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<h2> MAY. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
WHAT though my words glance sideways from the thing<br/>
Which I would utter in thine ear, my sire!<br/>
Truth in the inward parts thou dost desire—<br/>
Wise hunger, not a fitness fine of speech:<br/>
The little child that clamouring fails to reach<br/>
With upstretched hand the fringe of her attire,<br/>
Yet meets the mother's hand down hurrying.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
Even when their foolish words they turned on him,<br/>
He did not his disciples send away;<br/>
He knew their hearts were foolish, eyes were dim,<br/>
And therefore by his side needs must they stay.<br/>
Thou will not, Lord, send me away from thee.<br/>
When I am foolish, make thy cock crow grim;<br/>
If that is not enough, turn, Lord, and look on me.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
Another day of gloom and slanting rain!<br/>
Of closed skies, cold winds, and blight and bane!<br/>
Such not the weather, Lord, which thou art fain<br/>
To give thy chosen, sweet to heart and brain!—<br/>
Until we mourn, thou keep'st the merry tune;<br/>
Thy hand unloved its pleasure must restrain,<br/>
Nor spoil both gift and child by lavishing too soon.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
But all things shall be ours! Up, heart, and sing.<br/>
All things were made for us—we are God's heirs—<br/>
Moon, sun, and wildest comets that do trail<br/>
A crowd of small worlds for a swiftness-tail!<br/>
Up from Thy depths in me, my child-heart bring—<br/>
The child alone inherits anything:<br/>
God's little children-gods—all things are theirs!<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
Thy great deliverance is a greater thing<br/>
Than purest imagination can foregrasp;<br/>
A thing beyond all conscious hungering,<br/>
Beyond all hope that makes the poet sing.<br/>
It takes the clinging world, undoes its clasp,<br/>
Floats it afar upon a mighty sea,<br/>
And leaves us quiet with love and liberty and thee.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
<br/>
Through all the fog, through all earth's wintery sighs,<br/>
I scent Thy spring, I feel the eternal air,<br/>
Warm, soft, and dewy, filled with flowery eyes,<br/>
And gentle, murmuring motions everywhere—<br/>
Of life in heart, and tree, and brook, and moss;<br/>
Thy breath wakes beauty, love, and bliss, and prayer,<br/>
And strength to hang with nails upon thy cross.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
If thou hadst closed my life in seed and husk,<br/>
And cast me into soft, warm, damp, dark mould,<br/>
All unaware of light come through the dusk,<br/>
I yet should feel the split of each shelly fold,<br/>
Should feel the growing of my prisoned heart,<br/>
And dully dream of being slow unrolled,<br/>
And in some other vagueness taking part.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
<br/>
And little as the world I should foreknow<br/>
Up into which I was about to rise—<br/>
Its rains, its radiance, airs, and warmth, and skies,<br/>
How it would greet me, how its wind would blow—<br/>
As little, it may be, I do know the good<br/>
Which I for years half darkling have pursued—<br/>
The second birth for which my nature cries.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
The life that knows not, patient waits, nor longs:—<br/>
I know, and would be patient, yet would long.<br/>
I can be patient for all coming songs,<br/>
But let me sing my one monotonous song.<br/>
To me the time is slow my mould among;<br/>
To quicker life I fain would spur and start<br/>
The aching growth at my dull-swelling heart.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
Christ is the pledge that I shall one day see;<br/>
That one day, still with him, I shall awake,<br/>
And know my God, at one with him and free.<br/>
O lordly essence, come to life in me;<br/>
The will-throb let me feel that doth me make;<br/>
Now have I many a mighty hope in thee,<br/>
Then shall I rest although the universe should quake.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
Haste to me, Lord, when this fool-heart of mine<br/>
Begins to gnaw itself with selfish craving;<br/>
Or, like a foul thing scarcely worth the saving,<br/>
Swoln up with wrath, desireth vengeance fine.<br/>
Haste, Lord, to help, when reason favours wrong;<br/>
Haste when thy soul, the high-born thing divine,<br/>
Is torn by passion's raving, maniac throng.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
<br/>
Fair freshness of the God-breathed spirit air,<br/>
Pass through my soul, and make it strong to love;<br/>
Wither with gracious cold what demons dare<br/>
Shoot from my hell into my world above;<br/>
Let them drop down, like leaves the sun doth sear,<br/>
And flutter far into the inane and bare,<br/>
Leaving my middle-earth calm, wise, and clear.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
<br/>
Even thou canst give me neither thought nor thing,<br/>
Were it the priceless pearl hid in the land,<br/>
Which, if I fix thereon a greedy gaze,<br/>
Becomes not poison that doth burn and cling;<br/>
Their own bad look my foolish eyes doth daze,<br/>
They see the gift, see not the giving hand—<br/>
From the living root the apple dead I wring.<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
<br/>
This versing, even the reading of the tale<br/>
That brings my heart its joy unspeakable,<br/>
Sometimes will softly, unsuspectedly hale<br/>
That heart from thee, and all its pulses quell.<br/>
Discovery's pride, joy's bliss, take aback my sail,<br/>
And sweep me from thy presence and my grace,<br/>
Because my eyes dropped from the master's face.<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
<br/>
Afresh I seek thee. Lead me—once more I pray—<br/>
Even should it be against my will, thy way.<br/>
Let me not feel thee foreign any hour,<br/>
Or shrink from thee as an estranged power.<br/>
Through doubt, through faith, through bliss, through stark dismay,<br/>
Through sunshine, wind, or snow, or fog, or shower,<br/>
Draw me to thee who art my only day.<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
<br/>
I would go near thee—but I cannot press<br/>
Into thy presence—it helps not to presume.<br/>
Thy doors are deeds; the handles are their doing.<br/>
He whose day-life is obedient righteousness,<br/>
Who, after failure, or a poor success,<br/>
Rises up, stronger effort yet renewing—<br/>
He finds thee, Lord, at length, in his own common room.<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, thou hast carried me through this evening's duty;<br/>
I am released, weary, and well content.<br/>
O soul, put on the evening dress of beauty,<br/>
Thy sunset-flush, of gold and purple blent!—<br/>
Alas, the moment I turn to my heart,<br/>
Feeling runs out of doors, or stands apart!<br/>
But such as I am, Lord, take me as thou art.<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
<br/>
The word he then did speak, fits now as then,<br/>
For the same kind of men doth mock at it.<br/>
God-fools, God-drunkards these do call the men<br/>
Who think the poverty of their all not fit,<br/>
Borne humbly by their art, their voice, their pen,<br/>
Save for its allness, at thy feet to fling,<br/>
For whom all is unfit that is not everything.<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
<br/>
O Christ, my life, possess me utterly.<br/>
Take me and make a little Christ of me.<br/>
If I am anything but thy father's son,<br/>
'Tis something not yet from the darkness won.<br/>
Oh, give me light to live with open eyes.<br/>
Oh, give me life to hope above all skies.<br/>
Give me thy spirit to haunt the Father with my cries.<br/>
<br/>
20.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis hard for man to rouse his spirit up—<br/>
It is the human creative agony,<br/>
Though but to hold the heart an empty cup,<br/>
Or tighten on the team the rigid rein.<br/>
Many will rather lie among the slain<br/>
Than creep through narrow ways the light to gain—<br/>
Than wake the will, and be born bitterly.<br/>
<br/>
21.<br/>
<br/>
But he who would be born again indeed,<br/>
Must wake his soul unnumbered times a day,<br/>
And urge himself to life with holy greed;<br/>
Now ope his bosom to the Wind's free play;<br/>
And now, with patience forceful, hard, lie still,<br/>
Submiss and ready to the making will,<br/>
Athirst and empty, for God's breath to fill.<br/>
<br/>
22.<br/>
<br/>
All times are thine whose will is our remede.<br/>
Man turns to thee, thou hast not turned away;<br/>
The look he casts, thy labour that did breed—<br/>
It is thy work, thy business all the day:<br/>
That look, not foregone fitness, thou dost heed.<br/>
For duty absolute how be fitter than now?<br/>
Or learn by shunning?—Lord, I come; help thou.<br/>
<br/>
23.<br/>
<br/>
Ever above my coldness and my doubt<br/>
Rises up something, reaching forth a hand:<br/>
This thing I know, but cannot understand.<br/>
Is it the God in me that rises out<br/>
Beyond my self, trailing it up with him,<br/>
Towards the spirit-home, the freedom-land,<br/>
Beyond my conscious ken, my near horizon's brim?<br/>
<br/>
24.<br/>
<br/>
O God of man, my heart would worship all<br/>
My fellow men, the flashes from thy fire;<br/>
Them in good sooth my lofty kindred call,<br/>
Born of the same one heart, the perfect sire;<br/>
Love of my kind alone can set me free;<br/>
Help me to welcome all that come to me,<br/>
Not close my doors and dream solitude liberty!<br/>
<br/>
25.<br/>
<br/>
A loving word may set some door ajar<br/>
Where seemed no door, and that may enter in<br/>
Which lay at the heart of that same loving word.<br/>
In my still chamber dwell thou always, Lord;<br/>
Thy presence there will carriage true afford;<br/>
True words will flow, pure of design to win;<br/>
And to my men my door shall have no bar.<br/>
<br/>
26.<br/>
<br/>
My prayers, my God, flow from what I am not;<br/>
I think thy answers make me what I am.<br/>
Like weary waves thought follows upon thought,<br/>
But the still depth beneath is all thine own,<br/>
And there thou mov'st in paths to us unknown.<br/>
Out of strange strife thy peace is strangely wrought;<br/>
If the lion in us pray—thou answerest the lamb.<br/>
<br/>
27.<br/>
<br/>
So bound in selfishness am I, so chained,<br/>
I know it must be glorious to be free<br/>
But know not what, full-fraught, the word doth mean.<br/>
By loss on loss I have severely gained<br/>
Wisdom enough my slavery to see;<br/>
But liberty, pure, absolute, serene,<br/>
No fre�st-visioned slave has ever seen.<br/>
<br/>
28.<br/>
<br/>
For, that great freedom how should such as I<br/>
Be able to imagine in such a self?<br/>
Less hopeless far the miser man might try<br/>
To image the delight of friend-shared pelf.<br/>
Freedom is to be like thee, face and heart;<br/>
To know it, Lord, I must be as thou art,<br/>
I cannot breed the imagination high.<br/>
<br/>
29.<br/>
<br/>
Yet hints come to me from the realm unknown;<br/>
Airs drift across the twilight border land,<br/>
Odoured with life; and as from some far strand<br/>
Sea-murmured, whispers to my heart are blown<br/>
That fill me with a joy I cannot speak,<br/>
Yea, from whose shadow words drop faint and weak:<br/>
Thee, God, I shadow in that region grand.<br/>
<br/>
30.<br/>
<br/>
O Christ, who didst appear in Judah land,<br/>
Thence by the cross go back to God's right hand,<br/>
Plain history, and things our sense beyond,<br/>
In thee together come and correspond:<br/>
How rulest thou from the undiscovered bourne<br/>
The world-wise world that laughs thee still to scorn?<br/>
Please, Lord, let thy disciple understand.<br/>
<br/>
31.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis heart on heart thou rulest. Thou art the same<br/>
At God's right hand as here exposed to shame,<br/>
And therefore workest now as thou didst then—<br/>
Feeding the faint divine in humble men.<br/>
Through all thy realms from thee goes out heart-power,<br/>
Working the holy, satisfying hour,<br/>
When all shall love, and all be loved again.<br/></p>
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