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Receiving Sight.

Topics: classic

In hours of meditation fraught         With mem'ries of departed days,     Comes oft a tender, loving thought         Of one who shared our youthful plays.     In gayest sports and pleasures rife         Whose happy nature reveled so,     That on her ardent, joyous life         A shadow lay, we did not know;     And bade her look one summer night         Up to the sky that seemed to hold,     In dying sunset splendor bright,         All hues of sapphire, red, and gold.     How strange the spell that mystified         Us all, and hushed our wonted glee,     As sadly her sweet voice replied,         "Why, don't you know I cannot see?"     Too true! those eyes bereft of sight         No blemish bare, no drop-serene,     But nothing in this world of light         And beauty they had ever seen.     A dozen years in gentle ruth         Their impress lent to brow and cheek,     When precious words of sacred truth         Led her the Saviour's face to seek.     Responsive unto earnest prayers         Commingling love and penitence,     A blessing came - not unawares -         In new and strange experience.     And all was light, as Faith's clear eye         A brighter world than ours divined;     For never clouds obscured the sky         That she could see, while we were blind.     Oh, it must be an awful thing         To be shut out from light of day! -     From summer's grace, and bloom of spring         In gladness words cannot portray.     But haply into every heart         May enter that Celestial Light     That doth to life's dark ways impart         A radiance hid from mortal sight.

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"In hours of meditation fraught..."

"Receiving Sight." is a quintessential example of Hattie Howard's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"Oh, sing me a merry song!         My heart is sad ..."

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