01 To His Brother Samuel
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1726-01-to-his-brother-samuel-002 |
| Words | 107 |
Ah I what avails his fame declared
Thou blam'st, alas I the just decree
Whence Virtue meets its just reward.
Though sweeter sounds adorned thy tongue
Than Thracian Orpheus whilom played,
When list'ning to the morning song
Each tree bowed down its leafy head,
Never I ah, never from the gloom
Of unrelenting Pluto's sway
Could the thin shade again resume
Its ancient tenement of clay.
Indulgent Patience! heav'n-born guest!
Thy healing wings around display:
Thou gently calm'st the stormy breast
And driv'st the tyrant Grief away.
Corroding Care and eating Pain
By just degrees thy influence own;
And lovely lasting Peace again
Resumes her long-deserted throne.