Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Of The Son Of Man by George MacDonald
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Of The Son Of Man

    By George MacDonald



    I. I honour Nature, holding it unjust
    To look with jealousy on her designs;
    With every passing year more fast she twines
    About my heart; with her mysterious dust
    Claim I a fellowship not less august
    Although she works before me and combines
    Her changing forms, wherever the sun shines
    Spreading a leafy volume on the crust
    Of the old world; and man himself likewise
    Is of her making: wherefore then divorce
    What God hath joined thus, and rend by force
    Spirit away from substance, bursting ties
    By which in one great bond of unity
    God hath together bound all things that be?

    II. And in these lines my purpose is to show
    That He who left the Father, though he came
    Not with art-splendour or the earthly flame
    Of genius, yet in that he did bestow
    His own true loving heart, did cause to grow,
    Unseen and buried deep, whate'er we name
    The best in human art, without the shame
    Of idle sitting in most real woe;
    And that whate'er of Beautiful and Grand
    The Earth contains, by him was not despised,
    But rather was so deeply realized
    In word and deed, though not with artist hand,
    That it was either hid or all disguised
    From those who were not wise to understand.

    III. Art is the bond of weakness, and we find
    Therein acknowledgment of failing power:
    A man would worship, gazing on a flower--
    Onward he passeth, lo his eyes are blind!
    The unenlivened form he left behind
    Grew up within him only for an hour!
    And he will grapple with Nature till the dower
    Of strength shall be retreasured in his mind.
    And each form-record is a high protest
    Of treason done unto the soul of man,
    Which, striving upwards, ever is oppress'd
    By the old bondage, underneath whose ban
    He, failing in his struggle for the best,
    Must live in pain upon what food he can.

    IV. Moreover, were there perfect harmony
    'Twixt soul and Nature, we should never waste
    The precious hours in gazing, but should haste
    To assimilate her offerings, and we
    From high life-elements, as doth the tree,
    Should grow to higher; so what we call Taste
    Is a slow living as of roots encased
    In the grim chinks of some sterility
    Both cramping and withholding. Art is Truth,
    But Truth dammed up and frozen, gagged and bound
    As is a streamlet icy and uncouth
    Which pebbles hath and channel but no sound:
    Give it again its summer heart of youth
    And it will be a life upon the ground.

    V. And Love had not been prisoned in cold stone,
    Nor Beauty smeared on the dead canvas so,
    Had not their worshipper been forced to go
    Questful and restless through the world alone,
    Searching but finding not, till on him shone
    Back from his own deep heart a chilly glow
    As of a frost-nipped sunbeam, or of snow
    Under a storm-dodged crescent which hath grown
    Wasted to mockery; and beneath such gleam
    His wan conceits have found an utterance,
    Which, had they found a true and sunny beam,
    Had ripened into real touch and glance--
    Nay more, to real deed, the Truth of all,
    To some perfection high and personal.

    VI. "But yet the great of soul have ever been
    The first to glory in all works of art;
    For from the genius-form would ever dart
    A light of inspiration, and a sheen
    As of new comings; and ourselves have seen
    Men of stern purpose to whose eyes would start
    Sorrow at sight of sorrow though no heart
    Did riot underneath that chilly, screen;
    And hence we judge such utterance native to
    The human soul--expression highest--best."
    --Nay, it is by such sign they will pursue,
    Albeit unknowing, Beauty, without rest;
    And failing in the search, themselves will fling
    Speechless before its shadow, worshipping.

    VII. And how shall he whose mission is to bring
    The soul to worship at its rightful shrine,
    Seeing in Beauty what is most divine,
    Give out the mightiest impulse, and thus fling
    His soul into the future, scattering
    The living seed of wisdom? Shall there shine
    From underneath his hand a matchless line
    Of high earth-beauties, till the wide world ring
    With the far clang that tells a missioned soul,
    Kneeling to homage all about his feet?
    Alas for such a gift were this the whole,
    The only bread of life men had to eat!
    Lo, I behold them dead about him now,
    And him the heart of death, for all that brow!

    VIII. If Thou didst pass by Art, thou didst not scorn
    The souls that by such symbol yearned in vain
    From Truth and Love true nourishment to gain:
    On thy warm breast, so chilly and forlorn
    Fell these thy nurslings little more than born
    That thou wast anguished, and there fell a rain
    From thy blest eyelids, and in grief and pain
    Thou partedst from them yet one night and morn
    To find them wholesome food and nourishment
    Instead of what their blindness took for such,
    Laying thyself a seed in earthen rent
    From which, outspringing to the willing touch,
    Riseth for all thy children harvest great,
    For which they will all learn to bless thee yet.

    IV. Thou sawest Beauty in the streaking cloud
    When grief lift up those eyelids; nor in scorn
    Broke ever on thine eyes the purple morn
    Along the cedar tops; to thee aloud
    Spake the night-solitude, when hushed and bowed
    The earth lay at thy feet stony and worn;
    Loving thou markedst when the lamb unshorn
    Was glad before thee, and amongst the crowd
    Famished and pent in cities did thine eye
    Read strangest glory--though in human art
    No record lives to tell us that thy heart
    Bowed to its own deep beauty: deeper did lie
    The burden of thy mission, even whereby
    We know that Beauty liveth where Thou art.

    X. Doubtless thine eyes have watched the sun aspire
    From that same Olivet, when back on thee
    Flushed upwards after some night-agony
    Thy proper Godhead, with a purer fire
    Purpling thy Infinite, and in strong desire
    Thou sattest in the dawn that was to be
    Uplifted on our dark perplexity.
    Yea in thee lay thy soul, a living lyre,
    And each wild beauty smote it, though the sound
    Rung to the night-winds oft and desert air;
    Beneath thine eyes the lily paled more fair,
    And each still shadow slanting on the ground
    Lay sweetly on thee as commissioned there,
    So full wast thou of eyes all round and round.

    XI. And so thou neededst not our human skill
    To fix what thus were transient--there it grew
    Wedded to thy perfection; and anew
    With every coming vision rose there still
    Some living principle which did fulfil
    Thy most legitimate manhood; and unto
    Thy soul all Nature rendered up its due
    With not a contradiction; and each hill
    And mountain torrent and each wandering light
    Grew out divinely on thy countenance,
    Whereon, as we are told, by word and glance
    Thy hearers read an ever strange delight--So
    strange to them thy Truth, they could not tell
    What made thy message so unspeakable.

    XII. And by such living witness didst thou preach:
    Not with blind hands of groping forward thrust
    Into the darkness, gathering only dust,
    But by this real sign--that thou didst reach,
    In natural order, rising each from each,
    Thy own ideals of the True and Just;
    And that as thou didst live, even so he must
    Who would aspire his fellow-men to teach,
    Looking perpetual from new heights of Thought
    On his old self. Of art no scorner thou!
    Instead of leafy chaplet, on thy brow
    Wearing the light of manhood, thou hast brought
    Death unto Life! Above all statues now,
    Immortal Artist, hail! thy work is wrought!

    XIII. Solemn and icy stand ye in my eyes,
    Far up into the niches of the Past,
    Ye marble statues, dim and holden fast
    Within your stony homes! nor human cries
    Had shook you from your frozen phantasies
    Or sent the life-blood through you, till there passed
    Through all your chilly bulks a new life-blast
    From the Eternal Living, and ye rise
    From out your stiffened postures rosy-warm,
    Walking abroad a goodly company
    Of living virtues at that wondrous charm,
    As he with human heart and hand and eye
    Walked sorrowing upon our highways then,
    The Eternal Father's living gift to men!

    XIV. As the pent torrent in uneasy rest
    Under the griping rocks, doth ever keep
    A monstrous working as it lies asleep
    In the round hollow of some mountain's breast,
    Till where it hideth in its sweltering nest
    Some earthquake finds it, and its waters leap
    Forth to the sunshine down the mighty steep,
    So in thee once was anguished forth the quest
    Whereby man sought for life-power as he lay
    Under his own proud heart and black despair
    Wedged fast and stifled up with loads of care,
    Yet at dumb struggle with the tyrant clay;
    Thou wentest down below the roots of prayer,
    And he hath cried aloud since that same day!

    XV. As he that parts in hatred from a friend
    Mixing with other men forgets the woe
    Which anguished him when he beheld and lo
    Two souls had fled asunder which did bend
    Under the same blue heaven! yet ere the end,
    When the loud world hath tossed him to and fro,
    Will often strangely reappear that glow
    At simplest memory which some chance may send,
    Although much stronger bonds have lost their power:
    So thou God-sent didst come in lowly guise,
    Striking on simple chords,--not with surprise
    Or mightiest recollectings in that hour,
    But like remembered fragrance of a flower
    A man with human heart and loving eyes.

    March, 1852.



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