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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Book of Strife in the Form of The Diary
+of an Old Soul, by George MacDonald
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Book of Strife in the Form of The Diary of an Old Soul
+
+Author: George MacDonald
+
+Posting Date: October 1, 2008 [EBook #1953]
+Release Date: November, 1999
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK OF STRIFE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bechard
+
+
+
+
+
+A BOOK OF STRIFE IN THE FORM OF THE DIARY OF AN OLD SOUL
+
+by George MacDonald
+
+
+Published in 1880.
+
+
+
+
+ [The dedication refers to the fact that the
+ book was originally published using only the
+ right-hand side pages of the book, leaving
+ the left-hand side blank to allow for and
+ acknowledge any thoughtful reader responses.]
+
+ JB
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+ Sweet friends, receive my offering. You will find
+ Against each worded page a white page set:--
+ This is the mirror of each friendly mind
+ Reflecting that. In this book we are met.
+ Make it, dear hearts, of worth to you indeed:--
+ Let your white page be ground, my print be seed,
+ Growing to golden ears, that faith and hope shall feed.
+
+ YOUR OLD SOUL
+
+
+
+
+THE DIARY OF AN OLD SOUL.
+
+
+
+
+
+JANUARY.
+
+ 1.
+
+ LORD, what I once had done with youthful might,
+ Had I been from the first true to the truth,
+ Grant me, now old, to do--with better sight,
+ And humbler heart, if not the brain of youth;
+ So wilt thou, in thy gentleness and ruth,
+ Lead back thy old soul, by the path of pain,
+ Round to his best--young eyes and heart and brain.
+
+ 2.
+
+ A dim aurora rises in my east,
+ Beyond the line of jagged questions hoar,
+ As if the head of our intombed High Priest
+ Began to glow behind the unopened door:
+ Sure the gold wings will soon rise from the gray!--
+ They rise not. Up I rise, press on the more,
+ To meet the slow coming of the Master's day.
+
+ 3.
+
+ Sometimes I wake, and, lo! I have forgot,
+ And drifted out upon an ebbing sea!
+ My soul that was at rest now resteth not,
+ For I am with myself and not with thee;
+ Truth seems a blind moon in a glaring morn,
+ Where nothing is but sick-heart vanity:
+ Oh, thou who knowest! save thy child forlorn.
+
+ 4.
+
+ Death, like high faith, levelling, lifteth all.
+ When I awake, my daughter and my son,
+ Grown sister and brother, in my arms shall fall,
+ Tenfold my girl and boy. Sure every one
+ Of all the brood to the old wings will run.
+ Whole-hearted is my worship of the man
+ From whom my earthly history began.
+
+ 5.
+
+ Thy fishes breathe but where thy waters roll;
+ Thy birds fly but within thy airy sea;
+ My soul breathes only in thy infinite soul;
+ I breathe, I think, I love, I live but thee.
+ Oh breathe, oh think,--O Love, live into me;
+ Unworthy is my life till all divine,
+ Till thou see in me only what is thine.
+
+ 6.
+
+ Then shall I breathe in sweetest sharing, then
+ Think in harmonious consort with my kin;
+ Then shall I love well all my father's men,
+ Feel one with theirs the life my heart within.
+ Oh brothers! sisters holy! hearts divine!
+ Then I shall be all yours, and nothing mine--
+ To every human heart a mother-twin.
+
+ 7.
+
+ I see a child before an empty house,
+ Knocking and knocking at the closed door;
+ He wakes dull echoes--but nor man nor mouse,
+ If he stood knocking there for evermore.--
+ A mother angel, see! folding each wing,
+ Soft-walking, crosses straight the empty floor,
+ And opens to the obstinate praying thing.
+
+ 8.
+
+ Were there but some deep, holy spell, whereby
+ Always I should remember thee--some mode
+ Of feeling the pure heat-throb momently
+ Of the spirit-fire still uttering this I!--
+ Lord, see thou to it, take thou remembrance' load:
+ Only when I bethink me can I cry;
+ Remember thou, and prick me with love's goad.
+
+ 9.
+
+ If to myself--"God sometimes interferes"--
+ I said, my faith at once would be struck blind.
+ I see him all in all, the lifing mind,
+ Or nowhere in the vacant miles and years.
+ A love he is that watches and that hears,
+ Or but a mist fumed up from minds of men,
+ Whose fear and hope reach out beyond their ken.
+
+ 10.
+
+ When I no more can stir my soul to move,
+ And life is but the ashes of a fire;
+ When I can but remember that my heart
+ Once used to live and love, long and aspire,--
+ Oh, be thou then the first, the one thou art;
+ Be thou the calling, before all answering love,
+ And in me wake hope, fear, boundless desire.
+
+ 11.
+
+ I thought that I had lost thee; but, behold!
+ Thou comest to me from the horizon low,
+ Across the fields outspread of green and gold--
+ Fair carpet for thy feet to come and go.
+ Whence I know not, or how to me thou art come!--
+ Not less my spirit with calm bliss doth glow,
+ Meeting thee only thus, in nature vague and dumb.
+
+ 12.
+
+ Doubt swells and surges, with swelling doubt behind!
+ My soul in storm is but a tattered sail,
+ Streaming its ribbons on the torrent gale;
+ In calm, 'tis but a limp and flapping thing:
+ Oh! swell it with thy breath; make it a wing,--
+ To sweep through thee the ocean, with thee the wind
+ Nor rest until in thee its haven it shall find.
+
+ 13.
+
+ The idle flapping of the sail is doubt;
+ Faith swells it full to breast the breasting seas.
+ Bold, conscience, fast, and rule the ruling helm;
+ Hell's freezing north no tempest can send out,
+ But it shall toss thee homeward to thy leas;
+ Boisterous wave-crest never shall o'erwhelm
+ Thy sea-float bark as safe as field-borne rooted elm.
+
+ 14.
+
+ Sometimes, hard-trying, it seems I cannot pray--
+ For doubt, and pain, and anger, and all strife.
+ Yet some poor half-fledged prayer-bird from the nest
+ May fall, flit, fly, perch--crouch in the bowery breast
+ Of the large, nation-healing tree of life;--
+ Moveless there sit through all the burning day,
+ And on my heart at night a fresh leaf cooling lay.
+
+ 15.
+
+ My harvest withers. Health, my means to live--
+ All things seem rushing straight into the dark.
+ But the dark still is God. I would not give
+ The smallest silver-piece to turn the rush
+ Backward or sideways. Am I not a spark
+ Of him who is the light?--Fair hope doth flush
+ My east.--Divine success--Oh, hush and hark!
+
+ 16.
+
+ Thy will be done. I yield up everything.
+ "The life is more than meat"--then more than health;
+ "The body more than raiment"--then than wealth;
+ The hairs I made not, thou art numbering.
+ Thou art my life--I the brook, thou the spring.
+ Because thine eyes are open, I can see;
+ Because thou art thyself, 'tis therefore I am me.
+
+ 17.
+
+ No sickness can come near to blast my health;
+ My life depends not upon any meat;
+ My bread comes not from any human tilth;
+ No wings will grow upon my changeless wealth;
+ Wrong cannot touch it, violence or deceit;
+ Thou art my life, my health, my bank, my barn--
+ And from all other gods thou plain dost warn.
+
+ 18.
+
+ Care thou for mine whom I must leave behind;
+ Care that they know who 'tis for them takes care;
+ Thy present patience help them still to bear;
+ Lord, keep them clearing, growing, heart and mind;
+ In one thy oneness us together bind;
+ Last earthly prayer with which to thee I cling--
+ Grant that, save love, we owe not anything.
+
+ 19.
+
+ 'Tis well, for unembodied thought a live,
+ True house to build--of stubble, wood, nor hay;
+ So, like bees round the flower by which they thrive,
+ My thoughts are busy with the informing truth,
+ And as I build, I feed, and grow in youth--
+ Hoping to stand fresh, clean, and strong, and gay,
+ When up the east comes dawning His great day.
+
+ 20.
+
+ Thy will is truth--'tis therefore fate, the strong.
+ Would that my will did sweep full swing with thine!
+ Then harmony with every spheric song,
+ And conscious power, would give sureness divine.
+ Who thinks to thread thy great laws' onward throng,
+ Is as a fly that creeps his foolish way
+ Athwart an engine's wheels in smooth resistless play.
+
+ 21.
+
+ Thou in my heart hast planted, gardener divine,
+ A scion of the tree of life: it grows;
+ But not in every wind or weather it blows;
+ The leaves fall sometimes from the baby tree,
+ And the life-power seems melting into pine;
+ Yet still the sap keeps struggling to the shine,
+ And the unseen root clings cramplike unto thee.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Do thou, my God, my spirit's weather control;
+ And as I do not gloom though the day be dun,
+ Let me not gloom when earth-born vapours roll
+ Across the infinite zenith of my soul.
+ Should sudden brain-frost through the heart's summer run,
+ Cold, weary, joyless, waste of air and sun,
+ Thou art my south, my summer-wind, my all, my one.
+
+ 23.
+
+ O Life, why dost thou close me up in death?
+ O Health, why make me inhabit heaviness?--
+ I ask, yet know: the sum of this distress,
+ Pang-haunted body, sore-dismayed mind,
+ Is but the egg that rounds the winged faith;
+ When that its path into the air shall find,
+ My heart will follow, high above cold, rain, and wind.
+
+ 24.
+
+ I can no more than lift my weary eyes;
+ Therefore I lift my weary eyes--no more.
+ But my eyes pull my heart, and that, before
+ 'Tis well awake, knocks where the conscience lies;
+ Conscience runs quick to the spirit's hidden door:
+ Straightway, from every sky-ward window, cries
+ Up to the Father's listening ears arise.
+
+ 25.
+
+ Not in my fancy now I search to find thee;
+ Not in its loftiest forms would shape or bind thee;
+ I cry to one whom I can never know,
+ Filling me with an infinite overflow;
+ Not to a shape that dwells within my heart,
+ Clothed in perfections love and truth assigned thee,
+ But to the God thou knowest that thou art.
+
+ 26.
+
+ Not, Lord, because I have done well or ill;
+ Not that my mind looks up to thee clear-eyed;
+ Not that it struggles in fast cerements tied;
+ Not that I need thee daily sorer still;
+ Not that I wretched, wander from thy will;
+ Not now for any cause to thee I cry,
+ But this, that thou art thou, and here am I.
+
+ 27.
+
+ Yestereve, Death came, and knocked at my thin door.
+ I from my window looked: the thing I saw,
+ The shape uncouth, I had not seen before.
+ I was disturbed--with fear, in sooth, not awe;
+ Whereof ashamed, I instantly did rouse
+ My will to seek thee--only to fear the more:
+ Alas! I could not find thee in the house.
+
+ 28.
+
+ I was like Peter when he began to sink.
+ To thee a new prayer therefore I have got--
+ That, when Death comes in earnest to my door,
+ Thou wouldst thyself go, when the latch doth clink,
+ And lead him to my room, up to my cot;
+ Then hold thy child's hand, hold and leave him not,
+ Till Death has done with him for evermore.
+
+ 29.
+
+ Till Death has done with him?--Ah, leave me then!
+ And Death has done with me, oh, nevermore!
+ He comes--and goes--to leave me in thy arms,
+ Nearer thy heart, oh, nearer than before!
+ To lay thy child, naked, new-born again
+ Of mother earth, crept free through many harms,
+ Upon thy bosom--still to the very core.
+
+ 30.
+
+ Come to me, Lord: I will not speculate how,
+ Nor think at which door I would have thee appear,
+ Nor put off calling till my floors be swept,
+ But cry, "Come, Lord, come any way, come now."
+ Doors, windows, I throw wide; my head I bow,
+ And sit like some one who so long has slept
+ That he knows nothing till his life draw near.
+
+ 31.
+
+ O Lord, I have been talking to the people;
+ Thought's wheels have round me whirled a fiery zone,
+ And the recoil of my words' airy ripple
+ My heart unheedful has puffed up and blown.
+ Therefore I cast myself before thee prone:
+ Lay cool hands on my burning brain, and press
+ From my weak heart the swelling emptiness.
+
+
+
+
+
+FEBRUARY.
+
+ 1.
+
+ I TO myself have neither power nor worth,
+ Patience nor love, nor anything right good;
+ My soul is a poor land, plenteous in dearth--
+ Here blades of grass, there a small herb for food--
+ A nothing that would be something if it could;
+ But if obedience, Lord, in me do grow,
+ I shall one day be better than I know.
+
+ 2.
+
+ The worst power of an evil mood is this--
+ It makes the bastard self seem in the right,
+ Self, self the end, the goal of human bliss.
+ But if the Christ-self in us be the might
+ Of saving God, why should I spend my force
+ With a dark thing to reason of the light--
+ Not push it rough aside, and hold obedient course?
+
+ 3.
+
+ Back still it comes to this: there was a man
+ Who said, "I am the truth, the life, the way:"--
+ Shall I pass on, or shall I stop and hear?--
+ "Come to the Father but by me none can:"
+ What then is this?--am I not also one
+ Of those who live in fatherless dismay?
+ I stand, I look, I listen, I draw near.
+
+ 4.
+
+ My Lord, I find that nothing else will do,
+ But follow where thou goest, sit at thy feet,
+ And where I have thee not, still run to meet.
+ Roses are scentless, hopeless are the morns,
+ Rest is but weakness, laughter crackling thorns,
+ If thou, the Truth, do not make them the true:
+ Thou art my life, O Christ, and nothing else will do.
+
+ 5.
+
+ Thou art here--in heaven, I know, but not from here--
+ Although thy separate self do not appear;
+ If I could part the light from out the day,
+ There I should have thee! But thou art too near:
+ How find thee walking, when thou art the way?
+ Oh, present Christ! make my eyes keen as stings,
+ To see thee at their heart, the glory even of things.
+
+ 6.
+
+ That thou art nowhere to be found, agree
+ Wise men, whose eyes are but for surfaces;
+ Men with eyes opened by the second birth,
+ To whom the seen, husk of the unseen is,
+ Descry thee soul of everything on earth.
+ Who know thy ends, thy means and motions see:
+ Eyes made for glory soon discover thee.
+
+ 7.
+
+ Thou near then, I draw nearer--to thy feet,
+ And sitting in thy shadow, look out on the shine;
+ Ready at thy first word to leave my seat--
+ Not thee: thou goest too. From every clod
+ Into thy footprint flows the indwelling wine;
+ And in my daily bread, keen-eyed I greet
+ Its being's heart, the very body of God.
+
+ 8.
+
+ Thou wilt interpret life to me, and men,
+ Art, nature, yea, my own soul's mysteries--
+ Bringing, truth out, clear-joyous, to my ken,
+ Fair as the morn trampling the dull night. Then
+ The lone hill-side shall hear exultant cries;
+ The joyous see me joy, the weeping weep;
+ The watching smile, as Death breathes on me his cold sleep.
+
+ 9.
+
+ I search my heart--I search, and find no faith.
+ Hidden He may be in its many folds--
+ I see him not revealed in all the world
+ Duty's firm shape thins to a misty wraith.
+ No good seems likely. To and fro I am hurled.
+ I have no stay. Only obedience holds:--
+ I haste, I rise, I do the thing he saith.
+
+ 10.
+
+ Thou wouldst not have thy man crushed back to clay;
+ It must be, God, thou hast a strength to give
+ To him that fain would do what thou dost say;
+ Else how shall any soul repentant live,
+ Old griefs and new fears hurrying on dismay?
+ Let pain be what thou wilt, kind and degree,
+ Only in pain calm thou my heart with thee.
+
+ 11.
+
+ I will not shift my ground like Moab's king,
+ But from this spot whereon I stand, I pray--
+ From this same barren rock to thee I say,
+ "Lord, in my commonness, in this very thing
+ That haunts my soul with folly--through the clay
+ Of this my pitcher, see the lamp's dim flake;
+ And hear the blow that would the pitcher break."
+
+ 12.
+
+ Be thou the well by which I lie and rest;
+ Be thou my tree of life, my garden ground;
+ Be thou my home, my fire, my chamber blest,
+ My book of wisdom, loved of all the best;
+ Oh, be my friend, each day still newer found,
+ As the eternal days and nights go round!
+ Nay, nay--thou art my God, in whom all loves are bound!
+
+ 13.
+
+ Two things at once, thou know'st I cannot think.
+ When busy with the work thou givest me,
+ I cannot consciously think then of thee.
+ Then why, when next thou lookest o'er the brink
+ Of my horizon, should my spirit shrink,
+ Reproached and fearful, nor to greet thee run?
+ Can I be two when I am only one.
+
+ 14.
+
+ My soul must unawares have sunk awry.
+ Some care, poor eagerness, ambition of work,
+ Some old offence that unforgiving did lurk,
+ Or some self-gratulation, soft and sly--
+ Something not thy sweet will, not the good part,
+ While the home-guard looked out, stirred up the old murk,
+ And so I gloomed away from thee, my Heart.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Therefore I make provision, ere I begin
+ To do the thing thou givest me to do,
+ Praying,--Lord, wake me oftener, lest I sin.
+ Amidst my work, open thine eyes on me,
+ That I may wake and laugh, and know and see
+ Then with healed heart afresh catch up the clue,
+ And singing drop into my work anew.
+
+ 16.
+
+ If I should slow diverge, and listless stray
+ Into some thought, feeling, or dream unright,
+ O Watcher, my backsliding soul affray;
+ Let me not perish of the ghastly blight.
+ Be thou, O Life eternal, in me light;
+ Then merest approach of selfish or impure
+ Shall start me up alive, awake, secure.
+
+ 17.
+
+ Lord, I have fallen again--a human clod!
+ Selfish I was, and heedless to offend;
+ Stood on my rights. Thy own child would not send
+ Away his shreds of nothing for the whole God!
+ Wretched, to thee who savest, low I bend:
+ Give me the power to let my rag-rights go
+ In the great wind that from thy gulf doth blow.
+
+ 18.
+
+ Keep me from wrath, let it seem ever so right:
+ My wrath will never work thy righteousness.
+ Up, up the hill, to the whiter than snow-shine,
+ Help me to climb, and dwell in pardon's light.
+ I must be pure as thou, or ever less
+ Than thy design of me--therefore incline
+ My heart to take men's wrongs as thou tak'st mine.
+
+ 19.
+
+ Lord, in thy spirit's hurricane, I pray,
+ Strip my soul naked--dress it then thy way.
+ Change for me all my rags to cloth of gold.
+ Who would not poverty for riches yield?
+ A hovel sell to buy a treasure-field?
+ Who would a mess of porridge careful hold
+ Against the universe's birthright old?
+
+ 20.
+
+ Help me to yield my will, in labour even,
+ Nor toil on toil, greedy of doing, heap--
+ Fretting I cannot more than me is given;
+ That with the finest clay my wheel runs slow,
+ Nor lets the lovely thing the shapely grow;
+ That memory what thought gives it cannot keep,
+ And nightly rimes ere morn like cistus-petals go.
+
+ 21.
+
+ 'Tis--shall thy will be done for me?--or mine,
+ And I be made a thing not after thine--
+ My own, and dear in paltriest details?
+ Shall I be born of God, or of mere man?
+ Be made like Christ, or on some other plan?--
+ I let all run:--set thou and trim my sails;
+ Home then my course, let blow whatever gales.
+
+ 22.
+
+ With thee on board, each sailor is a king
+ Nor I mere captain of my vessel then,
+ But heir of earth and heaven, eternal child;
+ Daring all truth, nor fearing anything;
+ Mighty in love, the servant of all men;
+ Resenting nothing, taking rage and blare
+ Into the Godlike silence of a loving care.
+
+ 23.
+
+ I cannot see, my God, a reason why
+ From morn to night I go not gladsome free;
+ For, if thou art what my soul thinketh thee,
+ There is no burden but should lightly lie,
+ No duty but a joy at heart must be:
+ Love's perfect will can be nor sore nor small,
+ For God is light--in him no darkness is at all.
+
+ 24.
+
+ 'Tis something thus to think, and half to trust--
+ But, ah! my very heart, God-born, should lie
+ Spread to the light, clean, clear of mire and rust,
+ And like a sponge drink the divine sunbeams.
+ What resolution then, strong, swift, and high!
+ What pure devotion, or to live or die!
+ And in my sleep, what true, what perfect dreams!
+
+ 25.
+
+ There is a misty twilight of the soul,
+ A sickly eclipse, low brooding o'er a man,
+ When the poor brain is as an empty bowl,
+ And the thought-spirit, weariful and wan,
+ Turning from that which yet it loves the best,
+ Sinks moveless, with life-poverty opprest:--
+ Watch then, O Lord, thy feebly glimmering coal.
+
+ 26.
+
+ I cannot think; in me is but a void;
+ I have felt much, and want to feel no more;
+ My soul is hungry for some poorer fare--
+ Some earthly nectar, gold not unalloyed:--
+ The little child that's happy to the core,
+ Will leave his mother's lap, run down the stair,
+ Play with the servants--is his mother annoyed?
+
+ 27.
+
+ I would not have it so. Weary and worn,
+ Why not to thee run straight, and be at rest?
+ Motherward, with toy new, or garment torn,
+ The child that late forsook her changeless breast,
+ Runs to home's heart, the heaven that's heavenliest:
+ In joy or sorrow, feebleness or might,
+ Peace or commotion, be thou, Father, my delight.
+
+ 28.
+
+ The thing I would say, still comes forth with doubt
+ And difference:--is it that thou shap'st my ends?
+ Or is it only the necessity
+ Of stubborn words, that shift sluggish about,
+ Warping my thought as it the sentence bends?--
+ Have thou a part in it, O Lord, and I
+ Shall say a truth, if not the thing I try.
+
+ 29.
+
+ Gather my broken fragments to a whole,
+ As these four quarters make a shining day.
+ Into thy basket, for my golden bowl,
+ Take up the things that I have cast away
+ In vice or indolence or unwise play.
+ Let mine be a merry, all-receiving heart,
+ But make it a whole, with light in every part.
+
+
+
+
+
+MARCH.
+
+ 1.
+
+ THE song birds that come to me night and morn,
+ Fly oft away and vanish if I sleep,
+ Nor to my fowling-net will one return:
+ Is the thing ever ours we cannot keep?--
+ But their souls go not out into the deep.
+ What matter if with changed song they come back?
+ Old strength nor yet fresh beauty shall they lack.
+
+ 2.
+
+ Gloriously wasteful, O my Lord, art thou!
+ Sunset faints after sunset into the night,
+ Splendorously dying from thy window-sill--
+ For ever. Sad our poverty doth bow
+ Before the riches of thy making might:
+ Sweep from thy space thy systems at thy will--
+ In thee the sun sets every sunset still.
+
+ 3.
+
+ And in the perfect time, O perfect God,
+ When we are in our home, our natal home,
+ When joy shall carry every sacred load,
+ And from its life and peace no heart shall roam,
+ What if thou make us able to make like thee--
+ To light with moons, to clothe with greenery,
+ To hang gold sunsets o'er a rose and purple sea!
+
+ 4.
+
+ Then to his neighbour one may call out, "Come!
+ Brother, come hither--I would show you a thing;"
+ And lo, a vision of his imagining,
+ Informed of thought which else had rested dumb,
+ Before the neighbour's truth-delighted eyes,
+ In the great aether of existence rise,
+ And two hearts each to each the closer cling!
+
+ 5.
+
+ We make, but thou art the creating core.
+ Whatever thing I dream, invent, or feel,
+ Thou art the heart of it, the atmosphere.
+ Thou art inside all love man ever bore;
+ Yea, the love itself, whatever thing be dear.
+ Man calls his dog, he follows at his heel,
+ Because thou first art love, self-caused, essential, mere.
+
+ 6.
+
+ This day be with me, Lord, when I go forth,
+ Be nearer to me than I am able to ask.
+ In merriment, in converse, or in task,
+ Walking the street, listening to men of worth,
+ Or greeting such as only talk and bask,
+ Be thy thought still my waiting soul around,
+ And if He come, I shall be watching found.
+
+ 7.
+
+ What if, writing, I always seem to leave
+ Some better thing, or better way, behind,
+ Why should I therefore fret at all, or grieve!
+ The worse I drop, that I the better find;
+ The best is only in thy perfect mind.
+ Fallen threads I will not search for--I will weave.
+ Who makes the mill-wheel backward strike to grind!
+
+ 8.
+
+ Be with me, Lord. Keep me beyond all prayers:
+ For more than all my prayers my need of thee,
+ And thou beyond all need, all unknown cares;
+ What the heart's dear imagination dares,
+ Thou dost transcend in measureless majesty
+ All prayers in one--my God, be unto me
+ Thy own eternal self, absolutely.
+
+ 9.
+
+ Where should the unknown treasures of the truth
+ Lie, but there whence the truth comes out the most--
+ In the Son of man, folded in love and ruth?
+ Fair shore we see, fair ocean; but behind
+ Lie infinite reaches bathing many a coast--
+ The human thought of the eternal mind,
+ Pulsed by a living tide, blown by a living wind.
+
+ 10.
+
+ Thou, healthful Father, art the Ancient of Days,
+ And Jesus is the eternal youth of thee.
+ Our old age is the scorching of the bush
+ By life's indwelling, incorruptible blaze.
+ O Life, burn at this feeble shell of me,
+ Till I the sore singed garment off shall push,
+ Flap out my Psyche wings, and to thee rush.
+
+ 11.
+
+ But shall I then rush to thee like a dart?
+ Or lie long hours aeonian yet betwixt
+ This hunger in me, and the Father's heart?--
+ It shall be good, how ever, and not ill;
+ Of things and thoughts even now thou art my next;
+ Sole neighbour, and no space between, thou art--
+ And yet art drawing nearer, nearer still.
+
+ 12.
+
+ Therefore, my brothers, therefore, sisters dear,
+ However I, troubled or selfish, fail
+ In tenderness, or grace, or service clear,
+ I every moment draw to you more near;
+ God in us from our hearts veil after veil
+ Keeps lifting, till we see with his own sight,
+ And all together run in unity's delight.
+
+ 13.
+
+ I love thee, Lord, for very greed of love--
+ Not of the precious streams that towards me move,
+ But of the indwelling, outgoing, fountain store.
+ Than mine, oh, many an ignorant heart loves more!
+ Therefore the more, with Mary at thy feet,
+ I must sit worshipping--that, in my core,
+ Thy words may fan to a flame the low primeval heat.
+
+ 14.
+
+ Oh my beloved, gone to heaven from me!
+ I would be rich in love to heap you with love;
+ I long to love you, sweet ones, perfectly--
+ Like God, who sees no spanning vault above,
+ No earth below, and feels no circling air--
+ Infinitely, no boundary anywhere.
+ I am a beast until I love as God doth love.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Ah, say not, 'tis but perfect self I want
+ But if it were, that self is fit to live
+ Whose perfectness is still itself to scant,
+ Which never longs to have, but still to give.
+ A self I must have, or not be at all:
+ Love, give me a self self-giving--or let me fall
+ To endless darkness back, and free me from life's thrall.
+
+ 16.
+
+ "Back," said I! Whither back? How to the dark?
+ From no dark came I, but the depths of light;
+ From the sun-heart I came, of love a spark:
+ What should I do but love with all my might?
+ To die of love severe and pure and stark,
+ Were scarcely loss; to lord a loveless height--
+ That were a living death, damnation's positive night.
+
+ 17.
+
+ But love is life. To die of love is then
+ The only pass to higher life than this.
+ All love is death to loving, living men;
+ All deaths are leaps across clefts to the abyss.
+ Our life is the broken current, Lord, of thine,
+ Flashing from morn to morn with conscious shine--
+ Then first by willing death self-made, then life divine.
+
+ 18.
+
+ I love you, my sweet children, who are gone
+ Into another mansion; but I know
+ I love you not as I shall love you yet.
+ I love you, sweet dead children; there are none
+ In the land to which ye vanished to go,
+ Whose hearts more truly on your hearts are set--
+ Yet should I die of grief to love you only so.
+
+ 19.
+
+ "I am but as a beast before thee, Lord."--
+ Great poet-king, I thank thee for the word.--
+ Leave not thy son half-made in beastly guise--
+ Less than a man, with more than human cries--
+ An unshaped thing in which thyself cries out!
+ Finish me, Father; now I am but a doubt;
+ Oh! make thy moaning thing for joy to leap and shout.
+
+ 20.
+
+ Let my soul talk to thee in ordered words,
+ O king of kings, O lord of only lords!--
+ When I am thinking thee within my heart,
+ From the broken reflex be not far apart.
+ The troubled water, dim with upstirred soil,
+ Makes not the image which it yet can spoil:--
+ Come nearer, Lord, and smooth the wrinkled coil.
+
+ 21.
+
+ O Lord, when I do think of my departed,
+ I think of thee who art the death of parting;
+ Of him who crying Father breathed his last,
+ Then radiant from the sepulchre upstarted.--
+ Even then, I think, thy hands and feet kept smarting:
+ With us the bitterness of death is past,
+ But by the feet he still doth hold us fast.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Therefore our hands thy feet do hold as fast.
+ We pray not to be spared the sorest pang,
+ But only--be thou with us to the last.
+ Let not our heart be troubled at the clang
+ Of hammer and nails, nor dread the spear's keen fang,
+ Nor the ghast sickening that comes of pain,
+ Nor yet the last clutch of the banished brain.
+
+ 23.
+
+ Lord, pity us: we have no making power;
+ Then give us making will, adopting thine.
+ Make, make, and make us; temper, and refine.
+ Be in us patience--neither to start nor cower.
+ Christ, if thou be not with us--not by sign,
+ But presence, actual as the wounds that bleed--
+ We shall not bear it, but shall die indeed.
+
+ 24.
+
+ O Christ, have pity on all men when they come
+ Unto the border haunted of dismay;
+ When that they know not draweth very near--
+ The other thing, the opposite of day,
+ Formless and ghastly, sick, and gaping-dumb,
+ Before which even love doth lose his cheer:
+ O radiant Christ, remember then thy fear.
+
+ 25.
+
+ Be by me, Lord, this day. Thou know'st I mean--
+ Lord, make me mind thee. I herewith forestall
+ My own forgetfulness, when I stoop to glean
+ The corn of earth--which yet thy hand lets fall.
+ Be for me then against myself. Oh lean
+ Over me then when I invert my cup;
+ Take me, if by the hair, and lift me up.
+
+ 26.
+
+ Lord of essential life, help me to die.
+ To will to die is one with highest life,
+ The mightiest act that to Will's hand doth lie--
+ Born of God's essence, and of man's hard strife:
+ God, give me strength my evil self to kill,
+ And die into the heaven of thy pure will.--
+ Then shall this body's death be very tolerable.
+
+ 27.
+
+ As to our mothers came help in our birth--
+ Not lost in lifing us, but saved and blest--
+ Self bearing self, although right sorely prest,
+ Shall nothing lose, but die and be at rest
+ In life eternal, beyond all care and dearth.
+ God-born then truly, a man does no more ill,
+ Perfectly loves, and has whate'er he will.
+
+ 28.
+
+ As our dear animals do suffer less
+ Because their pain spreads neither right nor left,
+ Lost in oblivion and foresightlessness--
+ Our suffering sore by faith shall be bereft
+ Of all dismay, and every weak excess.
+ His presence shall be better in our pain,
+ Than even self-absence to the weaker brain.
+
+ 29.
+
+ "Father, let this cup pass." He prayed--was heard.
+ What cup was it that passed away from him?
+ Sure not the death-cup, now filled to the brim!
+ There was no quailing in the awful word;
+ He still was king of kings, of lords the lord:--
+ He feared lest, in the suffering waste and grim,
+ His faith might grow too faint and sickly dim.
+
+ 30.
+
+ Thy mind, my master, I will dare explore;
+ What we are told, that we are meant to know.
+ Into thy soul I search yet more and more,
+ Led by the lamp of my desire and woe.
+ If thee, my Lord, I may not understand,
+ I am a wanderer in a houseless land,
+ A weeping thirst by hot winds ever fanned.
+
+ 31.
+
+ Therefore I look again--and think I see
+ That, when at last he did cry out, "My God,
+ Why hast thou me forsaken?" straight man's rod
+ Was turned aside; for, that same moment, he
+ Cried "Father!" and gave up will and breath and spirit
+ Into his hands whose all he did inherit--
+ Delivered, glorified eternally.
+
+
+
+
+
+APRIL.
+
+ 1.
+
+ LORD, I do choose the higher than my will.
+ I would be handled by thy nursing arms
+ After thy will, not my infant alarms.
+ Hurt me thou wilt--but then more loving still,
+ If more can be and less, in love's perfect zone!
+ My fancy shrinks from least of all thy harms,
+ But do thy will with me--I am thine own.
+
+ 2.
+
+ Some things wilt thou not one day turn to dreams?
+ Some dreams wilt thou not one day turn to fact?
+ The thing that painful, more than should be, seems,
+ Shall not thy sliding years with them retract--
+ Shall fair realities not counteract?
+ The thing that was well dreamed of bliss and joy--
+ Wilt thou not breathe thy life into the toy?
+
+ 3.
+
+ I have had dreams of absolute delight,
+ Beyond all waking bliss--only of grass,
+ Flowers, wind, a peak, a limb of marble white;
+ They dwell with me like things half come to pass,
+ True prophecies:--when I with thee am right,
+ If I pray, waking, for such a joy of sight,
+ Thou with the gold, wilt not refuse the brass.
+
+ 4.
+
+ I think I shall not ever pray for such;
+ Thy bliss will overflood my heart and brain,
+ And I want no unripe things back again.
+ Love ever fresher, lovelier than of old--
+ How should it want its more exchanged for much?
+ Love will not backward sigh, but forward strain,
+ On in the tale still telling, never told.
+
+ 5.
+
+ What has been, shall not only be, but is.
+ The hues of dreamland, strange and sweet and tender
+ Are but hint-shadows of full many a splendour
+ Which the high Parent-love will yet unroll
+ Before his child's obedient, humble soul.
+ Ah, me, my God! in thee lies every bliss
+ Whose shadow men go hunting wearily amiss.
+
+ 6.
+
+ Now, ere I sleep, I wonder what I shall dream.
+ Some sense of being, utter new, may come
+ Into my soul while I am blind and dumb--
+ With shapes and airs and scents which dark hours teem,
+ Of other sort than those that haunt the day,
+ Hinting at precious things, ages away
+ In the long tale of us God to himself doth say.
+
+ 7.
+
+ Late, in a dream, an unknown lady I saw
+ Stand on a tomb; down she to me stepped thence.
+ "They tell me," quoth I, "thou art one of the dead!"
+ And scarce believed for gladness the yea she said;
+ A strange auroral bliss, an arctic awe,
+ A new, outworldish joy awoke intense,
+ To think I talked with one that verily was dead.
+
+ 8.
+
+ Thou dost demand our love, holy Lord Christ,
+ And batest nothing of thy modesty;--
+ Thou know'st no other way to bliss the highest
+ Than loving thee, the loving, perfectly.
+ Thou lovest perfectly--that is thy bliss:
+ We must love like thee, or our being miss--
+ So, to love perfectly, love perfect Love, love thee.
+
+ 9.
+
+ Here is my heart, O Christ; thou know'st I love thee.
+ But wretched is the thing I call my love.
+ O Love divine, rise up in me and move me--
+ I follow surely when thou first dost move.
+ To love the perfect love, is primal, mere
+ Necessity; and he who holds life dear,
+ Must love thee every hope and heart above.
+
+ 10.
+
+ Might I but scatter interfering things--
+ Questions and doubts, distrusts and anxious pride,
+ And in thy garment, as under gathering wings,
+ Nestle obedient to thy loving side,
+ Easy it were to love thee. But when thou
+ Send'st me to think and labour from thee wide,
+ Love falls to asking many a why and how.
+
+ 11.
+
+ Easier it were, but poorer were the love.
+ Lord, I would have me love thee from the deeps--
+ Of troubled thought, of pain, of weariness.
+ Through seething wastes below, billows above,
+ My soul should rise in eager, hungering leaps;
+ Through thorny thicks, through sands unstable press--
+ Out of my dream to him who slumbers not nor sleeps.
+
+ 12.
+
+ I do not fear the greatness of thy command--
+ To keep heart-open-house to brother men;
+ But till in thy God's love perfect I stand,
+ My door not wide enough will open. Then
+ Each man will be love-awful in my sight;
+ And, open to the eternal morning's might,
+ Each human face will shine my window for thy light.
+
+ 13.
+
+ Make me all patience and all diligence;
+ Patience, that thou mayst have thy time with me;
+ Diligence, that I waste not thy expense
+ In sending out to bring me home to thee.
+ What though thy work in me transcends my sense--
+ Too fine, too high, for me to understand--
+ I hope entirely. On, Lord, with thy labour grand.
+
+ 14.
+
+ Lest I be humbled at the last, and told
+ That my great labour was but for my peace
+ That not for love or truth had I been bold,
+ But merely for a prisoned heart's release;
+ Careful, I humble me now before thy feet:
+ Whate'er I be, I cry, and will not cease--
+ Let me not perish, though favour be not meet.
+
+ 15.
+
+ For, what I seek thou knowest I must find,
+ Or miserably die for lack of love.
+ I justify thee: what is in thy mind,
+ If it be shame to me, all shame above.
+ Thou know'st I choose it--know'st I would not shove
+ The hand away that stripped me for the rod--
+ If so it pleased my Life, my love-made-angry God.
+
+ 16.
+
+ I see a door, a multitude near by,
+ In creed and quarrel, sure disciples all!
+ Gladly they would, they say, enter the hall,
+ But cannot, the stone threshold is so high.
+ From unseen hand, full many a feeding crumb,
+ Slow dropping o'er the threshold high doth come:
+ They gather and eat, with much disputing hum.
+
+ 17.
+
+ Still and anon, a loud clear voice doth call--
+ "Make your feet clean, and enter so the hall."
+ They hear, they stoop, they gather each a crumb.
+ Oh the deaf people! would they were also dumb!
+ Hear how they talk, and lack of Christ deplore,
+ Stamping with muddy feet about the door,
+ And will not wipe them clean to walk upon his floor!
+
+ 18.
+
+ But see, one comes; he listens to the voice;
+ Careful he wipes his weary dusty feet!
+ The voice hath spoken--to him is left no choice;
+ He hurries to obey--that only is meet.
+ Low sinks the threshold, levelled with the ground;
+ The man leaps in--to liberty he's bound.
+ The rest go talking, walking, picking round.
+
+ 19.
+
+ If I, thus writing, rebuke my neighbour dull,
+ And talk, and write, and enter not the door,
+ Than all the rest I wrong Christ tenfold more,
+ Making his gift of vision void and null.
+ Help me this day to be thy humble sheep,
+ Eating thy grass, and following, thou before;
+ From wolfish lies my life, O Shepherd, keep.
+
+ 20.
+
+ God, help me, dull of heart, to trust in thee.
+ Thou art the father of me--not any mood
+ Can part me from the One, the verily Good.
+ When fog and failure o'er my being brood.
+ When life looks but a glimmering marshy clod,
+ No fire out flashing from the living God--
+ Then, then, to rest in faith were worthy victory!
+
+ 21.
+
+ To trust is gain and growth, not mere sown seed!
+ Faith heaves the world round to the heavenly dawn,
+ In whose great light the soul doth spell and read
+ Itself high-born, its being derived and drawn
+ From the eternal self-existent fire;
+ Then, mazed with joy of its own heavenly breed,
+ Exultant-humble falls before its awful sire.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Art thou not, Jesus, busy like to us?
+ Thee shall I image as one sitting still,
+ Ordering all things in thy potent will,
+ Silent, and thinking ever to thy father,
+ Whose thought through thee flows multitudinous?
+ Or shall I think of thee as journeying, rather,
+ Ceaseless through space, because thou everything dost fill?
+
+ 23.
+
+ That all things thou dost fill, I well may think--
+ Thy power doth reach me in so many ways.
+ Thou who in one the universe dost bind,
+ Passest through all the channels of my mind;
+ The sun of thought, across the farthest brink
+ Of consciousness thou sendest me thy rays;
+ Nor drawest them in when lost in sleep I sink.
+
+ 24.
+
+ So common are thy paths, thy coming seems
+ Only another phase oft of my me;
+ But nearer is my I, O Lord, to thee,
+ Than is my I to what itself it deems;
+ How better then couldst thou, O master, come,
+ Than from thy home across into my home,
+ Straight o'er the marches that I cannot see!
+
+ 25.
+
+ Marches?--'Twixt thee and me there's no division,
+ Except the meeting of thy will and mine,
+ The loves that love, the wills that will the same.
+ Where thine meets mine is my life's true condition;
+ Yea, only there it burns with any flame.
+ Thy will but holds me to my life's fruition.
+ O God, I would--I have no mine that is not thine.
+
+ 26.
+
+ I look for thee, and do not see thee come.--
+ If I could see thee, 'twere a commoner thing,
+ And shallower comfort would thy coming bring.
+ Earth, sea, and air lie round me moveless dumb,
+ Never a tremble, an expectant hum,
+ To tell the Lord of Hearts is drawing near:
+ Lo! in the looking eyes, the looked for Lord is here.
+
+ 27.
+
+ I take a comfort from my very badness:
+ It is for lack of thee that I am bad.
+ How close, how infinitely closer yet
+ Must I come to thee, ere I can pay one debt
+ Which mere humanity has on me set!
+ "How close to thee!"--no wonder, soul, thou art glad!
+ Oneness with him is the eternal gladness.
+
+ 28.
+
+ What can there be so close as making and made?
+ Nought twinned can be so near; thou art more nigh
+ To me, my God, than is this thinking I
+ To that I mean when I by me is said;
+ Thou art more near me, than is my ready will
+ Near to my love, though both one place do fill;--
+ Yet, till we are one,--Ah me! the long until!
+
+ 29.
+
+ Then shall my heart behold thee everywhere.
+ The vision rises of a speechless thing,
+ A perfectness of bliss beyond compare!
+ A time when I nor breathe nor think nor move,
+ But I do breathe and think and feel thy love,
+ The soul of all the songs the saints do sing!--
+ And life dies out in bliss, to come again in prayer.
+
+ 30.
+
+ In the great glow of that great love, this death
+ Would melt away like a fantastic cloud;
+ I should no more shrink from it than from the breath
+ That makes in the frosty air a nimbus-shroud;
+ Thou, Love, hast conquered death, and I aloud
+ Should triumph over him, with thy saintly crowd,
+ That where the Lamb goes ever followeth.
+
+
+
+
+
+MAY.
+
+ 1.
+
+ WHAT though my words glance sideways from the thing
+ Which I would utter in thine ear, my sire!
+ Truth in the inward parts thou dost desire--
+ Wise hunger, not a fitness fine of speech:
+ The little child that clamouring fails to reach
+ With upstretched hand the fringe of her attire,
+ Yet meets the mother's hand down hurrying.
+
+ 2.
+
+ Even when their foolish words they turned on him,
+ He did not his disciples send away;
+ He knew their hearts were foolish, eyes were dim,
+ And therefore by his side needs must they stay.
+ Thou will not, Lord, send me away from thee.
+ When I am foolish, make thy cock crow grim;
+ If that is not enough, turn, Lord, and look on me.
+
+ 3.
+
+ Another day of gloom and slanting rain!
+ Of closed skies, cold winds, and blight and bane!
+ Such not the weather, Lord, which thou art fain
+ To give thy chosen, sweet to heart and brain!--
+ Until we mourn, thou keep'st the merry tune;
+ Thy hand unloved its pleasure must restrain,
+ Nor spoil both gift and child by lavishing too soon.
+
+ 4.
+
+ But all things shall be ours! Up, heart, and sing.
+ All things were made for us--we are God's heirs--
+ Moon, sun, and wildest comets that do trail
+ A crowd of small worlds for a swiftness-tail!
+ Up from Thy depths in me, my child-heart bring--
+ The child alone inherits anything:
+ God's little children-gods--all things are theirs!
+
+ 5.
+
+ Thy great deliverance is a greater thing
+ Than purest imagination can foregrasp;
+ A thing beyond all conscious hungering,
+ Beyond all hope that makes the poet sing.
+ It takes the clinging world, undoes its clasp,
+ Floats it afar upon a mighty sea,
+ And leaves us quiet with love and liberty and thee.
+
+ 6.
+
+ Through all the fog, through all earth's wintery sighs,
+ I scent Thy spring, I feel the eternal air,
+ Warm, soft, and dewy, filled with flowery eyes,
+ And gentle, murmuring motions everywhere--
+ Of life in heart, and tree, and brook, and moss;
+ Thy breath wakes beauty, love, and bliss, and prayer,
+ And strength to hang with nails upon thy cross.
+
+ 7.
+
+ If thou hadst closed my life in seed and husk,
+ And cast me into soft, warm, damp, dark mould,
+ All unaware of light come through the dusk,
+ I yet should feel the split of each shelly fold,
+ Should feel the growing of my prisoned heart,
+ And dully dream of being slow unrolled,
+ And in some other vagueness taking part.
+
+ 8.
+
+ And little as the world I should foreknow
+ Up into which I was about to rise--
+ Its rains, its radiance, airs, and warmth, and skies,
+ How it would greet me, how its wind would blow--
+ As little, it may be, I do know the good
+ Which I for years half darkling have pursued--
+ The second birth for which my nature cries.
+
+ 9.
+
+ The life that knows not, patient waits, nor longs:--
+ I know, and would be patient, yet would long.
+ I can be patient for all coming songs,
+ But let me sing my one monotonous song.
+ To me the time is slow my mould among;
+ To quicker life I fain would spur and start
+ The aching growth at my dull-swelling heart.
+
+ 10.
+
+ Christ is the pledge that I shall one day see;
+ That one day, still with him, I shall awake,
+ And know my God, at one with him and free.
+ O lordly essence, come to life in me;
+ The will-throb let me feel that doth me make;
+ Now have I many a mighty hope in thee,
+ Then shall I rest although the universe should quake.
+
+ 11.
+
+ Haste to me, Lord, when this fool-heart of mine
+ Begins to gnaw itself with selfish craving;
+ Or, like a foul thing scarcely worth the saving,
+ Swoln up with wrath, desireth vengeance fine.
+ Haste, Lord, to help, when reason favours wrong;
+ Haste when thy soul, the high-born thing divine,
+ Is torn by passion's raving, maniac throng.
+
+ 12.
+
+ Fair freshness of the God-breathed spirit air,
+ Pass through my soul, and make it strong to love;
+ Wither with gracious cold what demons dare
+ Shoot from my hell into my world above;
+ Let them drop down, like leaves the sun doth sear,
+ And flutter far into the inane and bare,
+ Leaving my middle-earth calm, wise, and clear.
+
+ 13.
+
+ Even thou canst give me neither thought nor thing,
+ Were it the priceless pearl hid in the land,
+ Which, if I fix thereon a greedy gaze,
+ Becomes not poison that doth burn and cling;
+ Their own bad look my foolish eyes doth daze,
+ They see the gift, see not the giving hand--
+ From the living root the apple dead I wring.
+
+ 14.
+
+ This versing, even the reading of the tale
+ That brings my heart its joy unspeakable,
+ Sometimes will softly, unsuspectedly hale
+ That heart from thee, and all its pulses quell.
+ Discovery's pride, joy's bliss, take aback my sail,
+ And sweep me from thy presence and my grace,
+ Because my eyes dropped from the master's face.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Afresh I seek thee. Lead me--once more I pray--
+ Even should it be against my will, thy way.
+ Let me not feel thee foreign any hour,
+ Or shrink from thee as an estranged power.
+ Through doubt, through faith, through bliss, through stark dismay,
+ Through sunshine, wind, or snow, or fog, or shower,
+ Draw me to thee who art my only day.
+
+ 16.
+
+ I would go near thee--but I cannot press
+ Into thy presence--it helps not to presume.
+ Thy doors are deeds; the handles are their doing.
+ He whose day-life is obedient righteousness,
+ Who, after failure, or a poor success,
+ Rises up, stronger effort yet renewing--
+ He finds thee, Lord, at length, in his own common room.
+
+ 17.
+
+ Lord, thou hast carried me through this evening's duty;
+ I am released, weary, and well content.
+ O soul, put on the evening dress of beauty,
+ Thy sunset-flush, of gold and purple blent!--
+ Alas, the moment I turn to my heart,
+ Feeling runs out of doors, or stands apart!
+ But such as I am, Lord, take me as thou art.
+
+ 18.
+
+ The word he then did speak, fits now as then,
+ For the same kind of men doth mock at it.
+ God-fools, God-drunkards these do call the men
+ Who think the poverty of their all not fit,
+ Borne humbly by their art, their voice, their pen,
+ Save for its allness, at thy feet to fling,
+ For whom all is unfit that is not everything.
+
+ 19.
+
+ O Christ, my life, possess me utterly.
+ Take me and make a little Christ of me.
+ If I am anything but thy father's son,
+ 'Tis something not yet from the darkness won.
+ Oh, give me light to live with open eyes.
+ Oh, give me life to hope above all skies.
+ Give me thy spirit to haunt the Father with my cries.
+
+ 20.
+
+ 'Tis hard for man to rouse his spirit up--
+ It is the human creative agony,
+ Though but to hold the heart an empty cup,
+ Or tighten on the team the rigid rein.
+ Many will rather lie among the slain
+ Than creep through narrow ways the light to gain--
+ Than wake the will, and be born bitterly.
+
+ 21.
+
+ But he who would be born again indeed,
+ Must wake his soul unnumbered times a day,
+ And urge himself to life with holy greed;
+ Now ope his bosom to the Wind's free play;
+ And now, with patience forceful, hard, lie still,
+ Submiss and ready to the making will,
+ Athirst and empty, for God's breath to fill.
+
+ 22.
+
+ All times are thine whose will is our remede.
+ Man turns to thee, thou hast not turned away;
+ The look he casts, thy labour that did breed--
+ It is thy work, thy business all the day:
+ That look, not foregone fitness, thou dost heed.
+ For duty absolute how be fitter than now?
+ Or learn by shunning?--Lord, I come; help thou.
+
+ 23.
+
+ Ever above my coldness and my doubt
+ Rises up something, reaching forth a hand:
+ This thing I know, but cannot understand.
+ Is it the God in me that rises out
+ Beyond my self, trailing it up with him,
+ Towards the spirit-home, the freedom-land,
+ Beyond my conscious ken, my near horizon's brim?
+
+ 24.
+
+ O God of man, my heart would worship all
+ My fellow men, the flashes from thy fire;
+ Them in good sooth my lofty kindred call,
+ Born of the same one heart, the perfect sire;
+ Love of my kind alone can set me free;
+ Help me to welcome all that come to me,
+ Not close my doors and dream solitude liberty!
+
+ 25.
+
+ A loving word may set some door ajar
+ Where seemed no door, and that may enter in
+ Which lay at the heart of that same loving word.
+ In my still chamber dwell thou always, Lord;
+ Thy presence there will carriage true afford;
+ True words will flow, pure of design to win;
+ And to my men my door shall have no bar.
+
+ 26.
+
+ My prayers, my God, flow from what I am not;
+ I think thy answers make me what I am.
+ Like weary waves thought follows upon thought,
+ But the still depth beneath is all thine own,
+ And there thou mov'st in paths to us unknown.
+ Out of strange strife thy peace is strangely wrought;
+ If the lion in us pray--thou answerest the lamb.
+
+ 27.
+
+ So bound in selfishness am I, so chained,
+ I know it must be glorious to be free
+ But know not what, full-fraught, the word doth mean.
+ By loss on loss I have severely gained
+ Wisdom enough my slavery to see;
+ But liberty, pure, absolute, serene,
+ No freest-visioned slave has ever seen.
+
+ 28.
+
+ For, that great freedom how should such as I
+ Be able to imagine in such a self?
+ Less hopeless far the miser man might try
+ To image the delight of friend-shared pelf.
+ Freedom is to be like thee, face and heart;
+ To know it, Lord, I must be as thou art,
+ I cannot breed the imagination high.
+
+ 29.
+
+ Yet hints come to me from the realm unknown;
+ Airs drift across the twilight border land,
+ Odoured with life; and as from some far strand
+ Sea-murmured, whispers to my heart are blown
+ That fill me with a joy I cannot speak,
+ Yea, from whose shadow words drop faint and weak:
+ Thee, God, I shadow in that region grand.
+
+ 30.
+
+ O Christ, who didst appear in Judah land,
+ Thence by the cross go back to God's right hand,
+ Plain history, and things our sense beyond,
+ In thee together come and correspond:
+ How rulest thou from the undiscovered bourne
+ The world-wise world that laughs thee still to scorn?
+ Please, Lord, let thy disciple understand.
+
+ 31.
+
+ 'Tis heart on heart thou rulest. Thou art the same
+ At God's right hand as here exposed to shame,
+ And therefore workest now as thou didst then--
+ Feeding the faint divine in humble men.
+ Through all thy realms from thee goes out heart-power,
+ Working the holy, satisfying hour,
+ When all shall love, and all be loved again.
+
+
+
+
+
+JUNE.
+
+ 1.
+
+ FROM thine, as then, the healing virtue goes
+ Into our hearts--that is the Father's plan.
+ From heart to heart it sinks, it steals, it flows,
+ From these that know thee still infecting those.
+ Here is my heart--from thine, Lord, fill it up,
+ That I may offer it as the holy cup
+ Of thy communion to my every man.
+
+ 2.
+
+ When thou dost send out whirlwinds on thy seas,
+ Alternatest thy lightning with its roar,
+ Thy night with morning, and thy clouds with stars
+ Or, mightier force unseen in midst of these,
+ Orderest the life in every airy pore;
+ Guidest men's efforts, rul'st mishaps and jars,--
+ 'Tis only for their hearts, and nothing more.
+
+ 3.
+
+ This, this alone thy father careth for--
+ That men should live hearted throughout with thee--
+ Because the simple, only life thou art,
+ Of the very truth of living, the pure heart.
+ For this, deep waters whelm the fruitful lea,
+ Wars ravage, famine wastes, plague withers, nor
+ Shall cease till men have chosen the better part.
+
+ 4.
+
+ But, like a virtuous medicine, self-diffused
+ Through all men's hearts thy love shall sink and float;
+ Till every feeling false, and thought unwise,
+ Selfish, and seeking, shall, sternly disused,
+ Wither, and die, and shrivel up to nought;
+ And Christ, whom they did hang 'twixt earth and skies,
+ Up in the inner world of men arise.
+
+ 5.
+
+ Make me a fellow worker with thee, Christ;
+ Nought else befits a God-born energy;
+ Of all that's lovely, only lives the highest,
+ Lifing the rest that it shall never die.
+ Up I would be to help thee--for thou liest
+ Not, linen-swathed in Joseph's garden-tomb,
+ But walkest crowned, creation's heart and bloom.
+
+ 6.
+
+ My God, when I would lift my heart to thee,
+ Imagination instantly doth set
+ A cloudy something, thin, and vast, and vague,
+ To stand for him who is the fact of me;
+ Then up the Will, and doth her weakness plague
+ To pay the heart her duty and her debt,
+ Showing the face that hearkeneth to the plea.
+
+ 7.
+
+ And hence it comes that thou at times dost seem
+ To fade into an image of my mind;
+ I, dreamer, cover, hide thee up with dream,--
+ Thee, primal, individual entity!--
+ No likeness will I seek to frame or find,
+ But cry to that which thou dost choose to be,
+ To that which is my sight, therefore I cannot see.
+
+ 8.
+
+ No likeness? Lo, the Christ! Oh, large Enough!
+ I see, yet fathom not the face he wore.
+ He is--and out of him there is no stuff
+ To make a man. Let fail me every spark
+ Of blissful vision on my pathway rough,
+ I have seen much, and trust the perfect more,
+ While to his feet my faith crosses the wayless dark.
+
+ 9.
+
+ Faith is the human shadow of thy might.
+ Thou art the one self-perfect life, and we
+ Who trust thy life, therein join on to thee,
+ Taking our part in self-creating light.
+ To trust is to step forward out of the night--
+ To be--to share in the outgoing Will
+ That lives and is, because outgoing still.
+
+ 10.
+
+ I am lost before thee, Father! yet I will
+ Claim of thee my birthright ineffable.
+ Thou lay'st it on me, son, to claim thee, sire;
+ To that which thou hast made me, I aspire;
+ To thee, the sun, upflames thy kindled fire.
+ No man presumes in that to which he was born;
+ Less than the gift to claim, would be the giver to scorn.
+
+ 11.
+
+ Henceforth all things thy dealings are with me
+ For out of thee is nothing, or can be,
+ And all things are to draw us home to thee.
+ What matter that the knowers scoffing say,
+ "This is old folly, plain to the new day"?--
+ If thou be such as thou, and they as they,
+ Unto thy Let there be, they still must answer Nay.
+
+ 12.
+
+ They will not, therefore cannot, do not know him.
+ Nothing they could know, could be God. In sooth,
+ Unto the true alone exists the truth.
+ They say well, saying Nature doth not show him:
+ Truly she shows not what she cannot show;
+ And they deny the thing they cannot know.
+ Who sees a glory, towards it will go.
+
+ 13.
+
+ Faster no step moves God because the fool
+ Shouts to the universe God there is none;
+ The blindest man will not preach out the sun,
+ Though on his darkness he should found a school.
+ It may be, when he finds he is not dead,
+ Though world and body, sight and sound are fled,
+ Some eyes may open in his foolish head.
+
+ 14.
+
+ When I am very weary with hard thought,
+ And yet the question burns and is not quenched,
+ My heart grows cool when to remembrance wrought
+ That thou who know'st the light-born answer sought
+ Know'st too the dark where the doubt lies entrenched--
+ Know'st with what seemings I am sore perplexed,
+ And that with thee I wait, nor needs my soul be vexed.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Who sets himself not sternly to be good,
+ Is but a fool, who judgment of true things
+ Has none, however oft the claim renewed.
+ And he who thinks, in his great plenitude,
+ To right himself, and set his spirit free,
+ Without the might of higher communings,
+ Is foolish also--save he willed himself to be.
+
+ 16.
+
+ How many helps thou giv'st to those would learn!
+ To some sore pain, to others a sinking heart;
+ To some a weariness worse than any smart;
+ To some a haunting, fearing, blind concern;
+ Madness to some; to some the shaking dart
+ Of hideous death still following as they turn;
+ To some a hunger that will not depart.
+
+ 17.
+
+ To some thou giv'st a deep unrest--a scorn
+ Of all they are or see upon the earth;
+ A gaze, at dusky night and clearing morn,
+ As on a land of emptiness and dearth;
+ To some a bitter sorrow; to some the sting
+ Of love misprized--of sick abandoning;
+ To some a frozen heart, oh, worse than anything!
+
+ 18.
+
+ To some a mocking demon, that doth set
+ The poor foiled will to scoff at the ideal,
+ But loathsome makes to them their life of jar.
+ The messengers of Satan think to mar,
+ But make--driving the soul from false to feal--
+ To thee, the reconciler, the one real,
+ In whom alone the would be and the is are met.
+
+ 19.
+
+ Me thou hast given an infinite unrest,
+ A hunger--not at first after known good,
+ But something vague I knew not, and yet would--
+ The veiled Isis, thy will not understood;
+ A conscience tossing ever in my breast;
+ And something deeper, that will not be expressed,
+ Save as the Spirit thinking in the Spirit's brood.
+
+ 20.
+
+ But now the Spirit and I are one in this--
+ My hunger now is after righteousness;
+ My spirit hopes in God to set me free
+ From the low self loathed of the higher me.
+ Great elder brother of my second birth,
+ Dear o'er all names but one, in heaven or earth,
+ Teach me all day to love eternally.
+
+ 21.
+
+ Lo, Lord, thou know'st, I would not anything
+ That in the heart of God holds not its root;
+ Nor falsely deem there is any life at all
+ That doth in him nor sleep nor shine nor sing;
+ I know the plants that bear the noisome fruit
+ Of burning and of ashes and of gall--
+ From God's heart torn, rootless to man's they cling.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Life-giving love rots to devouring fire;
+ Justice corrupts to despicable revenge;
+ Motherhood chokes in the dam's jealous mire;
+ Hunger for growth turns fluctuating change;
+ Love's anger grand grows spiteful human wrath,
+ Hunting men out of conscience' holy path;
+ And human kindness takes the tattler's range.
+
+ 23.
+
+ Nothing can draw the heart of man but good;
+ Low good it is that draws him from the higher--
+ So evil--poison uncreate from food.
+ Never a foul thing, with temptation dire,
+ Tempts hellward force created to aspire,
+ But walks in wronged strength of imprisoned Truth,
+ Whose mantle also oft the Shame indu'th.
+
+ 24.
+
+ Love in the prime not yet I understand--
+ Scarce know the love that loveth at first hand:
+ Help me my selfishness to scatter and scout;
+ Blow on me till my love loves burningly;
+ Then the great love will burn the mean self out,
+ And I, in glorious simplicity,
+ Living by love, shall love unspeakably.
+
+ 25.
+
+ Oh, make my anger pure--let no worst wrong
+ Rouse in me the old niggard selfishness.
+ Give me thine indignation--which is love
+ Turned on the evil that would part love's throng;
+ Thy anger scathes because it needs must bless,
+ Gathering into union calm and strong
+ All things on earth, and under, and above.
+
+ 26.
+
+ Make my forgiveness downright--such as I
+ Should perish if I did not have from thee;
+ I let the wrong go, withered up and dry,
+ Cursed with divine forgetfulness in me.
+ 'Tis but self-pity, pleasant, mean, and sly,
+ Low whispering bids the paltry memory live:--
+ What am I brother for, but to forgive!
+
+ 27.
+
+ "Thou art my father's child--come to my heart:"
+ Thus must I say, or Thou must say, "Depart;"
+ Thus I would say--I would be as thou art;
+ Thus I must say, or still I work athwart
+ The absolute necessity and law
+ That dwells in me, and will me asunder draw,
+ If in obedience I leave any flaw.
+
+ 28.
+
+ Lord, I forgive--and step in unto thee.
+ If I have enemies, Christ deal with them:
+ He hath forgiven me and Jerusalem.
+ Lord, set me from self-inspiration free,
+ And let me live and think from thee, not me--
+ Rather, from deepest me then think and feel,
+ At centre of thought's swift-revolving wheel.
+
+ 29.
+
+ I sit o'ercanopied with Beauty's tent,
+ Through which flies many a golden-winged dove,
+ Well watched of Fancy's tender eyes up bent;
+ A hundred Powers wait on me, ministering;
+ A thousand treasures Art and Knowledge bring;
+ Will, Conscience, Reason tower the rest above;
+ But in the midst, alone, I gladness am and love.
+
+ 30.
+
+ 'Tis but a vision, Lord; I do not mean
+ That thus I am, or have one moment been--
+ 'Tis but a picture hung upon my wall,
+ To measure dull contentment therewithal,
+ And know behind the human how I fall;--
+ A vision true, of what one day shall be,
+ When thou hast had thy very will with me.
+
+
+
+
+
+JULY.
+
+ 1.
+
+ ALAS, my tent! see through it a whirlwind sweep!
+ Moaning, poor Fancy's doves are swept away.
+ I sit alone, a sorrow half asleep,
+ My consciousness the blackness all astir.
+ No pilgrim I, a homeless wanderer--
+ For how canst Thou be in the darkness deep,
+ Who dwellest only in the living day?
+
+ 2.
+
+ It must be, somewhere in my fluttering tent,
+ Strange creatures, half tamed only yet, are pent--
+ Dragons, lop-winged birds, and large-eyed snakes!
+ Hark! through the storm the saddest howling breaks!
+ Or are they loose, roaming about the bent,
+ The darkness dire deepening with moan and scream?--
+ My Morning, rise, and all shall be a dream.
+
+ 3.
+
+ Not thine, my Lord, the darkness all is mine--
+ Save that, as mine, my darkness too is thine:
+ All things are thine to save or to destroy--
+ Destroy my darkness, rise my perfect joy;
+ Love primal, the live coal of every night,
+ Flame out, scare the ill things with radiant fright,
+ And fill my tent with laughing morn's delight.
+
+ 4.
+
+ Master, thou workest with such common things--
+ Low souls, weak hearts, I mean--and hast to use,
+ Therefore, such common means and rescuings,
+ That hard we find it, as we sit and muse,
+ To think thou workest in us verily:
+ Bad sea-boats we, and manned with wretched crews--
+ That doubt the captain, watch the storm-spray flee.
+
+ 5.
+
+ Thou art hampered in thy natural working then
+ When beings designed on freedom's holy plan
+ Will not be free: with thy poor, foolish men,
+ Thou therefore hast to work just like a man.
+ But when, tangling thyself in their sore need,
+ Thou hast to freedom fashioned them indeed,
+ Then wilt thou grandly move, and Godlike speed.
+
+ 6.
+
+ Will this not then show grandest fact of all--
+ In thy creation victory most renowned--
+ That thou hast wrought thy will by slow and small,
+ And made men like thee, though thy making bound
+ By that which they were not, and could not be
+ Until thou mad'st them make along with thee?--
+ Master, the tardiness is but in me.
+
+ 7.
+
+ Hence come thy checks--because I still would run
+ My head into the sand, nor flutter aloft
+ Towards thy home, with thy wind under me.
+ 'Tis because I am mean, thy ways so oft
+ Look mean to me; my rise is low begun;
+ But scarce thy will doth grasp me, ere I see,
+ For my arrest and rise, its stern necessity.
+
+ 8.
+
+ Like clogs upon the pinions of thy plan
+ We hang--like captives on thy chariot-wheels,
+ Who should climb up and ride with Death's conqueror;
+ Therefore thy train along the world's highway steals
+ So slow to the peace of heart-reluctant man.
+ What shall we do to spread the wing and soar,
+ Nor straiten thy deliverance any more?
+
+ 9.
+
+ The sole way to put flight into the wing,
+ To preen its feathers, and to make them grow,
+ Is to heed humbly every smallest thing
+ With which the Christ in us has aught to do.
+ So will the Christ from child to manhood go,
+ Obedient to the father Christ, and so
+ Sweet holy change will turn all our old things to new.
+
+ 10.
+
+ Creation thou dost work by faint degrees,
+ By shade and shadow from unseen beginning;
+ Far, far apart, in unthought mysteries
+ Of thy own dark, unfathomable seas,
+ Thou will'st thy will; and thence, upon the earth--
+ Slow travelling, his way through centuries winning--
+ A child at length arrives at never ending birth.
+
+ 11.
+
+ Well mayst thou then work on indocile hearts
+ By small successes, disappointments small;
+ By nature, weather, failure, or sore fall;
+ By shame, anxiety, bitterness, and smarts;
+ By loneliness, by weary loss of zest:--
+ The rags, the husks, the swine, the hunger-quest,
+ Drive home the wanderer to the father's breast.
+
+ 12.
+
+ How suddenly some rapid turn of thought
+ May throw the life-machine all out of gear,
+ Clouding the windows with the steam of doubt,
+ Filling the eyes with dust, with noise the ear!
+ Who knows not then where dwells the engineer,
+ Rushes aghast into the pathless night,
+ And wanders in a land of dreary fright.
+
+ 13.
+
+ Amazed at sightless whirring of their wheels,
+ Confounded with the recklessness and strife,
+ Distract with fears of what may next ensue,
+ Some break rude exit from the house of life,
+ And plunge into a silence out of view--
+ Whence not a cry, no wafture once reveals
+ What door they have broke open with the knife.
+
+ 14.
+
+ Help me, my Father, in whatever dismay,
+ Whatever terror in whatever shape,
+ To hold the faster by thy garment's hem;
+ When my heart sinks, oh, lift it up, I pray;
+ Thy child should never fear though hell should gape,
+ Not blench though all the ills that men affray
+ Stood round him like the Roman round Jerusalem.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Too eager I must not be to understand.
+ How should the work the master goes about
+ Fit the vague sketch my compasses have planned?
+ I am his house--for him to go in and out.
+ He builds me now--and if I cannot see
+ At any time what he is doing with me,
+ 'Tis that he makes the house for me too grand.
+
+ 16.
+
+ The house is not for me--it is for him.
+ His royal thoughts require many a stair,
+ Many a tower, many an outlook fair,
+ Of which I have no thought, and need no care.
+ Where I am most perplexed, it may be there
+ Thou mak'st a secret chamber, holy-dim,
+ Where thou wilt come to help my deepest prayer.
+
+ 17.
+
+ I cannot tell why this day I am ill;
+ But I am well because it is thy will--
+ Which is to make me pure and right like thee.
+ Not yet I need escape--'tis bearable
+ Because thou knowest. And when harder things
+ Shall rise and gather, and overshadow me,
+ I shall have comfort in thy strengthenings.
+
+ 18.
+
+ How do I live when thou art far away?--
+ When I am sunk, and lost, and dead in sleep,
+ Or in some dream with no sense in its play?
+ When weary-dull, or drowned in study deep?--
+ O Lord, I live so utterly on thee,
+ I live when I forget thee utterly--
+ Not that thou thinkest of, but thinkest me.
+
+ 19.
+
+ Thou far!--that word the holy truth doth blur.
+ Doth the great ocean from the small fish run
+ When it sleeps fast in its low weedy bower?
+ Is the sun far from any smallest flower,
+ That lives by his dear presence every hour?
+ Are they not one in oneness without stir--
+ The flower the flower because the sun the sun?
+
+ 20.
+
+ "Dear presence every hour"!--what of the night,
+ When crumpled daisies shut gold sadness in;
+ And some do hang the head for lack of light,
+ Sick almost unto death with absence-blight?--
+ Thy memory then, warm-lingering in the ground,
+ Mourned dewy in the air, keeps their hearts sound,
+ Till fresh with day their lapsed life begin.
+
+ 21.
+
+ All things are shadows of the shining true:
+ Sun, sea, and air--close, potent, hurtless fire--
+ Flowers from their mother's prison--dove, and dew--
+ Every thing holds a slender guiding clue
+ Back to the mighty oneness:--hearts of faith
+ Know thee than light, than heat, endlessly nigher,
+ Our life's life, carpenter of Nazareth.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Sometimes, perhaps, the spiritual blood runs slow,
+ And soft along the veins of will doth flow,
+ Seeking God's arteries from which it came.
+ Or does the etherial, creative flame
+ Turn back upon itself, and latent grow?--
+ It matters not what figure or what name,
+ If thou art in me, and I am not to blame.
+
+ 23.
+
+ In such God-silence, the soul's nest, so long
+ As all is still, no flutter and no song,
+ Is safe. But if my soul begin to act
+ Without some waking to the eternal fact
+ That my dear life is hid with Christ in God--
+ I think and move a creature of earth's clod,
+ Stand on the finite, act upon the wrong.
+
+ 24.
+
+ My soul this sermon hence for itself prepares:--
+ "Then is there nothing vile thou mayst not do,
+ Buffeted in a tumult of low cares,
+ And treacheries of the old man 'gainst the new."--
+ Lord, in my spirit let thy spirit move,
+ Warning, that it may not have to reprove:--
+ In my dead moments, master, stir the prayers.
+
+ 25.
+
+ Lord, let my soul o'erburdened then feel thee
+ Thrilling through all its brain's stupidity.
+ If I must slumber, heedless of ill harms,
+ Let it not be but in my Father's arms;
+ Outside the shelter of his garment's fold,
+ All is a waste, a terror-haunted wold.--
+ Lord, keep me. 'Tis thy child that cries. Behold.
+
+ 26.
+
+ Some say that thou their endless love host won
+ By deeds for them which I may not believe
+ Thou ever didst, or ever willedst done:
+ What matter, so they love thee? They receive
+ Eternal more than the poor loom and wheel
+ Of their invention ever wove and spun.--
+ I love thee for I must, thine all from head to heel.
+
+ 27.
+
+ The love of thee will set all notions right.
+ Right save by love no thought can be or may;
+ Only love's knowledge is the primal light.
+ Questions keep camp along love's shining coast--
+ Challenge my love and would my entrance stay:
+ Across the buzzing, doubting, challenging host,
+ I rush to thee, and cling, and cry--Thou know'st.
+
+ 28.
+
+ Oh, let me live in thy realities,
+ Nor substitute my notions for thy facts,
+ Notion with notion making leagues and pacts;
+ They are to truth but as dream-deeds to acts,
+ And questioned, make me doubt of everything.--
+ "O Lord, my God," my heart gets up and cries,
+ "Come thy own self, and with thee my faith bring."
+
+ 29.
+
+ O master, my desires to work, to know,
+ To be aware that I do live and grow--
+ All restless wish for anything not thee,
+ I yield, and on thy altar offer me.
+ Let me no more from out thy presence go,
+ But keep me waiting watchful for thy will--
+ Even while I do it, waiting watchful still.
+
+ 30.
+
+ Thou art the Lord of life, the secret thing.
+ Thou wilt give endless more than I could find,
+ Even if without thee I could go and seek;
+ For thou art one, Christ, with my deepest mind,
+ Duty alive, self-willed, in me dost speak,
+ And to a deeper purer being sting:
+ I come to thee, my life, my causing kind.
+
+ 31.
+
+ Nothing is alien in thy world immense--
+ No look of sky or earth or man or beast;
+ "In the great hand of God I stand, and thence"
+ Look out on life, his endless, holy feast.
+ To try to feel is but to court despair,
+ To dig for a sun within a garden-fence:
+ Who does thy will, O God, he lives upon thy air.
+
+
+
+
+
+AUGUST.
+
+ 1.
+
+ SO shall abundant entrance me be given
+ Into the truth, my life's inheritance.
+ Lo! as the sun shoots straight from out his tomb,
+ God-floated, casting round a lordly glance
+ Into the corners of his endless room,
+ So, through the rent which thou, O Christ, hast riven,
+ I enter liberty's divine expanse.
+
+ 2.
+
+ It will be so--ah, so it is not now!
+ Who seeks thee for a little lazy peace,
+ Then, like a man all weary of the plough,
+ That leaves it standing in the furrow's crease,
+ Turns from thy presence for a foolish while,
+ Till comes again the rasp of unrest's file,
+ From liberty is distant many a mile.
+
+ 3.
+
+ Like one that stops, and drinks, and turns, and goes
+ Into a land where never water flows,
+ There travels on, the dry and thirsty day,
+ Until the hot night veils the farther way,
+ Then turns and finds again the bubbling pool--
+ Here would I build my house, take up my stay,
+ Nor ever leave my Sychar's margin cool.
+
+ 4.
+
+ Keep me, Lord, with thee. I call from out the dark--
+ Hear in thy light, of which I am a spark.
+ I know not what is mine and what is thine--
+ Of branch and stem I miss the differing mark--
+ But if a mere hair's-breadth me separateth,
+ That hair's-breadth is eternal, infinite death.
+ For sap thy dead branch calls, O living vine!
+
+ 5.
+
+ I have no choice, I must do what I can;
+ But thou dost me, and all things else as well;
+ Thou wilt take care thy child shall grow a man.
+ Rouse thee, my faith; be king; with life be one;
+ To trust in God is action's highest kind;
+ Who trusts in God, his heart with life doth swell;
+ Faith opens all the windows to God's wind.
+
+ 6.
+
+ O Father, thou art my eternity.
+ Not on the clasp Of consciousness--on thee
+ My life depends; and I can well afford
+ All to forget, so thou remember, Lord.
+ In thee I rest; in sleep thou dost me fold;
+ In thee I labour; still in thee, grow old;
+ And dying, shall I not in thee, my Life, be bold?
+
+ 7.
+
+ In holy things may be unholy greed.
+ Thou giv'st a glimpse of many a lovely thing,
+ Not to be stored for use in any mind,
+ But only for the present spiritual need.
+ The holiest bread, if hoarded, soon will breed
+ The mammon-moth, the having-pride, I find.
+ 'Tis momently thy heart gives out heart-quickening.
+
+ 8.
+
+ It is thyself, and neither this nor that,
+ Nor anything, told, taught, or dreamed of thee,
+ That keeps us live. The holy maid who sat
+ Low at thy feet, choosing the better part,
+ Rising, bore with her--what a memory!
+ Yet, brooding only on that treasure, she
+ Had soon been roused by conscious loss of heart.
+
+ 9.
+
+ I am a fool when I would stop and think,
+ And lest I lose my thoughts, from duty shrink.
+ It is but avarice in another shape.
+ 'Tis as the vine-branch were to hoard the grape,
+ Nor trust the living root beneath the sod.
+ What trouble is that child to thee, my God,
+ Who sips thy gracious cup, and will not drink!
+
+ 10.
+
+ True, faithful action only is the life,
+ The grapes for which we feel the pruning knife.
+ Thoughts are but leaves; they fall and feed the ground.
+ The holy seasons, swift and slow, go round;
+ The ministering leaves return, fresh, large, and rife--
+ But fresher, larger, more thoughts to the brain:--
+ Farewell, my dove!--come back, hope-laden, through the rain.
+
+ 11.
+
+ Well may this body poorer, feebler grow!
+ It is undressing for its last sweet bed;
+ But why should the soul, which death shall never know,
+ Authority, and power, and memory shed?
+ It is that love with absolute faith would wed;
+ God takes the inmost garments off his child,
+ To have him in his arms, naked and undefiled.
+
+ 12.
+
+ Thou art my knowledge and my memory,
+ No less than my real, deeper life, my love.
+ I will not fool, degrade myself to trust
+ In less than that which maketh me say Me,
+ In less than that causing itself to be.
+ Then art within me, behind, beneath, above--
+ I will be thine because I may and must.
+
+ 13.
+
+ Thou art the truth, the life. Thou, Lord, wilt see
+ To every question that perplexes me.
+ I am thy being; and my dignity
+ Is written with my name down in thy book;
+ Thou wilt care for it. Never shall I think
+ Of anything that thou mightst overlook:--
+ In faith-born triumph at thy feet I sink.
+
+ 14.
+
+ Thou carest more for that which I call mine,
+ In same sort--better manner than I could,
+ Even if I knew creation's ends divine,
+ Rousing in me this vague desire of good.
+ Thou art more to me than my desires' whole brood;
+ Thou art the only person, and I cry
+ Unto the father I of this my I.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Thou who inspirest prayer, then bend'st thine ear;
+ It, crying with love's grand respect to hear!
+ I cannot give myself to thee aright--
+ With the triumphant uttermost of gift;
+ That cannot be till I am full of light--
+ To perfect deed a perfect will must lift:--
+ Inspire, possess, compel me, first of every might.
+
+ 16.
+
+ I do not wonder men can ill believe
+ Who make poor claims upon thee, perfect Lord;
+ Then most I trust when most I would receive.
+ I wonder not that such do pray and grieve--
+ The God they think, to be God is not fit.
+ Then only in thy glory I seem to sit,
+ When my heart claims from thine an infinite accord.
+
+ 17.
+
+ More life I need ere I myself can be.
+ Sometimes, when the eternal tide ebbs low,
+ A moment weary of my life I grow--
+ Weary of my existence' self, I mean,
+ Not of its plodding, not its wind and snow
+ Then to thy knee trusting I turn, and lean:
+ Thou will'st I live, and I do will with thee.
+
+ 18.
+
+ Dost thou mean sometimes that we should forget thee,
+ Dropping the veil of things 'twixt thee and us?--
+ Ah, not that we should lose thee and regret thee!
+ But that, we turning from our windows thus,
+ The frost-fixed God should vanish from the pane,
+ Sun-melted, and a moment, Father, let thee
+ Look like thyself straight into heart and brain.
+
+ 19.
+
+ For sometimes when I am busy among men,
+ With heart and brain an open thoroughfare
+ For faces, words, and thoughts other than mine,
+ And a pause comes at length--oh, sudden then,
+ Back throbs the tide with rush exultant rare;
+ And for a gentle moment I divine
+ Thy dawning presence flush my tremulous air.
+
+ 20.
+
+ If I have to forget thee, do thou see
+ It be a good, not bad forgetfulness;
+ That all its mellow, truthful air be free
+ From dusty noes, and soft with many a yes;
+ That as thy breath my life, my life may be
+ Man's breath. So when thou com'st at hour unknown,
+ Thou shalt find nothing in me but thine own.
+
+ 21.
+
+ Thou being in me, in my deepest me,
+ Through all the time I do not think of thee,
+ Shall I not grow at last so true within
+ As to forget thee and yet never sin?
+ Shall I not walk the loud world's busy way,
+ Yet in thy palace-porch sit all the day?
+ Not conscious think of thee, yet never from thee stray?
+
+ 22.
+
+ Forget!--Oh, must it be?--Would it were rather
+ That every sense was so filled with my father
+ That not in anything could I forget him,
+ But deepest, highest must in all things set him!--
+ Yet if thou think in me, God, what great matter
+ Though my poor thought to former break and latter--
+ As now my best thoughts; break, before thee foiled, and scatter!
+
+ 23.
+
+ Some way there must be of my not forgetting,
+ And thither thou art leading me, my God.
+ The child that, weary of his mother's petting,
+ Runs out the moment that his feet are shod,
+ May see her face in every flower he sees,
+ And she, although beyond the window sitting,
+ Be nearer him than when he sat upon her knees.
+
+ 24.
+
+ What if, when I at last, at the long last,
+ Shall see thy face, my Lord, my life's delight,
+ It should not be the face that hath been glassed
+ In poor imagination's mirror slight!
+ Will my soul sink, and shall I stand aghast,
+ Beggared of hope, my heart a conscious blight,
+ Amazed and lost--death's bitterness come and not passed?
+
+ 25.
+
+ Ah, no! for from thy heart the love will press,
+ And shining from thy perfect human face,
+ Will sink into me like the father's kiss;
+ And deepening wide the gulf of consciousness
+ Beyond imagination's lowest abyss,
+ Will, with the potency of creative grace,
+ Lord it throughout the larger thinking place.
+
+ 26.
+
+ Thus God-possessed, new born, ah, not for long
+ Should I the sight behold, beatified,
+ Know it creating in me, feel the throng
+ Of speechless hopes out-throbbing like a tide,
+ And my heart rushing, borne aloft the flood,
+ To offer at his feet its living blood--
+ Ere, glory-hid, the other face I spied.
+
+ 27.
+
+ For out imagination is, in small,
+ And with the making-difference that must be,
+ Mirror of God's creating mirror; all
+ That shows itself therein, that formeth he,
+ And there is Christ, no bodiless vanity,
+ Though, face to face, the mighty perfectness
+ With glory blurs the dim-reflected less.
+
+ 28.
+
+ I clasp thy feet, O father of the living!
+ Thou wilt not let my fluttering hopes be more,
+ Or lovelier, or greater, than thy giving!
+ Surely thy ships will bring to my poor shore,
+ Of gold and peacocks such a shining store
+ As will laugh all the dreams to holy scorn,
+ Of love and sorrow that were ever born.
+
+ 29.
+
+ Sometimes it seems pure natural to trust,
+ And trust right largely, grandly, infinitely,
+ Daring the splendour of the giver's part;
+ At other times, the whole earth is but dust,
+ The sky is dust, yea, dust the human heart;
+ Then art thou nowhere, there is no room for thee
+ In the great dust-heap of eternity.
+
+ 30.
+
+ But why should it be possible to mistrust--
+ Nor possible only, but its opposite hard?
+ Why should not man believe because he must--
+ By sight's compulsion? Why should he be scarred
+ With conflict? worn with doubting fine and long?--
+ No man is fit for heaven's musician throng
+ Who has not tuned an instrument all shook and jarred.
+
+ 31.
+
+ Therefore, O Lord, when all things common seem,
+ When all is dust, and self the centre clod,
+ When grandeur is a hopeless, foolish dream,
+ And anxious care more reasonable than God,--
+ Out of the ashes I will call to thee--
+ In spite of dead distrust call earnestly:--
+ Oh thou who livest, call, then answer dying me.
+
+
+
+
+
+SEPTEMBER.
+
+ 1.
+
+ WE are a shadow and a shining, we!
+ One moment nothing seems but what we see,
+ Nor aught to rule but common circumstance--
+ Nought is to seek but praise, to shun but chance;
+ A moment more, and God is all in all,
+ And not a sparrow from its nest can fall
+ But from the ground its chirp goes up into his hall.
+
+ 2.
+
+ I know at least which is the better mood.
+ When on a heap of cares I sit and brood,
+ Like Job upon his ashes, sorely vext,
+ I feel a lower thing than when I stood
+ The world's true heir, fearless as, on its stalk,
+ A lily meeting Jesus in his walk:
+ I am not all mood--I can judge betwixt.
+
+ 3.
+
+ Such differing moods can scarce to one belong;
+ Shall the same fountain sweet and bitter yield?
+ Shall what bore late the dust-mood, think and brood
+ Till it bring forth the great believing mood?
+ Or that which bore the grand mood, bald and peeled,
+ Sit down to croon the shabby sensual song,
+ To hug itself, and sink from wrong to meaner wrong?
+
+ 4.
+
+ In the low mood, the mere man acts alone,
+ Moved by impulses which, if from within,
+ Yet far outside the centre man begin;
+ But in the grand mood, every softest tone
+ Comes from the living God at very heart--
+ From thee who infinite core of being art,
+ Thee who didst call our names ere ever we could sin.
+
+ 5.
+
+ There is a coward sparing in the heart,
+ Offspring of penury and low-born fear:--
+ Prayer must take heed nor overdo its part,
+ Asking too much of him with open ear!
+ Sinners must wait, not seek the very best,
+ Cry out for peace, and be of middling cheer:--
+ False heart! thou cheatest God, and dost thy life molest.
+
+ 6.
+
+ Thou hungerest not, thou thirstest not enough.
+ Thou art a temporizing thing, mean heart.
+ Down-drawn, thou pick'st up straws and wretched stuff,
+ Stooping as if the world's floor were the chart
+ Of the long way thy lazy feet must tread.
+ Thou dreamest of the crown hung o'er thy head--
+ But that is safe--thou gatherest hairs and fluff!
+
+ 7.
+
+ Man's highest action is to reach up higher,
+ Stir up himself to take hold of his sire.
+ Then best I love you, dearest, when I go
+ And cry to love's life I may love you so
+ As to content the yearning, making love,
+ That perfects strength divine in weakness' fire,
+ And from the broken pots calls out the silver dove.
+
+ 8.
+
+ Poor am I, God knows, poor as withered leaf;
+ Poorer or richer than, I dare not ask.
+ To love aright, for me were hopeless task,
+ Eternities too high to comprehend.
+ But shall I tear my heart in hopeless grief,
+ Or rise and climb, and run and kneel, and bend,
+ And drink the primal love--so love in chief?
+
+ 9.
+
+ Then love shall wake and be its own high life.
+ Then shall I know 'tis I that love indeed--
+ Ready, without a moment's questioning strife,
+ To be forgot, like bursting water-bead,
+ For the high good of the eternal dear;
+ All hope, all claim, resting, with spirit clear,
+ Upon the living love that every love doth breed.
+
+ 10.
+
+ Ever seem to fail in utterance.
+ Sometimes amid the swift melodious dance
+ Of fluttering words--as if it had not been,
+ The thought has melted, vanished into night;
+ Sometimes I say a thing I did not mean,
+ And lo! 'tis better, by thy ordered chance,
+ Than what eluded me, floating too feathery light.
+
+ 11.
+
+ If thou wouldst have me speak, Lord, give me speech.
+ So many cries are uttered now-a-days,
+ That scarce a song, however clear and true,
+ Will thread the jostling tumult safe, and reach
+ The ears of men buz-filled with poor denays:
+ Barb thou my words with light, make my song new,
+ And men will hear, or when I sing or preach.
+
+ 12.
+
+ Can anything go wrong with me? I ask--
+ And the same moment, at a sudden pain,
+ Stand trembling. Up from the great river's brim
+ Comes a cold breath; the farther bank is dim;
+ The heaven is black with clouds and coming rain;
+ High soaring faith is grown a heavy task,
+ And all is wrong with weary heart and brain.
+
+ 13.
+
+ "Things do go wrong. I know grief, pain, and fear.
+ I see them lord it sore and wide around."
+ From her fair twilight answers Truth, star-crowned,
+ "Things wrong are needful where wrong things abound.
+ Things go not wrong; but Pain, with dog and spear,
+ False faith from human hearts will hunt and hound.
+ The earth shall quake 'neath them that trust the solid ground."
+
+ 14.
+
+ Things go not wrong when sudden I fall prone,
+ But when I snatch my upheld hand from thine,
+ And, proud or careless, think to walk alone.
+ Then things go wrong, when I, poor, silly sheep,
+ To shelves and pits from the good pasture creep;
+ Not when the shepherd leaves the ninety and nine,
+ And to the mountains goes, after the foolish one.
+
+ 15.
+
+ Lo! now thy swift dogs, over stone and bush,
+ After me, straying sheep, loud barking, rush.
+ There's Fear, and Shame, and Empty-heart, and Lack,
+ And Lost-love, and a thousand at their back!
+ I see thee not, but know thou hound'st them on,
+ And I am lost indeed--escape is none.
+ See! there they come, down streaming on my track!
+
+ 16.
+
+ I rise and run, staggering--double and run.--
+ But whither?--whither?--whither for escape?
+ The sea lies all about this long-necked cape--
+ There come the dogs, straight for me every one--
+ Me, live despair, live centre of alarms!--
+ Ah! lo! 'twixt me and all his barking harms,
+ The shepherd, lo!--I run--fall folded in his arms.
+
+ 17.
+
+ There let the dogs yelp, let them growl and leap;
+ It is no matter--I will go to sleep.
+ Like a spent cloud pass pain and grief and fear,
+ Out from behind it unchanged love shines clear.--
+ Oh, save me, Christ!--I know not what I am,
+ I was thy stupid, self-willed, greedy lamb,
+ Would be thy honest and obedient sheep.
+
+ 18.
+
+ Why is it that so often I return
+ From social converse with a spirit worn,
+ A lack, a disappointment--even a sting
+ Of shame, as for some low, unworthy thing?--
+ Because I have not, careful, first of all,
+ Set my door open wide, back to the wall,
+ Ere I at others' doors did knock and call.
+
+ 19.
+
+ Yet more and more of me thou dost demand;
+ My faith and hope in God alone shall stand,
+ The life of law--not trust the rain and sun
+ To draw the golden harvest o'er the land.
+ I must not say--"This too will pass and die,"
+ "The wind will change," "Round will the seasons run."
+ Law is the body of will, of conscious harmony.
+
+ 20.
+
+ Who trusts a law, might worship a god of wood;
+ Half his soul slumbers, if it be not dead.
+ He is a live thing shut in chaos crude,
+ Hemmed in with dragons--a remorseless head
+ Still hanging over its uplifted eyes.
+ No; God is all in all, and nowhere dies--
+ The present heart and thinking will of good.
+
+ 21.
+
+ Law is our schoolmaster. Our master, Christ,
+ Lived under all our laws, yet always prayed--
+ So walked the water when the storm was highest.--
+ Law is Thy father's; thou hast it obeyed,
+ And it thereby subject to thee hast made--
+ To rule it, master, for thy brethren's sakes:--
+ Well may he guide the law by whom law's maker makes.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Death haunts our souls with dissolution's strife;
+ Soaks them with unrest; makes our every breath
+ A throe, not action; from God's purest gift
+ Wipes off the bloom; and on the harp of faith
+ Its fretted strings doth slacken still and shift:
+ Life everywhere, perfect, and always life,
+ Is sole redemption from this haunting death.
+
+ 23.
+
+ God, thou from death dost lift me. As I rise,
+ Its Lethe from my garment drips and flows.
+ Ere long I shall be safe in upper air,
+ With thee, my life--with thee, my answered prayer
+ Where thou art God in every wind that blows,
+ And self alone, and ever, softly dies,
+ There shall my being blossom, and I know it fair.
+
+ 24.
+
+ I would dig, Master, in no field but thine,
+ Would build my house only upon thy rock,
+ Yet am but a dull day, with a sea-sheen!
+ Why should I wonder then that they should mock,
+ Who, in the limbo of things heard and seen,
+ Hither and thither blowing, lose the shine
+ Of every light that hangs in the firmament divine.
+
+ 25.
+
+ Lord, loosen in me the hold of visible things;
+ Help me to walk by faith and not by sight;
+ I would, through thickest veils and coverings,
+ See into the chambers of the living light.
+ Lord, in the land of things that swell and seem,
+ Help me to walk by the other light supreme,
+ Which shows thy facts behind man's vaguely hinting dream.
+
+ 26.
+
+ I see a little child whose eager hands
+ Search the thick stream that drains the crowded street
+ For possible things hid in its current slow.
+ Near by, behind him, a great palace stands,
+ Where kings might welcome nobles to their feet.
+ Soft sounds, sweet scents, fair sights there only go--
+ There the child's father lives, but the child does not know.
+
+ 27.
+
+ On, eager, hungry, busy-seeking child,
+ Rise up, turn round, run in, run up the stair.
+ Far in a chamber from rude noise exiled,
+ Thy father sits, pondering how thou dost fare.
+ The mighty man will clasp thee to his breast:
+ Will kiss thee, stroke the tangles of thy hair,
+ And lap thee warm in fold on fold of lovely rest.
+
+ 28.
+
+ The prince of this world came, and nothing found
+ In thee, O master; but, ah, woe is me!
+ He cannot pass me, on other business bound,
+ But, spying in me things familiar, he
+ Casts over me the shadow of his flight,
+ And straight I moan in darkness--and the fight
+ Begins afresh betwixt the world and thee.
+
+ 29.
+
+ In my own heart, O master, in my thought,
+ Betwixt the woolly sheep and hairy goat
+ Not clearly I distinguish; but I think
+ Thou knowest that I fight upon thy side.
+ The how I am ashamed of; for I shrink
+ From many a blow--am borne on the battle-tide,
+ When I should rush to the front, and take thy foe by the throat.
+
+ 30.
+
+ The enemy still hath many things in me;
+ Yea, many an evil nest with open hole
+ Gapes out to him, at which he enters free.
+ But, like the impact of a burning coal,
+ His presence mere straight rouses the garrison,
+ And all are up in arms, and down on knee,
+ Fighting and praying till the foe is gone.
+
+
+
+
+
+OCTOBER.
+
+ 1.
+
+ REMEMBER, Lord, thou hast not made me good.
+ Or if thou didst, it was so long ago
+ I have forgotten--and never understood,
+ I humbly think. At best it was a crude,
+ A rough-hewn goodness, that did need this woe,
+ This sin, these harms of all kinds fierce and rude,
+ To shape it out, making it live and grow.
+
+ 2.
+
+ But thou art making me, I thank thee, sire.
+ What thou hast done and doest thou know'st well,
+ And I will help thee:--gently in thy fire
+ I will lie burning; on thy potter's-wheel
+ I will whirl patient, though my brain should reel;
+ Thy grace shall be enough the grief to quell,
+ And growing strength perfect through weakness dire.
+
+ 3.
+
+ I have not knowledge, wisdom, insight, thought,
+ Nor understanding, fit to justify
+ Thee in thy work, O Perfect. Thou hast brought
+ Me up to this--and, lo! what thou hast wrought,
+ I cannot call it good. But I can cry--
+ "O enemy, the maker hath not done;
+ One day thou shalt behold, and from the sight wilt run."
+
+ 4.
+
+ The faith I will, aside is easily bent;
+ But of thy love, my God, one glimpse alone
+ Can make me absolutely confident--
+ With faith, hope, joy, in love responsive blent.
+ My soul then, in the vision mighty grown,
+ Its father and its fate securely known,
+ Falls on thy bosom with exultant moan.
+
+ 5.
+
+ Thou workest perfectly. And if it seem
+ Some things are not so well, 'tis but because
+ They are too loving-deep, too lofty-wise,
+ For me, poor child, to understand their laws:
+ My highest wisdom half is but a dream;
+ My love runs helpless like a falling stream:
+ Thy good embraces ill, and lo! its illness dies!
+
+ 6.
+
+ From sleep I wake, and wake to think of thee.
+ But wherefore not with sudden glorious glee?
+ Why burst not gracious on me heaven and earth
+ In all the splendour of a new-day-birth?
+ Why hangs a cloud betwixt my lord and me?
+ The moment that my eyes the morning greet,
+ My soul should panting rush to clasp thy father-feet.
+
+ 7.
+
+ Is it because it is not thou I see,
+ But only my poor, blotted fancy of thee?
+ Oh! never till thyself reveal thy face,
+ Shall I be flooded with life's vital grace.
+ Oh make my mirror-heart thy shining-place,
+ And then my soul, awaking with the morn,
+ Shall be a waking joy, eternally new-born.
+
+ 8.
+
+ Lord, in my silver is much metal base,
+ Else should my being by this time have shown
+ Thee thy own self therein. Therefore do I
+ Wake in the furnace. I know thou sittest by,
+ Refining--look, keep looking in to try
+ Thy silver; master, look and see thy face,
+ Else here I lie for ever, blank as any stone.
+
+ 9.
+
+ But when in the dim silver thou dost look,
+ I do behold thy face, though blurred and faint.
+ Oh joy! no flaw in me thy grace will brook,
+ But still refine: slow shall the silver pass
+ From bright to brighter, till, sans spot or taint,
+ Love, well content, shall see no speck of brass,
+ And I his perfect face shall hold as in a glass.
+
+ 10.
+
+ With every morn my life afresh must break
+ The crust of self, gathered about me fresh;
+ That thy wind-spirit may rush in and shake
+ The darkness out of me, and rend the mesh
+ The spider-devils spin out of the flesh--
+ Eager to net the soul before it wake,
+ That it may slumberous lie, and listen to the snake.
+
+ 11.
+
+ 'Tis that I am not good--that is enough;
+ I pry no farther--that is not the way.
+ Here, O my potter, is thy making stuff!
+ Set thy wheel going; let it whir and play.
+ The chips in me, the stones, the straws, the sand,
+ Cast them out with fine separating hand,
+ And make a vessel of thy yielding clay.
+
+ 12.
+
+ What if it take a thousand years to make me,
+ So me he leave not, angry, on the floor!--
+ Nay, thou art never angry!--that would break me!
+ Would I tried never thy dear patience sore,
+ But were as good as thou couldst well expect me,
+ Whilst thou dost make, I mar, and thou correct me!
+ Then were I now content, waiting for something more.
+
+ 13.
+
+ Only, my God, see thou that I content thee--
+ Oh, take thy own content upon me, God!
+ Ah, never, never, sure, wilt thou repent thee,
+ That thou hast called thy Adam from the clod!
+ Yet must I mourn that thou shouldst ever find me
+ One moment sluggish, needing more of the rod
+ Than thou didst think when thy desire designed me.
+
+ 14.
+
+ My God, it troubles me I am not better.
+ More help, I pray, still more. Thy perfect debtor
+ I shall be when thy perfect child I am grown.
+ My Father, help me--am I not thine own?
+ Lo, other lords have had dominion o'er me,
+ But now thy will alone I set before me:
+ Thy own heart's life--Lord, thou wilt not abhor me!
+
+ 15.
+
+ In youth, when once again I had set out
+ To find thee, Lord, my life, my liberty,
+ A window now and then, clouds all about,
+ Would open into heaven: my heart forlorn
+ First all would tremble with a solemn glee,
+ Then, whelmed in peace, rest like a man outworn,
+ That sees the dawn slow part the closed lids of the morn.
+
+ 16.
+
+ Now I grow old, and the soft-gathered years
+ Have calmed, yea dulled the heart's swift fluttering beat;
+ But a quiet hope that keeps its household seat
+ Is better than recurrent glories fleet.
+ To know thee, Lord, is worth a many tears;
+ And when this mildew, age, has dried away,
+ My heart will beat again as young and strong and gay.
+
+ 17.
+
+ Stronger and gayer tenfold!--but, O friends,
+ Not for itself, nor any hoarded bliss.
+ I see but vaguely whither my being tends,
+ All vaguely spy a glory shadow-blent,
+ Vaguely desire the "individual kiss;"
+ But when I think of God, a large content
+ Fills the dull air of my gray cloudy tent.
+
+ 18.
+
+ Father of me, thou art my bliss secure.
+ Make of me, maker, whatsoe'er thou wilt.
+ Let fancy's wings hang moulting, hope grow poor,
+ And doubt steam up from where a joy was spilt--
+ I lose no time to reason it plain and clear,
+ But fly to thee, my life's perfection dear:--
+ Not what I think, but what thou art, makes sure.
+
+ 19.
+
+ This utterance of spirit through still thought,
+ This forming of heart-stuff in moulds of brain,
+ Is helpful to the soul by which 'tis wrought,
+ The shape reacting on the heart again;
+ But when I am quite old, and words are slow,
+ Like dying things that keep their holes for woe,
+ And memory's withering tendrils clasp with effort vain?
+
+ 20.
+
+ Thou, then as now, no less wilt be my life,
+ And I shall know it better than before,
+ Praying and trusting, hoping, claiming more.
+ From effort vain, sick foil, and bootless strife,
+ I shall, with childness fresh, look up to thee;
+ Thou, seeing thy child with age encumbered sore,
+ Wilt round him bend thine arm more carefully.
+
+ 21.
+
+ And when grim Death doth take me by the throat,
+ Thou wilt have pity on thy handiwork;
+ Thou wilt not let him on my suffering gloat,
+ But draw my soul out--gladder than man or boy,
+ When thy saved creatures from the narrow ark
+ Rushed out, and leaped and laughed and cried for joy,
+ And the great rainbow strode across the dark.
+
+ 22.
+
+ Against my fears, my doubts, my ignorance,
+ I trust in thee, O father of my Lord!
+ The world went on in this same broken dance,
+ When, worn and mocked, he trusted and adored:
+ I too will trust, and gather my poor best
+ To face the truth-faced false. So in his nest
+ I shall awake at length, a little scarred and scored.
+
+ 23.
+
+ Things cannot look all right so long as I
+ Am not all right who see--therefore not right
+ Can see. The lamp within sends out the light
+ Which shows the things; and if its rays go wry,
+ Or are not white, they must part show a lie.
+ The man, half-cured, did men not trees conclude,
+ Because he moving saw what else had seemed a wood.
+
+ 24.
+
+ Give me, take from me, as thou wilt. I learn--
+ Slowly and stubbornly I learn to yield
+ With a strange hopefulness. As from the field
+ Of hard-fought battle won, the victor chief
+ Turns thankfully, although his heart do yearn,
+ So from my old things to thy new I turn,
+ With sad, thee-trusting heart, and not in grief.
+
+ 25.
+
+ If with my father I did wander free,
+ Floating o'er hill and field where'er we would,
+ And, lighting on the sward before the door,
+ Strange faces through the window-panes should see,
+ And strange feet standing where the loved had stood,
+ The dear old place theirs all, as ours before--
+ Should I be sorrowful, father, having thee?
+
+ 26.
+
+ So, Lord, if thou tak'st from me all the rest,
+ Thyself with each resumption drawing nigher,
+ It shall but hurt me as the thorn of the briar,
+ When I reach to the pale flower in its breast.
+ To have thee, Lord, is to have all thy best,
+ Holding it by its very life divine--
+ To let my friend's hand go, and take his heart in mine.
+
+ 27.
+
+ Take from me leisure, all familiar places;
+ Take all the lovely things of earth and air
+ Take from me books; take all my precious faces;
+ Take words melodious, and their songful linking;
+ Take scents, and sounds, and all thy outsides fair;
+ Draw nearer, taking, and, to my sober thinking,
+ Thou bring'st them nearer all, and ready to my prayer.
+
+ 28.
+
+ No place on earth henceforth I shall count strange,
+ For every place belongeth to my Christ.
+ I will go calm where'er thou bid'st me range;
+ Whoe'er my neighbour, thou art still my nighest.
+ Oh my heart's life, my owner, will of my being!
+ Into my soul thou every moment diest,
+ In thee my life thus evermore decreeing.
+
+ 29.
+
+ What though things change and pass, nor come again!
+ Thou, the life-heart of all things, changest never.
+ The sun shines on; the fair clouds turn to rain,
+ And glad the earth with many a spring and river.
+ The hearts that answer change with chill and shiver,
+ That mourn the past, sad-sick, with hopeless pain,
+ They know not thee, our changeless heart and brain.
+
+ 30.
+
+ My halting words will some day turn to song--
+ Some far-off day, in holy other times!
+ The melody now prisoned in my rimes
+ Will one day break aloft, and from the throng
+ Of wrestling thoughts and words spring up the air;
+ As from the flower its colour's sweet despair
+ Issues in odour, and the sky's low levels climbs.
+
+ 31.
+
+ My surgent thought shoots lark-like up to thee.
+ Thou like the heaven art all about the lark.
+ Whatever I surmise or know in me,
+ Idea, or but symbol on the dark,
+ Is living, working, thought-creating power
+ In thee, the timeless father of the hour.
+ I am thy book, thy song--thy child would be.
+
+
+
+
+
+NOVEMBER
+
+ 1.
+
+ THOU art of this world, Christ. Thou know'st it all;
+ Thou know'st our evens, our morns, our red and gray;
+ How moons, and hearts, and seasons rise and fall;
+ How we grow weary plodding on the way;
+ Of future joy how present pain bereaves,
+ Rounding us with a dark of mere decay,
+ Tossed with a drift Of summer-fallen leaves.
+
+ 2.
+
+ Thou knowest all our weeping, fainting, striving;
+ Thou know'st how very hard it is to be;
+ How hard to rouse faint will not yet reviving;
+ To do the pure thing, trusting all to thee;
+ To hold thou art there, for all no face we see;
+ How hard to think, through cold and dark and dearth,
+ That thou art nearer now than when eye-seen on earth.
+
+ 3.
+
+ Have pity on us for the look of things,
+ When blank denial stares us in the face.
+ Although the serpent mask have lied before,
+ It fascinates the bird that darkling sings,
+ And numbs the little prayer-bird's beating wings.
+ For how believe thee somewhere in blank space,
+ If through the darkness come no knocking to our door?
+
+ 4.
+
+ If we might sit until the darkness go,
+ Possess our souls in patience perhaps we might;
+ But there is always something to be done,
+ And no heart left to do it. To and fro
+ The dull thought surges, as the driven waves fight
+ In gulfy channels. Oh! victorious one,
+ Give strength to rise, go out, and meet thee in the night.
+
+ 5.
+
+ "Wake, thou that sleepest; rise up from the dead,
+ And Christ will give thee light." I do not know
+ What sleep is, what is death, or what is light;
+ But I am waked enough to feel a woe,
+ To rise and leave death. Stumbling through the night,
+ To my dim lattice, O calling Christ! I go,
+ And out into the dark look for thy star-crowned head.
+
+ 6.
+
+ There are who come to me, and write, and send,
+ Whom I would love, giving good things to all,
+ But friend--that name I cannot on them spend;
+ 'Tis from the centre of self-love they call
+ For cherishing--for which they first must know
+ How to be still, and take the seat that's low:
+ When, Lord, shall I be fit--when wilt thou call me friend?
+
+ 7.
+
+ Wilt thou not one day, Lord? In all my wrong,
+ Self-love and weakness, laziness and fear,
+ This one thing I can say: I am content
+ To be and have what in thy heart I am meant
+ To be and have. In my best times I long
+ After thy will, and think it glorious-dear;
+ Even in my worst, perforce my will to thine is bent.
+
+ 8.
+
+ My God, I look to thee for tenderness
+ Such as I could not seek from any man,
+ Or in a human heart fancy or plan--
+ A something deepest prayer will not express:
+ Lord, with thy breath blow on my being's fires,
+ Until, even to the soul with self-love wan,
+ I yield the primal love, that no return desires.
+
+ 9.
+
+ Only no word of mine must ever foster
+ The self that in a brother's bosom gnaws;
+ I may not fondle failing, nor the boaster
+ Encourage with the breath of my applause.
+ Weakness needs pity, sometimes love's rebuke;
+ Strength only sympathy deserves and draws--
+ And grows by every faithful loving look.
+
+ 10.
+
+ 'Tis but as men draw nigh to thee, my Lord,
+ They can draw nigh each other and not hurt.
+ Who with the gospel of thy peace are girt,
+ The belt from which doth hang the Spirit's sword,
+ Shall breathe on dead bones, and the bones shall live,
+ Sweet poison to the evil self shall give,
+ And, clean themselves, lift men clean from the mire abhorred.
+
+ 11.
+
+ My Lord, I have no clothes to come to thee;
+ My shoes are pierced and broken with the road;
+ I am torn and weathered, wounded with the goad,
+ And soiled with tugging at my weary load:
+ The more I need thee! A very prodigal
+ I stagger into thy presence, Lord of me:
+ One look, my Christ, and at thy feet I fall!
+
+ 12.
+
+ Why should I still hang back, like one in a dream,
+ Who vainly strives to clothe himself aright,
+ That in great presence he may seemly seem?
+ Why call up feeling?--dress me in the faint,
+ Worn, faded, cast-off nimbus of some saint?
+ Why of old mood bring back a ghostly gleam--
+ While there He waits, love's heart and loss's blight!
+
+ 13.
+
+ Son of the Father, elder brother mine,
+ See thy poor brother's plight; See how he stands
+ Defiled and feeble, hanging down his hands!
+ Make me clean, brother, with thy burning shine;
+ From thy rich treasures, householder divine,
+ Bring forth fair garments, old and new, I pray,
+ And like thy brother dress me, in the old home-bred way.
+
+ 14.
+
+ My prayer-bird was cold--would not away,
+ Although I set it on the edge of the nest.
+ Then I bethought me of the story old--
+ Love-fact or loving fable, thou know'st best--
+ How, when the children had made sparrows of clay,
+ Thou mad'st them birds, with wings to flutter and fold:
+ Take, Lord, my prayer in thy hand, and make it pray.
+
+ 15.
+
+ My poor clay-sparrow seems turned to a stone,
+ And from my heart will neither fly nor run.
+ I cannot feel as thou and I both would,
+ But, Father, I am willing--make me good.
+ What art thou father for, but to help thy son?
+ Look deep, yet deeper, in my heart, and there,
+ Beyond where I can feel, read thou the prayer.
+
+ 16.
+
+ Oh what it were to be right sure of thee!
+ Sure that thou art, and the same as thy son, Jesus!
+ Oh, faith is deeper, wider than the sea,
+ Yea, than the blue of heaven that ever flees us!
+ Yet simple as the cry of sore-hurt child,
+ Or as his shout, with sudden gladness wild,
+ When home from school he runs, till morn set free.
+
+ 17.
+
+ If I were sure thou, Father, verily art,
+ True father of the Nazarene as true,
+ Sure as I am of my wife's shielding heart,
+ Sure as of sunrise in the watching blue,
+ Sure as I am that I do eat and drink,
+ And have a heart to love and laugh and think,
+ Meseems in flame the joy might from my body start.
+
+ 18.
+
+ But I must know thee in a deeper way
+ Than any of these ways, or know thee not;
+ My heart at peace far loftier proof must lay
+ Than if the wind thou me the wave didst roll,
+ Than if I lay before thee a sunny spot,
+ Or knew thee as the body knows its soul,
+ Or even as the part doth know its perfect whole.
+
+ 19.
+
+ There is no word to tell how I must know thee;
+ No wind clasped ever a low meadow-flower
+ So close that as to nearness it could show thee;
+ No rainbow so makes one the sun and shower.
+ A something with thee, I am a nothing fro' thee.
+ Because I am not save as I am in thee,
+ My soul is ever setting out to win thee.
+
+ 20.
+
+ I know not how--for that I first must know thee.
+ I know I know thee not as I would know thee,
+ For my heart burns like theirs that did not know him,
+ Till he broke bread, and therein they must know him.
+ I know thee, knowing that I do not know thee,
+ Nor ever shall till one with me I know thee--
+ Even as thy son, the eternal man, doth know thee.
+
+ 21.
+
+ Creation under me, in, and above,
+ Slopes upward from the base, a pyramid,
+ On whose point I shall stand at last, and love.
+ From the first rush of vapour at thy will,
+ To the last poet-word that darkness chid,
+ Thou hast been sending up creation's hill,
+ To lift thy souls aloft in faithful Godhead free.
+
+ 22.
+
+ I think my thought, and fancy I think thee.--
+ Lord, wake me up; rend swift my coffin-planks;
+ I pray thee, let me live--alive and free.
+ My soul will break forth in melodious thanks,
+ Aware at last what thou wouldst have it be,
+ When thy life shall be light in me, and when
+ My life to thine is answer and amen.
+
+ 23.
+
+ How oft I say the same things in these lines!
+ Even as a man, buried in during dark,
+ Turns ever where the edge of twilight shines,
+ Prays ever towards the vague eternal mark;
+ Or as the sleeper, having dreamed he drinks,
+ Back straightway into thirstful dreaming sinks,
+ So turns my will to thee, for thee still longs, still pines.
+
+ 24.
+
+ The mortal man, all careful, wise, and troubled,
+ The eternal child in the nursery doth keep.
+ To-morrow on to-day the man heaps doubled;
+ The child laughs, hopeful, even in his sleep.
+ The man rebukes the child for foolish trust;
+ The child replies, "Thy care is for poor dust;
+ Be still, and let me wake that thou mayst sleep."
+
+ 25.
+
+ Till I am one, with oneness manifold,
+ I must breed contradiction, strife, and doubt;
+ Things tread Thy court--look real--take proving hold--
+ My Christ is not yet grown to cast them out;
+ Alas! to me, false-judging 'twixt the twain,
+ The Unseen oft fancy seems, while, all about,
+ The Seen doth lord it with a mighty train.
+
+ 26.
+
+ But when the Will hath learned obedience royal,
+ He straight will set the child upon the throne;
+ To whom the seen things all, grown instant loyal,
+ Will gather to his feet, in homage prone--
+ The child their master they have ever known;
+ Then shall the visible fabric plainly lean
+ On a Reality that never can be seen.
+
+ 27.
+
+ Thy ways are wonderful, maker of men!
+ Thou gavest me a child, and I have fed
+ And clothed and loved her, many a growing year;
+ Lo! now a friend of months draws gently near,
+ And claims her future--all beyond his ken--
+ There he hath never loved her nor hath led:
+ She weeps and moans, but turns, and leaves her home so dear.
+
+ 28.
+
+ She leaves, but not forsakes. Oft in the night,
+ Oft at mid-day when all is still around,
+ Sudden will rise, in dim pathetic light,
+ Some childish memory of household bliss,
+ Or sorrow by love's service robed and crowned;
+ Rich in his love, she yet will sometimes miss
+ The mother's folding arms, the mother's sealing kiss.
+
+ 29.
+
+ Then first, I think, our eldest-born, although
+ Loving, devoted, tender, watchful, dear,
+ The innermost of home-bred love shall know!
+ Yea, when at last the janitor draws near,
+ A still, pale joy will through the darkness go,
+ At thought of lying in those arms again,
+ Which once were heaven enough for any pain.
+
+ 30.
+
+ By love doth love grow mighty in its love:
+ Once thou shalt love us, child, as we love thee.
+ Father of loves, is it not thy decree
+ That, by our long, far-wandering remove
+ From thee, our life, our home, our being blest,
+ We learn at last to love thee true and best,
+ And rush with all our loves back to thy infinite rest?
+
+
+
+
+
+DECEMBER.
+
+ 1.
+
+ I AM a little weary of my life--
+ Not thy life, blessed Father! Or the blood
+ Too slowly laves the coral shores of thought,
+ Or I am weary of weariness and strife.
+ Open my soul-gates to thy living flood;
+ I ask not larger heart-throbs, vigour-fraught,
+ I pray thy presence, with strong patience rife.
+
+ 2.
+
+ I will what thou will'st--only keep me sure
+ That thou art willing; call to me now and then.
+ So, ceasing to enjoy, I shall endure
+ With perfect patience--willing beyond my ken
+ Beyond my love, beyond my thinking scope;
+ Willing to be because thy will is pure;
+ Willing thy will beyond all bounds of hope.
+
+ 3.
+
+ This weariness of mine, may it not come
+ From something that doth need no setting right?
+ Shall fruit be blamed if it hang wearily
+ A day before it perfected drop plumb
+ To the sad earth from off its nursing tree?
+ Ripeness must always come with loss of might.
+ The weary evening fall before the resting night.
+
+ 4.
+
+ Hither if I have come through earth and air,
+ Through fire and water--I am not of them;
+ Born in the darkness, what fair-flashing gem
+ Would to the earth go back and nestle there?
+ Not of this world, this world my life doth hem;
+ What if I weary, then, and look to the door,
+ Because my unknown life is swelling at the core?
+
+ 5.
+
+ All winged things came from the waters first;
+ Airward still many a one from the water springs
+ In dens and caves wind-loving things are nursed:--
+ I lie like unhatched bird, upfolded, dumb,
+ While all the air is trembling with the hum
+ Of songs and beating hearts and whirring wings,
+ That call my slumbering life to wake to happy things.
+
+ 6.
+
+ I lay last night and knew not why I was sad.
+ "'Tis well with God," I said, "and he is the truth;
+ Let that content me."--'Tis not strength, nor youth,
+ Nor buoyant health, nor a heart merry-mad,
+ That makes the fact of things wherein men live:
+ He is the life, and doth my life outgive;
+ In him there is no gloom, but all is solemn-glad,
+
+ 7.
+
+ I said to myself, "Lo, I lie in a dream
+ Of separation, where there comes no sign;
+ My waking life is hid with Christ in God,
+ Where all is true and potent--fact divine."
+ I will not heed the thing that doth but seem;
+ I will be quiet as lark upon the sod;
+ God's will, the seed, shall rest in me the pod.
+
+ 8.
+
+ And when that will shall blossom--then, my God,
+ There will be jubilation in a world!
+ The glad lark, soaring heavenward from the sod,
+ Up the swift spiral of its own song whirled,
+ Never such jubilation wild out-poured
+ As from my soul will break at thy feet, Lord,
+ Like a great tide from sea-heart shoreward hurled.
+
+ 9.
+
+ For then thou wilt be able, then at last,
+ To glad me as thou hungerest to do;
+ Then shall thy life my heart all open find,
+ A thoroughfare to thy great spirit-wind;
+ Then shall I rest within thy holy vast,
+ One with the bliss of the eternal mind;
+ And all creation rise in me created new.
+
+ 10.
+
+ What makes thy being a bliss shall then make mind
+ For I shall love as thou, and love in thee;
+ Then shall I have whatever I desire,
+ My every faintest wish being all divine;
+ Power thou wilt give me to work mightily,
+ Even as my Lord, leading thy low men nigher,
+ With dance and song to cast their best upon thy fire.
+
+ 11.
+
+ Then shall I live such an essential life
+ That a mere flower will then to me unfold
+ More bliss than now grandest orchestral strife--
+ By love made and obedience humble-bold,
+ I shall straight through its window God behold.
+ God, I shall feed on thee, thy creature blest
+ With very being--work at one with sweetest rest.
+
+ 12.
+
+ Give me a world, to part for praise and sunder.
+ The brooks be bells; the winds, in caverns dumb,
+ Wake fife and flute and flageolet and voice;
+ The fire-shook earth itself be the great drum;
+ And let the air the region's bass out thunder;
+ The firs be violins; the reeds hautboys;
+ Rivers, seas, icebergs fill the great score up and under!
+
+ 13.
+
+ But rather dost thou hear the blundered words
+ Of breathing creatures; the music-lowing herds
+ Of thy great cattle; thy soft-bleating sheep;
+ O'erhovered by the trebles of thy birds,
+ Whose Christ-praised carelessness song-fills the deep;
+ Still rather a child's talk who apart doth hide him,
+ And make a tent for God to come and sit beside him.
+
+ 14.
+
+ This is not life; this being is not enough.
+ But thou art life, and thou hast life for me.
+ Thou mad'st the worm--to cast the wormy slough,
+ And fly abroad--a glory flit and flee.
+ Thou hast me, statue-like, hewn in the rough,
+ Meaning at last to shape me perfectly.
+ Lord, thou hast called me fourth, I turn and call on thee.
+
+ 15.
+
+ 'Tis thine to make, mine to rejoice in thine.
+ As, hungering for his mother's face and eyes,
+ The child throws wide the door, back to the wall,
+ I run to thee, the refuge from poor lies:
+ Lean dogs behind me whimper, yelp, and whine;
+ Life lieth ever sick, Death's writhing thrall,
+ In slavery endless, hopeless, and supine.
+
+ 16.
+
+ The life that hath not willed itself to be,
+ Must clasp the life that willed, and be at peace;
+ Or, like a leaf wind-blown, through chaos flee;
+ A life-husk into which the demons go,
+ And work their will, and drive it to and fro;
+ A thing that neither is, nor yet can cease,
+ Which uncreation can alone release.
+
+ 17.
+
+ But when I turn and grasp the making hand,
+ And will the making will, with confidence
+ I ride the crest of the creation-wave,
+ Helpless no more, no more existence' slave;
+ In the heart of love's creating fire I stand,
+ And, love-possessed in heart and soul and sense,
+ Take up the making share the making Master gave.
+
+ 18.
+
+ That man alone who does the Father's works
+ Can be the Father's son; yea, only he
+ Who sonlike can create, can ever be;
+ Who with God wills not, is no son, not free.
+ O Father, send the demon-doubt that lurks
+ Behind the hope, out into the abyss;
+ Who trusts in knowledge all its good shall miss.
+
+ 19.
+
+ Thy beasts are sinless, and do live before thee;
+ Thy child is sinful, and must run to thee.
+ Thy angels sin not and in peace adore thee;
+ But I must will, or never more be free.
+ I from thy heart came, how can I ignore thee?--
+ Back to my home I hurry, haste, and flee;
+ There I shall dwell, love-praising evermore thee.
+
+ 20.
+
+ My holy self, thy pure ideal, lies
+ Calm in thy bosom, which it cannot leave;
+ My self unholy, no ideal, hies
+ Hither and thither, gathering store to grieve--
+ Not now, O Father! now it mounts, it flies,
+ To join the true self in thy heart that waits,
+ And, one with it, be one with all the heavenly mates.
+
+ 21.
+
+ Trusting thee, Christ, I kneel, and clasp thy knee;
+ Cast myself down, and kiss thy brother-feet--
+ One self thou and the Father's thought of thee!
+ Ideal son, thou hast left the perfect home,
+ Ideal brother, to seek thy brothers come!
+ Thou know'st our angels all, God's children sweet,
+ And of each two wilt make one holy child complete.
+
+ 22.
+
+ To a slow end I draw these daily words,
+ Nor think such words often to write again--
+ Rather, as light the power to me affords,
+ Christ's new and old would to my friends unbind;
+ Through words he spoke help to his thought behind;
+ Unveil the heart with which he drew his men;
+ Set forth his rule o'er devils, animals, corn, and wind.
+
+ 23.
+
+ I do remember how one time I thought,
+ "God must be lonely--oh, so lonely lone!
+ I will be very good to him--ah, nought
+ Can reach the heart of his great loneliness!
+ My whole heart I will bring him, with a moan
+ That I may not come nearer; I will lie prone
+ Before the awful loveliness in loneliness' excess."
+
+ 24.
+
+ A God must have a God for company.
+ And lo! thou hast the Son-God to thy friend.
+ Thou honour'st his obedience, he thy law.
+ Into thy secret life-will he doth see;
+ Thou fold'st him round in live love perfectly--
+ One two, without beginning, without end;
+ In love, life, strength, and truth, perfect without a flaw.
+
+ 25.
+
+ Thou hast not made, or taught me, Lord, to care
+ For times and seasons--but this one glad day
+ Is the blue sapphire clasping all the lights
+ That flash in the girdle of the year so fair--
+ When thou wast born a man, because alway
+ Thou wast and art a man, through all the flights
+ Of thought, and time, and thousandfold creation's play.
+
+ 26.
+
+ We all are lonely, Maker--each a soul
+ Shut in by itself, a sundered atom of thee.
+ No two yet loved themselves into a whole;
+ Even when we weep together we are two.
+ Of two to make one, which yet two shall be,
+ Is thy creation's problem, deep, and true,
+ To which thou only hold'st the happy, hurting clue.
+
+ 27.
+
+ No less than thou, O Father, do we need
+ A God to friend each lonely one of us.
+ As touch not in the sack two grains of seed,
+ Touch no two hearts in great worlds populous.
+ Outside the making God we cannot meet
+ Him he has made our brother: homeward, thus,
+ To find our kin we first must turn our wandering feet.
+
+ 28.
+
+ It must be possible that the soul made
+ Should absolutely meet the soul that makes;
+ Then, in that bearing soul, meet every other
+ There also born, each sister and each brother.
+ Lord, till I meet thee thus, life is delayed;
+ I am not I until that morning breaks,
+ Not I until my consciousness eternal wakes.
+
+ 29.
+
+ Again I shall behold thee, daughter true;
+ The hour will come when I shall hold thee fast
+ In God's name, loving thee all through and through.
+ Somewhere in his grand thought this waits for us.
+ Then shall I see a smile not like thy last--
+ For that great thing which came when all was past,
+ Was not a smile, but God's peace glorious.
+
+ 30.
+
+ Twilight of the transfiguration-joy,
+ Gleam-faced, pure-eyed, strong-willed, high-hearted boy!
+ Hardly thy life clear forth of heaven was sent,
+ Ere it broke out into a smile, and went.
+ So swift thy growth, so true thy goalward bent,
+ Thou, child and sage inextricably blent,
+ Wilt one day teach thy father in some heavenly tent
+
+ 31.
+
+ Go, my beloved children, live your life.
+ Wounded, faint, bleeding, never yield the strife.
+ Stunned, fallen-awake, arise, and fight again.
+ Before you victory stands, with shining train
+ Of hopes not credible until they are.
+ Beyond morass and mountain swells the star
+ Of perfect love--the home of longing heart and brain
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Book of Strife in the Form of The
+Diary of an Old Soul, by George MacDonald
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