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1835–1905

TEMPERED

Sarah Chauncey Woolsey

WHEN stern occasion calls for war, And the trumpets shrill and peal, Forges and armories ring all day With the fierce clash of steel.

The blades are heated in the flame, And cooled in icy flood, And beaten hard, and beaten well, To make them firm and pliable,

Their edge and temper good; Then tough and sharp with discipline, They win the fight for fighting men. When God’ s occasions call for men,

His chosen souls he takes, In life’ s hot fire he tempers them, With tears he cools and slakes; With many a heavy, grievous stroke

He beats them to an edge, And tests and tries, again, again, Till the hard will is fused, and pain Becomes high privilege;

Then strong, and quickened through and through, They ready are his work to do. Like an on-rushing, furious host The tide of need and sin,

Unless the blades shall tempered be, They have no chance to win; God trusts to no untested sword When he goes forth to war;

Only the souls that, beaten long On pain’ s great anvil, have grown strong, His chosen weapons are. Ah souls, on pain’ s great anvil laid,

Remember this, nor be afraid!

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TEMPERED · Sarah Chauncey Woolsey · Poetry Cove