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4 revisions | Landon Braun at Jul 30, 2020 09:08 AM | |
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69"Unfinished Business!" I suppose everyone who has been privileged Roll them about in your mind, you worried He was, when I come to think of it, living | 69"Unfinished Business!" I suppose everyone who has been privileged to talk a while with Robert Frost has come away treasuring a memory of that conversation fruity with wisdom. After such an hour with the great bust easy old poet, beside the hearth at his Vermont farm, I found the casual words above to linger longest in my thoughts. Roll them about in your mind, you worried and hurried ones! Savor the richness of time and patience, of hope and faith, that lies in this simple utterance. For there is much in the business of our lives that we cannot hasten, for all the urgency of speed that today devils us. There is much--and this is true of the most important of our affairs--that cannot be concluded in a day, or a week, or a month, but must be let to take a guided course. We are too prone to bring it with us to our rest, and thrash it over uselessly. So I, for one, over and over, give thanks for the slyly sensible remark by Robert Frost. He was, when I come to think of it, living as Nature lives. When an acorn fallen from an oak at last splits husk, sprouts, and begins to take root, how much unfinished business lies ahead of it! It has no contract with the sun and rain to have become an oak tree by a certain date. But with their help it will grow until it towers and spreads shade, in the good time we call God's. We ought as trustingly to let our plans and problems ripen to solution, knowing there is another Hand in the business beside our own. To leave a question to "unfinished business" is not to abandon the task. It is to attain the serenity which will give us strength to carry on with it when the call to effort comes. |
