Good in Ill (George S. Burleigh)
A seven-fold glory spans across
The darkest cloud that looms above us;
The shadow of our deepest-loss
Is lit by angel eyes that love us
The sunshine is a blessed gift,
The rain and tempest are as blessed;
Hands that in agony we lift
By hands invisible are caressed.
A smile is pleasure’s sunny sign,
But tears at last are all as sunny,
The bees from many a noxious vine
And poison plant suck sweetest honey.
Accept alike the sun and shade,
The happy chances and the sorrow,
For know, our darkest nights are made
The canvass of the brightest morrow.
The seas that suck your navies down,
And strew with wreck their barren breakers,
Weave dewy morning’s jeweled crown,
And feed all life beneath the Maker’s.
Old Earthquake ploughed the granite globe,
And howling Tempest drove the harrow,
That now may greening Sumer’s robe
In bloom and verdure veil the furrow.
Our wing-drooped griefs, on everything, brood
The fledglings of some genial laughter;
No ill scapes the reign of Good
In life, or death, or life’s hereafter.
By pangs our laggard souls that goad
Are nobler, stronger pulses given,
And God who gives a thorny road
Has made its goal His glorious Heaven.
- Title
- Good in Ill (George S. Burleigh)
- Alternative Title
- A seven-fold glory spans across
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Small Scrapbook 169
- Hand-written manuscript copy in Loose Materials, Poems by George and Ruth Burleigh, held by Little Compton Historical Society, Box A47.24
- Date
- 1858
- August 17, 1858
- Subject
- Religion
- Philosophy
- note
- In the hand-written manuscript, the following note is included at the end: "For Lizzie Wood, at Little Compton, R. I., August 17, 1858."
- Media
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Good in Ill