John Keble

Here you will find the Poem Sixteenth Sunday After Trinity of poet John Keble

Sixteenth Sunday After Trinity

Wish not, dear friends, my pain away -
 Wish me a wise and thankful heart,
With GOD, in all my griefs, to stay,
 Nor from His loved correction start.

The dearest offering He can crave
 His portion in our souls to prove,
What is it to the gift He gave,
 The only Son of His dear love?

But we, like vexed unquiet sprights,
 Will still be hovering o'er the tomb,
Where buried lie our vain delights,
 Nor sweetly take a sinner's doom.

In Life's long sickness evermore
 Our thoughts are tossing to and fro:
We change our posture o'er and o'er,
 But cannot rest, nor cheat our woe.

Were it not better to lie still,
 Let Him strike home and bless the rod,
Never so safe as when our will
 Yields undiscerned by all but God?

Thy precious things, whate'er they be,
 That haunt and vex thee, heart and brain,
Look to the Cross and thou shalt see
 How thou mayst turn them all to gain.

Lovest thou praise? the Cross is shame:
 Or ease? the Cross is bitter grief:
More pangs than tongue or heart can frame
 Were suffered there without relief.

We of that Altar would partake,
 But cannot quit the cost--no throne
Is ours, to leave for Thy dear sake -
 We cannot do as Thou hast done.

We cannot part with Heaven for Thee -
 Yet guide us in Thy track of love:
Let us gaze on where light should be,
 Though not a beam the clouds remove.

So wanderers ever fond and true
 Look homeward through the evening sky,
Without a streak of heaven's soft blue
 To aid Affection's dreaming eye.

The wanderer seeks his native bower,
 And we will look and long for Thee,
And thank Thee for each trying hour,
 Wishing, not struggling, to be free.