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1844–1911

A TRIBUTE.

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

Blinded I groped — you gave me sight. Perplexed I turned — you sent me light. You speak unto a thousand ears: I pay you tribute in hid tears.

I pay you homage in the hopes That rise to scale life's scathed slopes. I give you gratitude in this: That, midway on the precipice

You never trod and never saw, Where air you never drank, strikes raw And wan upon the wasted breath, And gulfs you never passed, gape death,

And crags you gained some sunlit way Frown threatening over me to-day,— That here with bruised hand I cling, Because I heard you yonder sing

With those who conquer. If through joy, Then deeper be our shame who toy And loiter in the scourging rain, And did not pass by strength of pain.

Laggard below, I reach to bless You who are King of happiness; You are the victor, you the brave, Who could not stoop to be her slave.

Downward to me, rebuking, fling My privilege of suffering. I take and listen. Teach me. See! Nearer than you, I ought to be;

Nearer the height man never trod, Nearer the veiled face of God. I ought, and am not. Comrade! be Unconscious captain unto me.

Unknowing, beckon and command: I answer you with unseen hand. You read in vain these lines between, And smiling, wonder whom I mean.

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A TRIBUTE. · Elizabeth Stuart Phelps · Poetry Cove