To lay the soul that loves him low, Becomes the Only-wise: To hide beneath a veil of woe, The children of the skies. |
Man, though a worm, would yet be great; Though feeble, would seem strong; Assumes an independent state, By sacrilege and wrong. |
Strange the reverse, which, once abased, The haughty creature proves! He feels his soul a barren waste, Nor dares affirm he loves. |
Scorned by the thoughtless and the vain, To God he presses near; Superior to the world's disdain, And happy in its sneer. |
Oh welcome, in his heart he says, Humility and shame! Farewell the wish for human praise, The music of a name! |
But will not scandal mar the good That I might else perform? And can God work it, if he would, By so despised a worm? |
Ah, vainly anxious!--leave the Lord To rule thee, and dispose; Sweet is the mandate of his word, And gracious all he does. |
He draws from human littleness His grandeur and renown; And generous hearts with joy confess The triumph all his own. |
Down, then, with self-exalting thoughts; Thy faith and hope employ, To welcome all that he allots, And suffer shame with joy. |
No longer, then, thou wilt encroach On his eternal right; And he shall smile at thy approach, And make thee his delight. |