Saturday, April 26, 2014

Is It for Me? -- Frances Ridley Havergal



This poetess had a few questions that she wanted to record as she felt the loss of a loved one in her 35th year. Frances Ridley Havergal was also travelling that year of 1871 with a  friend, a time for appreciation of His creation that struck her. These were just a few of the circumstances about her as Havergal penned the poem “Is It for Me?” Had she really doubts in her mind, as she thought about what lay ahead? Did this often-sick, but relatively young woman wonder whether her life would be cut short? Her poetry may also have been a learned response, the imitation of a parent she now could only remember, but to whom she could no longer speak.


Poetry was a craft that Frances learned from her father as a child, and which she used throughout her brief but productive life. William Havergal’s family, including his daughter Frances, lived in Anglican England where he ministered and composed verse and hymn, passing along key parts of his character to his children. While one brother Henry followed in his father’s footsteps as a ‘man of the cloth’ and an organist, Francis adopted her father’s poetic trait. Frances was a precocious girl who could read at age 4 and was writing verse at age 7. She learned several languages, and memorized several books of the bible, equipping her with a mind and a heart tuned specially for hymn-writing as an adult. These must have girded her spirit too, for she lost both parents before she was 40 – her mother at age 11, and her father when she was 34. The second loss was in 1870, the year before she would write her poem-question “Is It for Me?” It’s reported that her father’s death made her faith more acutely real for Frances, and perhaps that and her travel with a friend the following year played roles in the words she would write. She visited Switzerland with her friend Elizabeth Clay in 1871 when “Is It…” was composed. She marveled at the scenery before her eyes, with a growing appreciation for the Creator. You can sense the amazement still in her consciousness in the words of the poem she crafted, a woman who felt undeserving of her status in God’s kingdom. The few years of this particular period may have been something of a life turning point, as something coalesced inside her. Shortly thereafter, around 1873, she began to fully devote herself to lifting Jesus in all her efforts. It’s almost as if she was answering her own question ‘Is it for me?’, with a realization that God’s answer was indeed ‘yes’ to her.   

Frances would spend but a few years living her deepened devotion following “Is It for Me?” Sickness became more common and serious for her, finally taking her life in 1879 when she was just 42. But, she’d been prepared, with an attitude of joy in her last hours despite the pain that tormented her physically. She must have imagined it in many of her thoughts that are recorded poetically. These included words from the concluding verse of the hymn she’d written eight years earlier…’never grieve Thee more’. She meant it, in life and in death. May we all.  

    
See this site for all the verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/i/s/i/isitform.htm

See this site for further biography: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Ridley_Havergal

See this site for further biographic information:


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