm of the mountains,243.
When the sun of joy is hidden,176.
When thou art fain to trace,102.
When thou hast thanked thy God,160.
When thou turnest away from all,219.
When thou wakest in the morning,246.
When thy heart with joy o'erflowing,71.
When wilt thou save the people,75.
When winds are raging o'er the upper ocean,88.
Whene'er a noble deed is wrought,12.
Where cross the crowded ways of life,76.
Where'er I look one Face alone I see,232.
Whether we climb, whether we plod,13.
Whichever way the wind doth blow,108.
While I sought happiness she fled,49.
While thus to love he gave his days,13.
Who bides his time, and day by day,105.
Who counts himself as nobly born,35.
Who does the best his circumstance allows,44.
Who drives the horses of the sun,113.
Who gives, and hides the giving hand,58.
Who heeds not experience,265.
Who is as the Christian great,37.
Who learns and learns, and acts not,255.
Who liveth best? Not he whose sail,180.
Who loves, no law can ever bind,169.
Who ne'er has suffered, he has lived but half,161.