Poetical works of Mathilde Blind/Suffering

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SUFFERING.

Oh ye, all ye, who suffer here below,
Schooled in the baffling mystery of pain.
Who on life's anvil bear the fateful strain.
Wrung as forged iron, hammered blow on blow,
Take counsel with your grief, in that you know
That he who suffers suffers not in vain,
Nay, that it shall be for the whole world's gain,
And wisdom prove the priceless price of woe.


Thus in some new-found land where no man's feet
Have trod a path, bold voyagers astray,
May fall foredone by torturing thirst and heat:
But from the impotent body of defeat
The winners spring who carve a conquering way—
Measured by milestones of their perished clay.