Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Somnium Mystici by George MacDonald
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Somnium Mystici

    By George MacDonald



    A Microcosm In Terza Rima.

    I.

    Quiet I lay at last, and knew no more
        Whether I breathed or not, so worn I lay
        With the death-struggle. What was yet before
    Neither I met, nor turned from it away;
        My only conscious being was the rest
        Of pain gone dead--dead with the bygone day,
    And long I could have lingered all but blest
        In that half-slumber. But there came a sound
        As of a door that opened--in the west
    Somewhere I thought it. As the hare the hound,
        The noise did start my eyelids and they rose.
        I turned my eyes and looked. Then straight I found
    It was my chamber-door that did unclose,
        For a tall form up to my bedside drew.
        Grand was it, silent, its very walk repose;
    And when I saw the countenance, I knew
        That I was lying in my chamber dead;
        For this my brother--brothers such are few--
    That now to greet me bowed his kingly head,
        Had, many years agone, like holy dove
        Returning, from his friends and kindred sped,
    And, leaving memories of mournful love,
        Passed vanishing behind the unseen veil;
        And though I loved him, all high words above.
    Not for his loss then did I weep or wail,
        Knowing that here we live but in a tent,
        And, seeking home, shall find it without fail.
    Feeble but eager, toward him my hands went--
        I too was dead, so might the dead embrace!
        Taking me by the shoulders down he bent,
    And lifted me. I was in sickly case,
        But, growing stronger, stood up on the floor,
        There turned, and once regarded my dead face
    With curious eyes: its brow contentment wore,
        But I had done with it, and turned away.
        I saw my brother by the open door,
    And followed him out into the night blue-gray.
        The houses stood up hard in limpid air,
        The moon hung in the heavens in half decay,
    And all the world to my bare feet lay bare.

    II.

    Now I had suffered in my life, as they
        Must suffer, and by slow years younger grow,
        From whom the false fool-self must drop away,
    Compact of greed and fear, which, gathered slow,
        Darkens the angel-self that, evermore,
        Where no vain phantom in or out shall go,
    Moveless beholds the Father--stands before
        The throne of revelation, waiting there,
        With wings low-drooping on the sapphire-floor,
    Until it find the Father's ideal fair,
        And be itself at last: not one small thorn
        Shall needless any pilgrim's garments tear;
    And but to say I had suffered I would scorn
        Save for the marvellous thing that next befell:
        Sudden I grew aware I was new-born;
    All pain had vanished in the absorbent swell
        Of some exalting peace that was my own;
        As the moon dwelt in heaven did calmness dwell
    At home in me, essential. The earth's moan
        Lay all behind. Had I then lost my part
        In human griefs, dear part with them that groan?
    "'Tis weariness!" I said; but with a start
        That set it trembling and yet brake it not,
        I found the peace was love. Oh, my rich heart!
    For, every time I spied a glimmering spot
        Of window pane, "There, in that silent room,"
        Thought I, "mayhap sleeps human heart whose lot
    Is therefore dear to mine!" I cared for whom
        I saw not, had not seen, and might not see!
        After the love crept prone its shadow-gloom,
    But instant a mightier love arose in me,
        As in an ocean a single wave will swell,
        And heaved the shadow to the centre: we
    Had called it prayer, before on sleep I fell.
        It sank, and left my sea in holy calm:
        I gave each man to God, and all was well.
    And in my heart stirred soft a sleeping psalm.

    III.

    No gentlest murmur through the city crept;
        Not one lone word my brother to me had spoken;
        But when beyond the city-gate we stept
    I knew the hovering silence would be broken.
        A low night wind came whispering: through and through
        It did baptize me with the pledge and token
    Of that soft spirit-wind which blows and blew
        And fans the human world since evermore.
        The very grass, cool to my feet, I knew
    To be love also, and with the love I bore
        To hold far sympathy, silent and sweet,
        As having known the secret from of yore
    In the eternal heart where all things meet,
        Feelings and thinkings, and where still they are bred.
        Sudden he stood, and with arrested feet
    I also. Like a half-sunned orb, his head
        Slow turned the bright side: lo, the brother-smile
        That ancient human glory on me shed
    Clothéd in which Jesus came forth to wile
        Unto his bosom every labouring soul,
        And all dividing passions to beguile
    To winsome death, and then on them to roll
        The blessed stone of the holy sepulchre!
        "Thank God," he said, "thou also now art whole
    And sound and well! For the keen pain, and stir
        Uneasy, and sore grief that came to us all,
        In that we knew not how the wine and myrrh
    Could ever from the vinegar and gall
        Be parted, are deep sunk, yea drowned in God;
        And yet the past not folded in a pall,
    But breathed upon, like Aaron's withered rod,
        By a sweet light that brings the blossoms through,
        Showing in dreariest paths that men have trod
    Another's foot-prints, spotted of crimson hue,
        Still on before wherever theirs did wend;
        Yea, through the desert leading, of thyme and rue,
    The desert souls in which young lions rend
        And roar--the passionate who, to be blest,
        Ravin as bears, and do not gain their end,
    Because that, save in God, there is no rest."

    IV.

    Something my brother said to me like this,
        But how unlike it also, think, I pray:
        His eyes were music, and his smile a kiss;
    Himself the word, his speech was but a ray
        In the clear nimbus that with verity
        Of absolute utterance made a home-born day
    Of truth about him, lamping solemnly;
        And when he paused, there came a swift repose,
        Too high, too still to be called ecstasy--
    A purple silence, lanced through in the close
        By such keen thought that, with a sudden smiling,
        It grew sheen silver, hearted with burning rose.
    He was a glory full of reconciling,
        Of faithfulness, of love with no self-stain,
        Of tenderness, and care, and brother-wiling
    Back to the bosom of a speechless gain.

    V.

    I cannot tell how long we joyous talked,
        For from my sense old time had vanished quite,
        Space dim-remaining--for onward still we walked.
    No sun arose to blot the pale, still night--
        Still as the night of some great spongy stone
        That turns but once an age betwixt the light
    And the huge shadow from its own bulk thrown,
        And long as that to me before whose face
        Visions so many slid, and veils were blown
    Aside from the vague vast of Isis' grace.
        Innumerous thoughts yet throng that infinite hour,
        And hopes which greater hopes unceasing chase,
    For I was all responsive to his power.
        I saw my friends weep, wept, and let them weep;
        I saw the growth of each grief-nurtured flower;
    I saw the gardener watching--in their sleep
        Wiping their tears with the napkin he had laid
        Wrapped by itself when he climbed Hades' steep;
    What wonder then I saw nor was dismayed!
        I saw the dull, degraded monsters nursed
        In money-marshes, greedy men that preyed
    Upon the helpless, ground the feeblest worst;
        Yea all the human chaos, wild and waste,
        Where he who will not leave what God hath cursed
    Now fruitless wallows, now is stung and chased
        By visions lovely and by longings dire.
        "But who believeth, he shall not make haste,
    Even passing through the water and the fire,
        Or sad with memories of a better lot!
        He, saved by hope, for all men will desire,
    Knowing that God into a mustard-jot
        May shut an aeon; give a world that lay
        Wombed in its sun, a molten unorbed clot,
    One moment from the red rim to spin away
        Librating--ages to roll on weary wheel
        Ere it turn homeward, almost spent its day!
    Who knows love all, time nothing, he shall feel
        No anxious heart, shall lift no trembling hand;
        Tender as air, but clothed in triple steel,
    He for his kind, in every age and land,
        Hoping will live; and, to his labour bent,
        The Father's will shall, doing, understand."
    So spake my brother as we onward went:
        His words my heart received, as corn the lea,
        And answered with a harvest of content.
    We came at last upon a lonesome sea.

    VI.

    And onward still he went, I following
        Out on the water. But the water, lo,
        Like a thin sheet of glass, lay vanishing!
    The starry host in glorious twofold show
        Looked up, looked down. The moment I saw this,
        A quivering fear thorough my heart did go:
    Unstayed I walked across a twin abyss,
        A hollow sphere of blue; nor floor was found
        Of questing eye, only the foot met the kiss
    Of the cool water lightly crisping round
        The edges of the footsteps! Terror froze
        My fallen eyelids. But again the sound
    Of my guide's voice on the still air arose:
        "Hast thou forgotten that we walk by faith?
        For keenest sight but multiplies the shows.
    Lift up thine eyelids; take a valiant breath;
        Terrified, dare the terror in God's name;
        Step wider; trust the invisible. Can Death
    Avail no more to hearten up thy flame?"
        I trembled, but I opened wide mine eyes,
        And strode on the invisible sea. The same
    High moment vanished all my cowardice,
        And God was with me. The well-pleased stars
        Threw quivering smiles across the gulfy skies,
    The white aurora flashed great scimitars
        From north to zenith; and again my guide
        Full turned on me his face. No prison-bars
    Latticed across a soul I there descried,
        No weather-stains of grief; quiet age-long
        Brooded upon his forehead clear and wide;
    Yet from that face a pang shot, vivid and strong,
        Into my heart. For, though I saw him stand
        Close to me in the void as one in a throng,
    Yet on the border of some nameless land
        He stood afar; a still-eyed mystery
        Caught him whole worlds away. Though in my hand
    His hand I held, and, gazing earnestly,
        Searched in his countenance, as in a mine,
        For jewels of contentment, satisfy
    My heart I could not. Seeming to divine
        My hidden trouble, gently he stooped and kissed
        My forehead, and his arms did round me twine,
    And held me to his bosom. Still I missed
        That ancient earthly nearness, when we shared
        One bed, like birds that of no morrow wist;
    Roamed our one father's farm; or, later, fared
        Along the dusty highways of the old clime.
        Backward he drew, and, as if he had bared
    My soul, stood reading there a little time,
        While in his eyes tears gathered slow, like dew
        That dims the grass at evening or at prime,
    But makes the stars clear-goldener in the blue:
        And on his lips a faint ethereal smile
        Hovered, as hangs the mist of its own hue
    Trembling about a purple flower, the while
        Evening grows brown. "Brother! brother!" I cried;
        But straight outbursting tears my words beguile,
    And in my bosom all the utterance died.

    VII.

    A moment more he stood, then softly sighed.
        "I know thy pain; but this sorrow is far
        Beyond my help," his voice at length replied
    To my beseeching tears. "Look at yon star
        Up from the low east half-way, all ablaze:
        Think'st thou, because no cloud between doth mar
    The liquid glory that from its visage rays,
        Thou therefore knowest that same world on high,
        Its people and its orders and its ways?"
    "What meanest thou?" I said.    "Thou know'st that
        Would hold, not thy dear form, but the self-thee!
        Thou art not near me! For thyself I cry!"
    "Not the less near that nearer I shall be.
        I have a world within thou dost not know--
        Would I could make thee know it! but all of me
    Is thine, though thou not yet canst enter so
        Into possession that betwixt us twain
        The frolic homeliness of love should flow
    As o'er the brim of childhood's cup again:
        Away the deeper childhood first must wipe
        That clouded consciousness which was our pain.
    When in thy breast the godlike hath grown ripe,
        And thou, Christ's little one, art ten times more
        A child than when we played with drum and pipe
    About our earthly father's happy door,
        Then--" He ceased not; his holy utterance still
        Flowing went on, like spring from hidden store
    Of wasteless waters; but I wept my fill,
        Nor heeded much the comfort of his speech.
        At length he said: "When first I clomb the hill--
    With earthly words I heavenly things would reach--
        Where dwelleth now the man we used to call
        Father, whose voice, oh memory dear! did teach
    Us in our beds, when straight, as once a stall
        Became a temple, holy grew the room,
        Prone on the ground before him I did fall,
    So grand he towered above me like a doom;
        But now I look into the well-known face
        Fearless, yea, basking blessed in the bloom
    Of his eternal youthfulness and grace."
        "But something separates us," yet I cried;
        "Let light at least begin the dark to chase,
    The dark begin to waver and divide,
        And clear the path of vision. In the old time,
        When clouds one heart did from the other hide,
    A wind would blow between! If I would climb,
        This foot must rise ere that can go up higher:
        Some big A teach me of the eternal prime."
    He answered me: "Hearts that to love aspire
        Must learn its mighty harmony ere they can
        Give out one perfect note in its great quire;
    And thereto am I sent--oh, sent of one
        Who makes the dumb for joy break out and sing:
        He opens every door 'twixt man and man;
    He to all inner chambers all will bring."

    VIII.

    It was enough; Hope waked from dreary swound,
        And Hope had ever been enough for me,
        To kennel driving grim Tomorrow's hound;
    From chains of school and mode she set me free,
        And urged my life to living.--On we went
        Across the stars that underlay the sea,
    And came to a blown shore of sand and bent.
        Beyond the sand a marshy moor we crossed
        Silent--I, for I pondered what he meant,
    And he, that sacred speech might not be lost--
        And came at length upon an evil place:
        Trees lay about like a half-buried host,
    Each in its desolate pool; some fearful race
        Of creatures was not far, for howls and cries
        And gurgling hisses rose. With even pace
    Walking, "Fear not," he said, "for this way lies
        Our journey." On we went; and soon the ground
        Slow from the waste began a gentle rise;
    And tender grass in patches, then all round,
        Came clouding up, with its fresh homely tinge
        Of softest green cold-flushing every mound;
    At length, of lowly shrubs a scattered fringe;
        And last, a gloomy forest, almost blind,
        For on its roof no sun-ray did impinge,
    So that its very leaves did share the mind
        Of a brown shadowless day. Not, all the year,
        Once part its branches to let through a wind,
    But all day long the unmoving trees appear
        To ponder on the past, as men may do
        That for the future wait without a fear,
    And in the past the coming present view.

    IX.

    I know not if for days many or few
        Pathless we thrid the wood; for never sun,
        Its sylvan-traceried windows peeping through,
    Mottled with brighter green the mosses dun,
        Or meted with moving shadows Time the shade.
        No life was there--not even a spider spun.
    At length we came into a sky-roofed glade,
        An open level, in a circle shut
        By solemn trees that stood aside and made
    Large room and lonely for a little hut
        By grassy sweeps wide-margined from the wood.
        'Twas built of saplings old, that had been cut
    When those great trees no larger by them stood;
        Thick with an ancient moss, it seemed to have grown
        Thus from the old brown earth, a covert rude,
    Half-house, half-grave; half-lifted up, half-prone.
        To its low door my brother led me. "There
        Is thy first school," he said; "there be thou shown
    Thy pictured alphabet. Wake a mind of prayer,
        And praying enter." "But wilt thou not come,
        Brother?" I said. "No," said he. And I, "Where
    Then shall I find thee?    Thou wilt not leave me dumb,
        And a whole world of thoughts unuttered?"
        With half-sad smile and dewy eyes, and some
    Conflicting motions of his kingly head,
        He pointed to the open-standing door.
        I entered: inward, lo, my shadow led!
    I turned: his countenance shone like lightning hoar!
        Then slow he turned from me, and parted slow,
        Like one unwilling, whom I should see no more;
    With voice nor hand said, Farewell, I must go!
        But drew the clinging door hard to the post.
        No dry leaves rustled 'neath his going; no
    Footfalls came back from the departing ghost.
        He was no more. I laid me down and wept;
        I dared not follow him, restrained the most
    By fear I should not see him if I leapt
        Out after him with cries of pleading love.
        Close to the wall, in hopeless loss, I crept;
    There cool sleep came, God's shadow, from above.

    X.

    I woke, with calmness cleansed and sanctified--
        The peace that filled my heart of old, when I
        Woke in my mother's lap; for since I died
    The past lay bare, even to the dreaming shy
        That shadowed my yet gathering unborn brain.
        And, marvelling, on the floor I saw, close by
    My elbow-pillowed head, as if it had lain
        Beside me all the time I dreamless lay,
        A little pool of sunlight, which did stain
    The earthen brown with gold; marvelling, I say,
        Because, across the sea and through the wood,
        No sun had shone upon me all the way.
    I rose, and through a chink the glade I viewed,
        But all was dull as it had always been,
        And sunless every tree-top round it stood,
    With hardly light enough to show it green;
        Yet through the broken roof, serenely glad,
        By a rough hole entered that heavenly sheen.
    Then I remembered in old years I had
        Seen such a light--where, with dropt eyelids gloomed,
        Sitting on such a floor, dark women sad
    In a low barn-like house where lay entombed
        Their sires and children; only there the door
        Was open to the sun, which entering plumed
    With shadowy palms the stones that on the floor
        Stood up like lidless chests--again to find
        That the soul needs no brain, but keeps her store
    In hidden chambers of the eternal mind.
        Thence backward ran my roused Memory
        Down the ever-opening vista--back to blind
    Anticipations while my soul did lie
        Closed in my mother's; forward thence through bright
        Spring morns of childhood, gay with hopes that fly
    Bird-like across their doming blue and white,
    To passionate summer noons, to saddened eves
        Of autumn rain, so on to wintred night;
    Thence up once more to the dewy dawn that weaves
        Saffron and gold--weaves hope with still content,
        And wakes the worship that even wrong bereaves
    Of half its pain. And round her as she went
        Hovered a sense as of an odour dear
        Whose flower was far--as of a letter sent
    Not yet arrived--a footstep coming near,
        But, oh, how long delayed the lifting latch!--
        As of a waiting sun, ready to peer
    Yet peering not--as of a breathless watch
        Over a sleeping beauty--babbling rime
        About her lips, but no winged word to catch!
    And here I lay, the child of changeful Time
        Shut in the weary, changeless Evermore,
        A dull, eternal, fadeless, fruitless clime!
    Was this the dungeon of my sinning sore--
        A gentle hell of loneliness, foredoomed
        For such as I, whose love was yet the core
    Of all my being? The brown shadow gloomed
        Persistent, faded, warm. No ripple ran
        Across the air, no roaming insect boomed.
    "Alas," I cried, "I am no living man!
        Better were darkness and the leave to grope
        Than light that builds its own drear prison! Can
    This be the folding of the wings of Hope?"

    XI.

    That instant--through the branches overhead
        No sound of going went--a shadow fell
        Isled in the unrippled pool of sunlight fed
    From some far fountain hid in heavenly dell.
        I looked, and in the low roofs broken place
        A single snowdrop stood--a radiant bell
    Of silvery shine, softly subdued by grace
        Of delicate green that made the white appear
        Yet whiter. Blind it bowed its head a space,
    Half-timid--then, as in despite of fear,
        Unfolded its three rays. If it had swung
        Its pendent bell, and music golden clear--
    Division just entrancing sounds among--
        Had flickered down as tender as flakes of snow,
        It had not shed more influence as it rung
    Than from its look alone did rain and flow.
        I knew the flower; perceived its human ways;
        Dim saw the secret that had made it grow:
    My heart supplied the music's golden phrase.
        Light from the dark and snowdrops from the earth,
        Life's resurrection out of gross decays,
    The endless round of beauty's yearly birth,
        And nations' rise and fall--were in the flower,
        And read themselves in silence. Heavenly mirth
    Awoke in my sad heart. For one whole hour
        I praised the God of snowdrops. But at height
        The bliss gave way. Next, faith began to cower;
    And then the snowdrop vanished from my sight.

    XII.

    Last, I began in unbelief to say:
        "No angel this! a snowdrop--nothing more!
        A trifle which God's hands drew forth in play
    From the tangled pond of chaos, dank and frore,
        Threw on the bank, and left blindly to breed!
        A wilful fancy would have gathered store
    Of evanescence from the pretty weed,
        White, shapely--then divine! Conclusion lame
        O'erdriven into the shelter of a creed!
    Not out of God, but nothingness it came:
        Colourless, feeble, flying from life's heat,
        It has no honour, hardly shunning shame!"
    When, see, another shadow at my feet!
        Hopeless I lifted now my weary head:
        Why mock me with another heavenly cheat?--
    A primrose fair, from its rough-blanketed bed
        Laughed, lo, my unbelief to heavenly scorn!
        A sun-child, just awake, no prayer yet said,
    Half rising from the couch where it was born,
        And smiling to the world! I breathed again;
        Out of the midnight once more dawned the morn,
    And fled the phantom Doubt with all his train.

    XIII.

    I was a child once more, nor pondered life,
        Thought not of what or how much. All my soul
        With sudden births of lovely things grew rife.
    In peeps a daisy: on the instant roll
        Rich lawny fields, with red tips crowding the green,
        Across the hollows, over ridge and knoll,
    To where the rosy sun goes down serene.
        From out of heaven in looks a pimpernel:
        I walk in morning scents of thyme and bean;
    Dewdrops on every stalk and bud and bell
        Flash, like a jewel-orchard, many roods;
        Glow ruby suns, which emerald suns would quell;
    Topaz saint-glories, sapphire beatitudes
        Blaze in the slanting sunshine all around;
        Above, the high-priest-lark, o'er fields and woods--
    Rich-hearted with his five eggs on the ground--
        The sacrifice bore through the veil of light,
        Odour and colour offering up in sound.--
    Filled heart-full thus with forms of lowly might
        And shapeful silences of lovely lore,
        I sat a child, happy with only sight,
    And for a time I needed nothing more.

    XIV.

    Supine to the revelation I did lie,
        Passive as prophet to his dreaming deep,
        Or harp Aeolian to the breathing sky,
    And blest as any child whom twilight sleep
        Holds half, and half lets go. But the new day
        Of higher need up-dawned with sudden leap:
    "Ah, flowers," I said, "ye are divinely gay,
        But your fair music is too far and fine!
        Ye are full cups, yet reach not to allay
    The drought of those for human love who pine
        As the hart for water-brooks!" At once a face
        Was looking in my face; its eyes through mine
    Were feeding me with tenderness and grace,
        And by their love I knew my mother's eyes.
        Gazing in them, there grew in me apace
    A longing grief, and love did swell and rise
        Till weeping I brake out and did bemoan
        My blameful share in bygone tears and cries:
    "O mother, wilt thou plead for me?" I groan;
        "I say not, plead with Christ, but plead with those
        Who, gathered now in peace about his throne,
    Were near me when my heart was full of throes,
        And longings vain alter a flying bliss,
        Which oft the fountain by the threshold froze:
    They must forgive me, mother! Tell them this:
        No more shall swell the love-dividing sigh;
        Down at their feet I lay my selfishness."
    The face grew passionate at this my cry;
        The gathering tears up to its eyebrims rose;
        It grew a trembling mist, that did not fly
    But slow dissolved. I wept as one of those
        Who wake outside the garden of their dream,
        And, lo, the droop-winged hours laborious close
    Its opal gates with stone and stake and beam.

    XV.

    But glory went that glory more might come.
        Behold a countless multitude--no less!
        A host of faces, me besieging, dumb
    In the lone castle of my mournfulness!
        Had then my mother given the word I sent,
        Gathering my dear ones from the shining press?
    And had these others their love-aidance lent
        For full assurance of the pardon prayed?
        Would they concentre love, with sweet intent,
    On my self-love, to blast the evil shade?
        Ah, perfect vision! pledge of endless hope!
        Oh army of the holy spirit, arrayed
    In comfort's panoply! For words I grope--
        For clouds to catch your radiant dawn, my own,
        And tell your coming! From the highest cope
    Of blue, down to my roof-breach came a cone
        Of faces and their eyes on love's will borne,
        Bright heads down-bending like the forward blown,
    Heavy with ripeness, golden ears of corn,
        By gentle wind on crowded harvest-field,
        All gazing toward my prison-hut forlorn
    As if with power of eyes they would have healed
        My troubled heart, making it like their own
        In which the bitter fountain had been sealed,
    And the life-giving water flowed alone!

    XVI.

    With what I thus beheld, glorified then,
    "God, let me love my fill and pass!" I sighed,
        And dead, for love had almost died again.
    "O fathers, brothers, I am yours!" I cried;
    "O mothers, sisters. I am nothing now
        Save as I am yours, and in you sanctified!
    O men, O women, of the peaceful brow,
        And infinite abysses in the eyes
        Whence God's ineffable gazes on me, how
    Care ye for me, impassioned and unwise?
        Oh ever draw my heart out after you!
        Ever, O grandeur, thus before me rise
    And I need nothing, not even for love will sue!
        I am no more, and love is all in all!
        Henceforth there is, there can be nothing new--
    All things are always new!" Then, like the fall
        Of a steep avalanche, my joy fell steep:
        Up in my spirit rose as it were the call
    Of an old sorrow from an ancient deep;
        For, with my eyes fixed on the eyes of him
        Whom I had loved before I learned to creep--
    God's vicar in his twilight nursery dim
        To gather us to the higher father's knee--
        I saw a something fill their azure rim
    That caught him worlds and years away from me;
        And like a javelin once more through me passed
        The pang that pierced me walking on the sea:
    "O saints," I cried, "must loss be still the last?"

    XVII.

    When I said this, the cloud of witnesses
        Turned their heads sideways, and the cloud grew dim
        I saw their faces half, but now their bliss
    Gleamed low, like the old moon in the new moon's rim.
        Then as I gazed, a better kind of light
        On every outline 'gan to glimmer and swim,
    Faint as the young moon threadlike on the night,
        Just born of sunbeams trembling on her edge:
        'Twas a great cluster of profiles in sharp white.
    Had some far dawn begun to drive a wedge
        Into the night, and cleave the clinging dark?
        I saw no moon or star, token or pledge
    Of light, save that manifold silvery mark,
        The shining title of each spirit-book.
        Whence came that light? Sudden, as if a spark
    Of vital touch had found some hidden nook
        Where germs of potent harmonies lay prest,
        And their outbursting life old Aether shook,
    Rose, as in prayer to lingering promised guest,
        From that great cone of faces such a song,
        Instinct with hope's harmonical unrest,
    That with sore weeping, and the cry "How long?"
        I bore my part because I could not sing.
        And as they sang, the light more clear and strong
    Bordered their faces, till the glory-sting
        I could almost no more encounter and bear;
        Light from their eyes, like water from a spring,
    Flowed; on their foreheads reigned their flashing hair;
        I saw the light from eyes I could not see.
        "He comes! he comes!" they sang, "comes to our prayer!"
    "Oh my poor heart, if only it were He!"
        I cried. Thereat the faces moved! those eyes
        Were turning on me! In rushed ecstasy,
    And woke me to the light of lower skies.

    XVIII.

    "What matter," said I, "whether clank of chain
        Or over-bliss wakes up to bitterness!"
        Stung with its loss, I called the vision vain.
    Yet feeling life grown larger, suffering less,
        Sleep's ashes from my eyelids I did brush.
        The room was veiled, that morning should not press
    Upon the slumber which had stayed the rush
        Of ebbing life; I looked into the gloom:
        Upon her brow the dawn's first grayest flush,
    And on her cheek pale hope's reviving bloom,
        Sat, patient watcher, darkling and alone,
        She who had lifted me from many a tomb!
    One then was left me of Love's radiant cone!
        Its light on her dear face, though faint and wan,
        Was shining yet--a dawn upon it thrown
    From the far coming of the Son of Man!

    XIX.

    In every forehead now I see a sky
        Catching the dawn; I hear the wintriest breeze
        About me blow the news the Lord is nigh.
    Long is the night, dark are the polar seas,
        Yet slanting suns ascend the northern hill.
        Round Spring's own steps the oozy waters freeze
    But hold them not. Dreamers are sleeping still,
        But labourers, light-stung, from their slumber start:
        Faith sees the ripening ears with harvest fill
    When but green blades the clinging earth-clods part.

    XX.

    Lord, I have spoken a poor parable,
        In which I would have said thy name alone
        Is the one secret lying in Truth's well,
    Thy voice the hidden charm in every tone,
        Thy face the heart of every flower on earth,
        Its vision the one hope; for every moan
    Thy love the cure! O sharer of the birth
        Of little children seated on thy knee!
        O human God! I laugh with sacred mirth
    To think how all the laden shall go free;
        For, though the vision tarry, in healing ruth
        One morn the eyes that shone in Galilee
    Will dawn upon them, full of grace and truth,
        And thy own love--the vivifying core
        Of every love in heart of age or youth,
    Of every hope that sank 'neath burden sore!



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