The Torchbearer
         

        The God of the great endeavor
        gave me a torch to bear.
        I lifted it high above me
        in the dark and murky air.

        Straightway with loud hosannas
        the crowd acclaimed its light,
        And followed me as I carried my torch
        through the dark and starless night.

        Til mad with peoples’ praises
        and drunken with vanity,
        I forgot it was the torch that drew them
        and fancied they followed me.

        And my arm grew sore and weary
        upholding the shining load,
        And my tired feet went stumbling
        over the hilly road.

        I fell with the torch beneath me,
        in a moment the flame was out.
        But lo, from the throng a stripling
        sprang forth with a mighty shout,

        Caught up the torch as it smouldered
        and lifted it high again,
        Til fanned by the winds of heaven
        it fired the souls of men.

        As I lay alone in the darkness,
        the feet of the trampling crowd,
        Passed over and far beyond me,
        their praises proclaimed aloud.

        And I learned in the deepening shadow
        this glorious verity,
        ‘Tis the torch the people follow,
        who ere the bearer be.

        ---------------------------------

        Author Unknown
         
        It was quoted by Elder Vaughn J. Featherstone in the October 1983
        General Conference. (Ensign, November 1983, p. 39)
        The author was listed as "anonymous"