“Let us go”
Raising of Lazarus.
(The Gospel History, Section 83)
Thomas therefore, who is called Didymus, said unto his fellow-disciples, Let us also go, that we may die with him.
“Let us go”
(The Saviour of the World, Vol V Book V Poem LXXIV)
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The father who his son would train
May not choose pleasant paths to tread;
Behoves him sometimes teach through pain;
Through trial, up, the boy is led.
“For your sakes, I am glad his bed
Was not watched over by his Friend,
That ye may believe that word I said,—
‘I am the Life’: come, see the end.”
Said Didymus, “To die with Him we too will wend.”
Two dismal watchers shared that home,
Sat with the sisters in their woe;
Should doubt and sorrow ever roam
From place whose lord had been laid low?
Four days had he been gone, as though
Labourers had carried from the field:
Death came, and did his errand; lo,
No comfort might kind neighbours yield:
That only Friend with help, He kept himself concealed.
St. John xi. 16.
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