Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Vision Of St. Eligius by George MacDonald
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A Vision Of St. Eligius

    By George MacDonald



    I.

    I see thy house, but I am blown about,
        A wind-mocked kite, between the earth and sky,
    All out of doors--alas! of thy doors out,
        And drenched in dews no summer suns can dry.

    For every blast is passion of my own;
        The dews cold sweats of selfish agony;
    Dank vapour steams from memories lying prone;
        And all my soul is but a stifled cry.

    II.

    Lord, thou dost hold my string, else were I driven
        Down to some gulf where I were tossed no more,
    No turmoil telling I was not in heaven,
        No billows raving on a blessed shore.

    Thou standest on thy door-sill, calm as day,
        And all my throbs and pangs are pulls from thee;
    Hold fast the string, lest I should break away
        And outer dark and silence swallow me.

    III.

    No longer fly thy kite, Lord; draw me home.
        Thou pull'st the string through all the distance bleak;
    Lord, I am nearing thee; O Lord, I come;
        Thy pulls grow stronger and the wind grows weak.

    In thy remodelling hands thou tak'st thy kite;
        A moment to thy bosom hold'st me fast.
    Thou flingest me abroad:--lo, in thy might
        A strong-winged bird I soar on every blast!



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