| When I consider how my light is spent, |
| Ere half my days, in this
dark world and wide, |
| And that one talent which
is death to hide |
| Lodged with me useless,
though my soul more bent |
| To serve therewith my Maker, and
present |
| My true account, lest he
returning chide, |
| ‘Doth God exact
day-labour, light denied?’ |
| I fondly ask. But
Patience, to prevent |
| That murmur, soon replies: ‘God doth
not need |
| Either man’s work or his
own gifts; who best |
| Bear his mild yoke, they
serve him best. His state |
| Is kingly: thousands at his bidding
speed, |
| And post o’er land and
ocean without rest; |
They also serve who only
stand and wait.’
|
| John Milton |
Classic Poems |
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[ On His Blindness ] [ Lycidas ] [ Ode on the Morning of Christ's Nativity ] [ Paradise Lost ] |
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