THE RIGHT MUST WIN.

Oh, it is hard to work for God,

To rise and take his part

Upon this battle-field of earth,

And not sometimes lose heart!

He hides himself so wondrously,

As though there were no God;

He is least seen when all the powers

Of ill are most abroad;

Or he deserts us in the hour

The fight is all but lost;

And seems to leave us to ourselves

Just when we need him most.

Yes, there is less to try our faith,

In our mysterious creed,

Than in the godless look of earth,

In these our hours of need.

Ill masters good; good seems to change

To ill with greatest ease;

And, worst of all, the good with good

Is at cross purposes.

It is not so, but so it looks;

And we lose courage then;

And doubts will come if God hath kept

His promises to men.

Ah! God is other than we think;

His ways are far above,

Far beyond reason's height, and reached

Only by childlike love.

The look, the fashion of God's ways

Love's life long study are;

She can be bold, and guess, and act,

When reason would not dare,

She has a prudence of her own;

Her step is firm and free;

Yet there is cautious science, too,

In her simplicity.

Workmen of God! Oh lose not heart,

But learn what God is like;

And in the darkest battle field

Thou shalt know where to strike.

Thrice blest is he to whom is given

The instinct that can tell

That God is on the field when He

Is most invisible.

Blest too is he who can divine

Where real right doth lie,

And dares to take the side that seems

Wrong to man's blindfold eye.

Then learn to scorn the praise of men,

And learn to lose with God;

For Jesus won the world through shame,

And beckons thee His road.

God's glory is a wondrous thing,

Most strange in all its ways,

And, of all things on earth, least like

What men agree to praise.

As he can endless glory weave

From what men reckon shame,

In His own world He is content

To play a losing game.

Muse on His justice, downcast some!

Muse and take better heart;

Back with thine angel to the field,

And bravely do thy part.

God's justice is a bed, where we

Our anxious hearts may lay,

And, weary with ourselves, may sleep

Our discontent away.

But right is right, since God is God;

And right the day must win;

To doubt would be disloyalty,

To falter would be sin!

F. W. Faber.