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1811–1896

FIRST HOUR.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

THAT cry hath stirred the deadness of my soul; I feel a heart-string throb, as throbs a chord When breaks the master chord of some great harp; My heart responsive answers, “Why?” O Lord.

Take my dead heart, O Jesus, down with thee To that still sepulchre where thou didst rest; Lay it in the fair linen's spicy folds, As a dear mother lays her babe to rest.

I am so worn, so weary, so o'erspent, To lie with thee in that calm trance were sweet; The bitter myrrh of long-remembered pain May work in me new strength to rise again.

This dark and weary mystery of woe, This hopeless struggle, this most useless strife,— Ah, let it end! I die with thee, my Lord, To all I ever hoped or wished from life.

I die with thee: thy fellowship of grief, Thy partnership with mortal misery, The weary watching and the nameless dread,— Let them be mine to make me one with thee.

Thou hast asked, “Why?” and God will answer thee, Therefore I ask not, but in peace lie down, For the three days of mystery and rest, Till comes the resurrection and the crown.

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FIRST HOUR. · Harriet Beecher Stowe · Poetry Cove