Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Broken Prayer by George MacDonald
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A Broken Prayer

    By George MacDonald



    0 Lord, my God, how long
    Shall my poor heart pant for a boundless joy?
    How long, O mighty Spirit, shall I hear
    The murmur of Truth's crystal waters slide
    From the deep caverns of their endless being,
    But my lips taste not, and the grosser air
    Choke each pure inspiration of thy will?

    I am a denseness 'twixt me and the light;
    1 cannot round myself; my purest thought,
    Ere it is thought, hath caught the taint of earth,
    And mocked me with hard thoughts beyond my will.

    I would be a wind
    Whose smallest atom is a viewless wing,
    All busy with the pulsing life that throbs
    To do thy bidding; yea, or the meanest thing
    That has relation to a changeless truth,
    Could I but be instinct with thee--each thought
    The lightning of a pure intelligence,
    And every act as the loud thunder-clap
    Of currents warring for a vacuum.

    Lord, clothe me with thy truth as with a robe;
    Purge me with sorrow; I will bend my head
    And let the nations of thy waves pass over,
    Bathing me in thy consecrated strength;
    And let thy many-voiced and silver winds
    Pass through my frame with their clear influence,
    O save me; I am blind; lo, thwarting shapes
    Wall up the void before, and thrusting out
    Lean arms of unshaped expectation, beckon
    Down to the night of all unholy thoughts.

    Oh, when at midnight one of thy strong angels
    Stems back the waves of earthly influence
    That shape unsteady continents around me,
    And they draw off with the devouring gush
    Of exile billows that have found a home,
    Leaving me islanded on unseen points,
    Hanging 'twixt thee and chaos--I have seen
    Unholy shapes lop off my shining thoughts,
    And they have lent me leathern wings of fear,
    Of baffled pride and harrowing distrust;
    And Godhead, with its crown of many stars,
    Its pinnacles of flaming holiness,
    And voice of leaves in the green summer-time,
    Has seemed the shadowed image of a self!
    Then my soul blackened; and I rose to find
    And grasp my doom, and cleave the arching deeps
    Of desolation.

    O Lord, my soul is a forgotten well
    Clad round with its own rank luxuriance;
    A fountain a kind sunbeam searches for,
    Sinking the lustre of its arrowy finger
    Through the long grass its own strange virtue
    Hath blinded up its crystal eye withal:
    Make me a broad strong river coming down
    With shouts from its high hills, whose rocky hearts
    Throb forth the joy of their stability
    In watery pulses from their inmost deeps;
    And I shall be a vein upon thy world,
    Circling perpetual from the parent deep.

    Most mighty One,
    Confirm and multiply my thoughts of good;
    Help me to wall each sacred treasure round
    With the firm battlements of special action.
    Alas, my holy happy thoughts of thee
    Make not perpetual nest within my soul,
    But like strange birds of dazzling colours stoop
    The trailing glories of their sunward speed
    For one glad moment, filling my blasted boughs
    With the sunshine of their wings. Make me a forest
    Of gladdest life wherein perpetual spring
    Lifts up her leafy tresses in the wind.
    Lo, now I see
    Thy trembling starlight sit among my pines,
    And thy young moon slide down my arching boughs
    With a soft sound of restless eloquence!
    And I can feel a joy as when thy hosts
    Of trampling winds, gathering in maddened bands,
    Roar upward through the blue and flashing day
    Round my still depths of uncleft solitude.

    Hear me, O Lord,
    When the black night draws down upon my soul,
    And voices of temptation darken down
    The misty wind, slamming thy starry doors
    With bitter jests:--"Thou fool!" they seem to say,
    "Thou hast no seed of goodness in thee; all
    Thy nature hath been stung right through and through;
    Thy sin hath blasted thee and made thee old;
    Thou hadst a will, but thou hast killed it dead,
    And with the fulsome garniture of life
    Built out the loathsome corpse; thou art a child
    Of night and death, even lower than a worm;
    Gather the skirts up of thy shadowy self,
    And with what resolution thou hast left
    Fall on the damned spikes of doom!"

    Oh, take me like a child,
    If thou hast made me for thyself, my God,
    And lead me up thy hills. I shall not fear,
    So thou wilt make me pure, and beat back sin
    With the terrors of thine eye: it fears me not
    As once it might have feared thine own good image,
    But lays bold siege at my heart's doors.

    Oh, I have seen a thing of beauty stand
    In the young moonlight of its upward thoughts,
    And the old earth came round it with its gifts
    Of gladness, whispering leaves, and odorous plants,
    Until its large and spiritual eye
    Burned with intensest love: my God, I could
    Have watched it evermore with Argus-eyes,
    Lest when the noontide of the summer's sun
    Let down the tented sunlight on the plain,
    His flaming beams should scorch my darling flower;
    And through the fruitless nights of leaden gloom,
    Of plashing rains, and knotted winds of cold,
    Yea, when thy lightnings ran across the sky,
    And the loud stumbling blasts fell from the hills
    Upon the mounds of death, I could have watched
    Guarding such beauty like another life!
    But, O my God, it changed!--
    Yet methinks I know not if it was not I!
    Its beauty turned to ghastly loathsomeness!
    Then a hand spurned me backwards from the clouds,
    And with the gather of a mighty whirlwind,
    Drew in the glittering gifts of life.

    How long, O Lord, how long?
    I am a man lost in a rocky place!
    Lo, all thy echoes smite me with confusion
    Of varied speech,--the cry of vanished Life
    Rolled upon nations' sighs--of hearts uplifted
    Against despair--the stifled sounds of Woe
    Sitting perpetual by its grey cold well--
    Or wasted Toil climbing its endless hills
    With quickening gasps--or the thin winds of Joy
    That beat about the voices of the crowd!

    Lord, hast thou sent
    Thy moons to mock us with perpetual hope?
    Lighted within our breasts the love of love
    To make us ripen for despair, my God?

    Oh, dost thou hold each individual soul
    Strung clear upon thy flaming rods of purpose?
    Or does thine inextinguishable will
    Stand on the steeps of night with lifted hand
    Filling the yawning wells of monstrous space
    With mixing thought--drinking up single life
    As in a cup? and from the rending folds
    Of glimmering purpose, do all thy navied stars
    Slide through the gloom with mystic melody,
    Like wishes on a brow? Oh, is my soul,
    Hung like a dewdrop in thy grassy ways,
    Drawn up again into the rack of change
    Even through the lustre which created it?
    --O mighty one, thou wilt not smite me through
    With scorching wrath, because my spirit stands
    Bewildered in thy circling mysteries!

    Oh lift the burdened gloom that chokes my soul
    With dews of darkness; smite the lean winds of death
    That run with howls around the ruined temples,
    Blowing the souls of men about like leaves.

    Lo, the broad life-lands widen overhead,
    Star-galaxies arise like drifting snow,
    And happy life goes whitening down the stream
    Of boundless action, whilst my fettered soul
    Sits, as a captive in a noisome dungeon
    Watches the pulses of his withered heart
    Lave out the sparkling minutes of his life
    On the idle flags!

    Come in the glory of thine excellence,
    Rive the dense gloom with wedges of clear light,
    And let the shimmer of thy chariot wheels
    Burn through the cracks of night! So slowly, Lord,
    To lift myself to thee with hands of toil,
    Climbing the slippery cliffs of unheard prayer!
    Lift up a hand among my idle days--
    One beckoning finger: I will cast aside
    The clogs of earthly circumstance and run
    Up the broad highways where the countless worlds
    Sit ripening in the summer of thy love.
    Send a clear meaning sparkling through the years;
    Burst all the prison-doors, and make men's hearts
    Gush up like fountains with thy melody;
    Brighten the hollow eyes; fill with life's fruits
    The hands that grope and scramble down the wastes;
    And let the ghastly troops of withered ones
    Come shining o'er the mountains of thy love.

    Lord, thy strange mysteries come thickening down
    Upon my head like snowflakes, shutting out
    The happy upper fields with chilly vapour.
    Shall I content my soul with a weak sense
    Of safety? or feed my ravenous hunger with
    Sore purged hopes, that are not hopes but fears
    Clad in white raiment?

    The creeds lie in the hollow of men's hearts
    Like festering pools glassing their own corruption;
    The slimy eyes stare up with dull approval,
    And answer not when thy bright starry feet
    Move on the watery floors: oh, shake men's souls
    Together like the gathering of all oceans
    Rent from their hidden chambers, till the waves
    Lift up their million voices of high joy
    Along the echoing cliffs! come thus, O Lord,
    With nightly gifts of stars, and lay a hand
    Of mighty peace upon the quivering flood.

    O wilt thou hear me when I cry to thee?
    I am a child lost in a mighty forest;
    The air is thick with voices, and strange hands
    Reach through the dusk, and pluck me by the skirts.
    There is a voice which sounds like words from home,
    But, as I stumble on to reach it, seems
    To leap from rock to rock: oh, if it is
    Willing obliquity of sense, descend,
    Heal all my wanderings, take me by the hand,
    And lead me homeward through the shadows.
    Let me not by my wilful acts of pride
    Block up the windows of thy truth, and grow
    A wasted, withered thing, that stumbles on
    Down to the grave with folded hands of sloth
    And leaden confidence.



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