The Christian Year by John Keble
page 31 of 300 (10%)
page 31 of 300 (10%)
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The glorious dint a martyr's shield should bear?
How chance no cheek among them wears The deep-worn trace of penitential tears, But all is bright and smiling love, As if, fresh-borne from Eden's happy grove, They had flown here, their King to see, Nor ever had been heirs of dark mortality? Ask, and some angel will reply, "These, like yourselves, were born to sin and die, But ere the poison root was grown, God set His seal, and marked them for His own. Baptised its blood for Jesus' sake, Now underneath the Cross their bed they make, Not to be scared from that sure rest By frightened mother's shriek, or warrior's waving crest." Mindful of these, the firstfruits sweet Borne by this suffering Church her Lord to greet; Blessed Jesus ever loved to trace The "innocent brightness" of an infant's face. He raised them in His holy arms, He blessed them from the world and all its harms: Heirs though they were of sin and shame, He blessed them in his own and in his Father's Name. Then, as each fond unconscious child On the everlasting Parent sweetly smiled (Like infants sporting on the shore, That tremble not at Ocean's boundless roar), |
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