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Title: A Book of Strife in the Form of The Diary of an Old Soul

Author: George MacDonald

Release Date: October 1, 2008 [EBook #1953]
Last Updated: January 15, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK OF STRIFE ***




Produced by John Bechard, and David Widger







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






Contents

DEDICATION


THE DIARY OF AN OLD SOUL.


JANUARY.

FEBRUARY.

MARCH.

APRIL.

MAY.

JUNE.

JULY.

AUGUST.

SEPTEMBER.

OCTOBER.

NOVEMBER

DECEMBER.






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 æther 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 æonian 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 freëst-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










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