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				Title:     To Charles Lloyd 
			    Author: Charles Lamb [More Titles by Lamb ]		                
			     A stranger, and alone, I past those scenesWe past so late together; and my heart
 Felt something like desertion, when I look'd
 Around me, and the well-known voice of friend
 Was absent, and the cordial look was there
 No more to smile on me. I thought on Lloyd;
 All he had been to me. And now I go
 Again to mingle with a world impure,
 With men who make a mock of holy things
 Mistaken, and of man's best hope think scorn.
 The world does much to warp the heart of man,
 And I may sometimes join its ideot laugh.
 Of this I now complain not. Deal with me,
 Omniscient Father! as thou judgest best,
 And in thy season _tender_ thou my heart.
 I pray not for myself; I pray for him
 Whose soul is sore perplex'd: shine thou on him,
 Father of Lights! and in the difficult paths
 Make plain his way before him. His own thoughts
 May he not think, his own ends not pursue;
 So shall he best perform thy will on earth.
 Greatest and Best, thy will be ever ours!
         _August_, 1797.
 
 
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