Thursday, December 24, 2020

Thanksgiving by Ella Wheeler Wilcox

Before you read the following poem on the importance of thanksgiving, you might wanna click on the following piece of music to still your mind as you review and reflect on the years that have passed and find fresh impetus for the New Year.

Click here for Beethoven's Silence - (Extended).


Thanksgiving

(By Ella Wheeler Wilcox)

We walk on starry fields of white   
And do not see the daisies;
For blessings common in our sight
We rarely offer praises.

We sigh for some supreme delight
To crown our lives with splendor,
A
nd quite ignore our daily store
Of pleasures sweet and tender.

Our cares are bold and push their way
Upon our thought and feeling.
They hand about us all the day,
Our time from pleasure stealing.

So unobtrusive many a joy
We pass by and forget it,
B
ut worry strives to own our lives,
And conquers if we let it.

There’s not a day in all the year
But holds some hidden pleasure,
And looking back, joys oft appear
To brim the past’s wide measure.

But blessings are like friends, I hold,
Who love and labor near us. 
We ought to raise our notes of praise
While living hearts can hear us.

Full many a blessing wears the guise
Of worry or of trouble;
Far-seeing is the soul, and wise, 
Who knows the mask is double.

But he who has the faith and strength
To thank his God for sorrow
Has found a joy without alloy
To gladden every morrow.

We ought to make the moments notes
Of happy, glad Thanksgiving;
The hours and days a silent phrase
Of music we are living.

And so the theme should swell and grow
As weeks and months pass o’er us,
And rise sublime at this good time,
A grand Thanksgiving chorus.




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