<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> MARCH. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
THE song birds that come to me night and morn,<br/>
Fly oft away and vanish if I sleep,<br/>
Nor to my fowling-net will one return:<br/>
Is the thing ever ours we cannot keep?—<br/>
But their souls go not out into the deep.<br/>
What matter if with changed song they come back?<br/>
Old strength nor yet fresh beauty shall they lack.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
Gloriously wasteful, O my Lord, art thou!<br/>
Sunset faints after sunset into the night,<br/>
Splendorously dying from thy window-sill—<br/>
For ever. Sad our poverty doth bow<br/>
Before the riches of thy making might:<br/>
Sweep from thy space thy systems at thy will—<br/>
In thee the sun sets every sunset still.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
And in the perfect time, O perfect God,<br/>
When we are in our home, our natal home,<br/>
When joy shall carry every sacred load,<br/>
And from its life and peace no heart shall roam,<br/>
What if thou make us able to make like thee—<br/>
To light with moons, to clothe with greenery,<br/>
To hang gold sunsets o'er a rose and purple sea!<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
Then to his neighbour one may call out, "Come!<br/>
Brother, come hither—I would show you a thing;"<br/>
And lo, a vision of his imagining,<br/>
Informed of thought which else had rested dumb,<br/>
Before the neighbour's truth-delighted eyes,<br/>
In the great �ther of existence rise,<br/>
And two hearts each to each the closer cling!<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
We make, but thou art the creating core.<br/>
Whatever thing I dream, invent, or feel,<br/>
Thou art the heart of it, the atmosphere.<br/>
Thou art inside all love man ever bore;<br/>
Yea, the love itself, whatever thing be dear.<br/>
Man calls his dog, he follows at his heel,<br/>
Because thou first art love, self-caused, essential, mere.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
<br/>
This day be with me, Lord, when I go forth,<br/>
Be nearer to me than I am able to ask.<br/>
In merriment, in converse, or in task,<br/>
Walking the street, listening to men of worth,<br/>
Or greeting such as only talk and bask,<br/>
Be thy thought still my waiting soul around,<br/>
And if He come, I shall be watching found.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
What if, writing, I always seem to leave<br/>
Some better thing, or better way, behind,<br/>
Why should I therefore fret at all, or grieve!<br/>
The worse I drop, that I the better find;<br/>
The best is only in thy perfect mind.<br/>
Fallen threads I will not search for—I will weave.<br/>
Who makes the mill-wheel backward strike to grind!<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
<br/>
Be with me, Lord. Keep me beyond all prayers:<br/>
For more than all my prayers my need of thee,<br/>
And thou beyond all need, all unknown cares;<br/>
What the heart's dear imagination dares,<br/>
Thou dost transcend in measureless majesty<br/>
All prayers in one—my God, be unto me<br/>
Thy own eternal self, absolutely.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
Where should the unknown treasures of the truth<br/>
Lie, but there whence the truth comes out the most—<br/>
In the Son of man, folded in love and ruth?<br/>
Fair shore we see, fair ocean; but behind<br/>
Lie infinite reaches bathing many a coast—<br/>
The human thought of the eternal mind,<br/>
Pulsed by a living tide, blown by a living wind.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
Thou, healthful Father, art the Ancient of Days,<br/>
And Jesus is the eternal youth of thee.<br/>
Our old age is the scorching of the bush<br/>
By life's indwelling, incorruptible blaze.<br/>
O Life, burn at this feeble shell of me,<br/>
Till I the sore singed garment off shall push,<br/>
Flap out my Psyche wings, and to thee rush.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
But shall I then rush to thee like a dart?<br/>
Or lie long hours �onian yet betwixt<br/>
This hunger in me, and the Father's heart?—<br/>
It shall be good, how ever, and not ill;<br/>
Of things and thoughts even now thou art my next;<br/>
Sole neighbour, and no space between, thou art—<br/>
And yet art drawing nearer, nearer still.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
<br/>
Therefore, my brothers, therefore, sisters dear,<br/>
However I, troubled or selfish, fail<br/>
In tenderness, or grace, or service clear,<br/>
I every moment draw to you more near;<br/>
God in us from our hearts veil after veil<br/>
Keeps lifting, till we see with his own sight,<br/>
And all together run in unity's delight.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
<br/>
I love thee, Lord, for very greed of love—<br/>
Not of the precious streams that towards me move,<br/>
But of the indwelling, outgoing, fountain store.<br/>
Than mine, oh, many an ignorant heart loves more!<br/>
Therefore the more, with Mary at thy feet,<br/>
I must sit worshipping—that, in my core,<br/>
Thy words may fan to a flame the low primeval heat.<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
<br/>
Oh my beloved, gone to heaven from me!<br/>
I would be rich in love to heap you with love;<br/>
I long to love you, sweet ones, perfectly—<br/>
Like God, who sees no spanning vault above,<br/>
No earth below, and feels no circling air—<br/>
Infinitely, no boundary anywhere.<br/>
I am a beast until I love as God doth love.<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
<br/>
Ah, say not, 'tis but perfect self I want<br/>
But if it were, that self is fit to live<br/>
Whose perfectness is still itself to scant,<br/>
Which never longs to have, but still to give.<br/>
A self I must have, or not be at all:<br/>
Love, give me a self self-giving—or let me fall<br/>
To endless darkness back, and free me from life's thrall.<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
<br/>
"Back," said I! Whither back? How to the dark?<br/>
From no dark came I, but the depths of light;<br/>
From the sun-heart I came, of love a spark:<br/>
What should I do but love with all my might?<br/>
To die of love severe and pure and stark,<br/>
Were scarcely loss; to lord a loveless height—<br/>
That were a living death, damnation's positive night.<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
<br/>
But love is life. To die of love is then<br/>
The only pass to higher life than this.<br/>
All love is death to loving, living men;<br/>
All deaths are leaps across clefts to the abyss.<br/>
Our life is the broken current, Lord, of thine,<br/>
Flashing from morn to morn with conscious shine—<br/>
Then first by willing death self-made, then life divine.<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
<br/>
I love you, my sweet children, who are gone<br/>
Into another mansion; but I know<br/>
I love you not as I shall love you yet.<br/>
I love you, sweet dead children; there are none<br/>
In the land to which ye vanished to go,<br/>
Whose hearts more truly on your hearts are set—<br/>
Yet should I die of grief to love you only so.<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
<br/>
"I am but as a beast before thee, Lord."—<br/>
Great poet-king, I thank thee for the word.—<br/>
Leave not thy son half-made in beastly guise—<br/>
Less than a man, with more than human cries—<br/>
An unshaped thing in which thyself cries out!<br/>
Finish me, Father; now I am but a doubt;<br/>
Oh! make thy moaning thing for joy to leap and shout.<br/>
<br/>
20.<br/>
<br/>
Let my soul talk to thee in ordered words,<br/>
O king of kings, O lord of only lords!—<br/>
When I am thinking thee within my heart,<br/>
From the broken reflex be not far apart.<br/>
The troubled water, dim with upstirred soil,<br/>
Makes not the image which it yet can spoil:—<br/>
Come nearer, Lord, and smooth the wrinkled coil.<br/>
<br/>
21.<br/>
<br/>
O Lord, when I do think of my departed,<br/>
I think of thee who art the death of parting;<br/>
Of him who crying Father breathed his last,<br/>
Then radiant from the sepulchre upstarted.—<br/>
Even then, I think, thy hands and feet kept smarting:<br/>
With us the bitterness of death is past,<br/>
But by the feet he still doth hold us fast.<br/>
<br/>
22.<br/>
<br/>
Therefore our hands thy feet do hold as fast.<br/>
We pray not to be spared the sorest pang,<br/>
But only—be thou with us to the last.<br/>
Let not our heart be troubled at the clang<br/>
Of hammer and nails, nor dread the spear's keen fang,<br/>
Nor the ghast sickening that comes of pain,<br/>
Nor yet the last clutch of the banished brain.<br/>
<br/>
23.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, pity us: we have no making power;<br/>
Then give us making will, adopting thine.<br/>
Make, make, and make us; temper, and refine.<br/>
Be in us patience—neither to start nor cower.<br/>
Christ, if thou be not with us—not by sign,<br/>
But presence, actual as the wounds that bleed—<br/>
We shall not bear it, but shall die indeed.<br/>
<br/>
24.<br/>
<br/>
O Christ, have pity on all men when they come<br/>
Unto the border haunted of dismay;<br/>
When that they know not draweth very near—<br/>
The other thing, the opposite of day,<br/>
Formless and ghastly, sick, and gaping-dumb,<br/>
Before which even love doth lose his cheer:<br/>
O radiant Christ, remember then thy fear.<br/>
<br/>
25.<br/>
<br/>
Be by me, Lord, this day. Thou know'st I mean—<br/>
Lord, make me mind thee. I herewith forestall<br/>
My own forgetfulness, when I stoop to glean<br/>
The corn of earth—which yet thy hand lets fall.<br/>
Be for me then against myself. Oh lean<br/>
Over me then when I invert my cup;<br/>
Take me, if by the hair, and lift me up.<br/>
<br/>
26.<br/>
<br/>
Lord of essential life, help me to die.<br/>
To will to die is one with highest life,<br/>
The mightiest act that to Will's hand doth lie—<br/>
Born of God's essence, and of man's hard strife:<br/>
God, give me strength my evil self to kill,<br/>
And die into the heaven of thy pure will.—<br/>
Then shall this body's death be very tolerable.<br/>
<br/>
27.<br/>
<br/>
As to our mothers came help in our birth—<br/>
Not lost in lifing us, but saved and blest—<br/>
Self bearing self, although right sorely prest,<br/>
Shall nothing lose, but die and be at rest<br/>
In life eternal, beyond all care and dearth.<br/>
God-born then truly, a man does no more ill,<br/>
Perfectly loves, and has whate'er he will.<br/>
<br/>
28.<br/>
<br/>
As our dear animals do suffer less<br/>
Because their pain spreads neither right nor left,<br/>
Lost in oblivion and foresightlessness—<br/>
Our suffering sore by faith shall be bereft<br/>
Of all dismay, and every weak excess.<br/>
His presence shall be better in our pain,<br/>
Than even self-absence to the weaker brain.<br/>
<br/>
29.<br/>
<br/>
"Father, let this cup pass." He prayed—was heard.<br/>
What cup was it that passed away from him?<br/>
Sure not the death-cup, now filled to the brim!<br/>
There was no quailing in the awful word;<br/>
He still was king of kings, of lords the lord:—<br/>
He feared lest, in the suffering waste and grim,<br/>
His faith might grow too faint and sickly dim.<br/>
<br/>
30.<br/>
<br/>
Thy mind, my master, I will dare explore;<br/>
What we are told, that we are meant to know.<br/>
Into thy soul I search yet more and more,<br/>
Led by the lamp of my desire and woe.<br/>
If thee, my Lord, I may not understand,<br/>
I am a wanderer in a houseless land,<br/>
A weeping thirst by hot winds ever fanned.<br/>
<br/>
31.<br/>
<br/>
Therefore I look again—and think I see<br/>
That, when at last he did cry out, "My God,<br/>
Why hast thou me forsaken?" straight man's rod<br/>
Was turned aside; for, that same moment, he<br/>
Cried "Father!" and gave up will and breath and spirit<br/>
Into his hands whose all he did inherit—<br/>
Delivered, glorified eternally.<br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />