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<h2> AUGUST. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
SO shall abundant entrance me be given<br/>
Into the truth, my life's inheritance.<br/>
Lo! as the sun shoots straight from out his tomb,<br/>
God-floated, casting round a lordly glance<br/>
Into the corners of his endless room,<br/>
So, through the rent which thou, O Christ, hast riven,<br/>
I enter liberty's divine expanse.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
It will be so—ah, so it is not now!<br/>
Who seeks thee for a little lazy peace,<br/>
Then, like a man all weary of the plough,<br/>
That leaves it standing in the furrow's crease,<br/>
Turns from thy presence for a foolish while,<br/>
Till comes again the rasp of unrest's file,<br/>
From liberty is distant many a mile.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
Like one that stops, and drinks, and turns, and goes<br/>
Into a land where never water flows,<br/>
There travels on, the dry and thirsty day,<br/>
Until the hot night veils the farther way,<br/>
Then turns and finds again the bubbling pool—<br/>
Here would I build my house, take up my stay,<br/>
Nor ever leave my Sychar's margin cool.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
Keep me, Lord, with thee. I call from out the dark—<br/>
Hear in thy light, of which I am a spark.<br/>
I know not what is mine and what is thine—<br/>
Of branch and stem I miss the differing mark—<br/>
But if a mere hair's-breadth me separateth,<br/>
That hair's-breadth is eternal, infinite death.<br/>
For sap thy dead branch calls, O living vine!<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
I have no choice, I must do what I can;<br/>
But thou dost me, and all things else as well;<br/>
Thou wilt take care thy child shall grow a man.<br/>
Rouse thee, my faith; be king; with life be one;<br/>
To trust in God is action's highest kind;<br/>
Who trusts in God, his heart with life doth swell;<br/>
Faith opens all the windows to God's wind.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
<br/>
O Father, thou art my eternity.<br/>
Not on the clasp Of consciousness—on thee<br/>
My life depends; and I can well afford<br/>
All to forget, so thou remember, Lord.<br/>
In thee I rest; in sleep thou dost me fold;<br/>
In thee I labour; still in thee, grow old;<br/>
And dying, shall I not in thee, my Life, be bold?<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
In holy things may be unholy greed.<br/>
Thou giv'st a glimpse of many a lovely thing,<br/>
Not to be stored for use in any mind,<br/>
But only for the present spiritual need.<br/>
The holiest bread, if hoarded, soon will breed<br/>
The mammon-moth, the having-pride, I find.<br/>
'Tis momently thy heart gives out heart-quickening.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
<br/>
It is thyself, and neither this nor that,<br/>
Nor anything, told, taught, or dreamed of thee,<br/>
That keeps us live. The holy maid who sat<br/>
Low at thy feet, choosing the better part,<br/>
Rising, bore with her—what a memory!<br/>
Yet, brooding only on that treasure, she<br/>
Had soon been roused by conscious loss of heart.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
I am a fool when I would stop and think,<br/>
And lest I lose my thoughts, from duty shrink.<br/>
It is but avarice in another shape.<br/>
'Tis as the vine-branch were to hoard the grape,<br/>
Nor trust the living root beneath the sod.<br/>
What trouble is that child to thee, my God,<br/>
Who sips thy gracious cup, and will not drink!<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
True, faithful action only is the life,<br/>
The grapes for which we feel the pruning knife.<br/>
Thoughts are but leaves; they fall and feed the ground.<br/>
The holy seasons, swift and slow, go round;<br/>
The ministering leaves return, fresh, large, and rife—<br/>
But fresher, larger, more thoughts to the brain:—<br/>
Farewell, my dove!—come back, hope-laden, through the rain.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
Well may this body poorer, feebler grow!<br/>
It is undressing for its last sweet bed;<br/>
But why should the soul, which death shall never know,<br/>
Authority, and power, and memory shed?<br/>
It is that love with absolute faith would wed;<br/>
God takes the inmost garments off his child,<br/>
To have him in his arms, naked and undefiled.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
<br/>
Thou art my knowledge and my memory,<br/>
No less than my real, deeper life, my love.<br/>
I will not fool, degrade myself to trust<br/>
In less than that which maketh me say Me,<br/>
In less than that causing itself to be.<br/>
Then art within me, behind, beneath, above—<br/>
I will be thine because I may and must.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
<br/>
Thou art the truth, the life. Thou, Lord, wilt see<br/>
To every question that perplexes me.<br/>
I am thy being; and my dignity<br/>
Is written with my name down in thy book;<br/>
Thou wilt care for it. Never shall I think<br/>
Of anything that thou mightst overlook:—<br/>
In faith-born triumph at thy feet I sink.<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
<br/>
Thou carest more for that which I call mine,<br/>
In same sort—better manner than I could,<br/>
Even if I knew creation's ends divine,<br/>
Rousing in me this vague desire of good.<br/>
Thou art more to me than my desires' whole brood;<br/>
Thou art the only person, and I cry<br/>
Unto the father I of this my I.<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
<br/>
Thou who inspirest prayer, then bend'st thine ear;<br/>
It, crying with love's grand respect to hear!<br/>
I cannot give myself to thee aright—<br/>
With the triumphant uttermost of gift;<br/>
That cannot be till I am full of light—<br/>
To perfect deed a perfect will must lift:—<br/>
Inspire, possess, compel me, first of every might.<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
<br/>
I do not wonder men can ill believe<br/>
Who make poor claims upon thee, perfect Lord;<br/>
Then most I trust when most I would receive.<br/>
I wonder not that such do pray and grieve—<br/>
The God they think, to be God is not fit.<br/>
Then only in thy glory I seem to sit,<br/>
When my heart claims from thine an infinite accord.<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
<br/>
More life I need ere I myself can be.<br/>
Sometimes, when the eternal tide ebbs low,<br/>
A moment weary of my life I grow—<br/>
Weary of my existence' self, I mean,<br/>
Not of its plodding, not its wind and snow<br/>
Then to thy knee trusting I turn, and lean:<br/>
Thou will'st I live, and I do will with thee.<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
<br/>
Dost thou mean sometimes that we should forget thee,<br/>
Dropping the veil of things 'twixt thee and us?—<br/>
Ah, not that we should lose thee and regret thee!<br/>
But that, we turning from our windows thus,<br/>
The frost-fixed God should vanish from the pane,<br/>
Sun-melted, and a moment, Father, let thee<br/>
Look like thyself straight into heart and brain.<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
<br/>
For sometimes when I am busy among men,<br/>
With heart and brain an open thoroughfare<br/>
For faces, words, and thoughts other than mine,<br/>
And a pause comes at length—oh, sudden then,<br/>
Back throbs the tide with rush exultant rare;<br/>
And for a gentle moment I divine<br/>
Thy dawning presence flush my tremulous air.<br/>
<br/>
20.<br/>
<br/>
If I have to forget thee, do thou see<br/>
It be a good, not bad forgetfulness;<br/>
That all its mellow, truthful air be free<br/>
From dusty noes, and soft with many a yes;<br/>
That as thy breath my life, my life may be<br/>
Man's breath. So when thou com'st at hour unknown,<br/>
Thou shalt find nothing in me but thine own.<br/>
<br/>
21.<br/>
<br/>
Thou being in me, in my deepest me,<br/>
Through all the time I do not think of thee,<br/>
Shall I not grow at last so true within<br/>
As to forget thee and yet never sin?<br/>
Shall I not walk the loud world's busy way,<br/>
Yet in thy palace-porch sit all the day?<br/>
Not conscious think of thee, yet never from thee stray?<br/>
<br/>
22.<br/>
<br/>
Forget!—Oh, must it be?—Would it were rather<br/>
That every sense was so filled with my father<br/>
That not in anything could I forget him,<br/>
But deepest, highest must in all things set him!—<br/>
Yet if thou think in me, God, what great matter<br/>
Though my poor thought to former break and latter—<br/>
As now my best thoughts; break, before thee foiled, and scatter!<br/>
<br/>
23.<br/>
<br/>
Some way there must be of my not forgetting,<br/>
And thither thou art leading me, my God.<br/>
The child that, weary of his mother's petting,<br/>
Runs out the moment that his feet are shod,<br/>
May see her face in every flower he sees,<br/>
And she, although beyond the window sitting,<br/>
Be nearer him than when he sat upon her knees.<br/>
<br/>
24.<br/>
<br/>
What if, when I at last, at the long last,<br/>
Shall see thy face, my Lord, my life's delight,<br/>
It should not be the face that hath been glassed<br/>
In poor imagination's mirror slight!<br/>
Will my soul sink, and shall I stand aghast,<br/>
Beggared of hope, my heart a conscious blight,<br/>
Amazed and lost—death's bitterness come and not passed?<br/>
<br/>
25.<br/>
<br/>
Ah, no! for from thy heart the love will press,<br/>
And shining from thy perfect human face,<br/>
Will sink into me like the father's kiss;<br/>
And deepening wide the gulf of consciousness<br/>
Beyond imagination's lowest abyss,<br/>
Will, with the potency of creative grace,<br/>
Lord it throughout the larger thinking place.<br/>
<br/>
26.<br/>
<br/>
Thus God-possessed, new born, ah, not for long<br/>
Should I the sight behold, beatified,<br/>
Know it creating in me, feel the throng<br/>
Of speechless hopes out-throbbing like a tide,<br/>
And my heart rushing, borne aloft the flood,<br/>
To offer at his feet its living blood—<br/>
Ere, glory-hid, the other face I spied.<br/>
<br/>
27.<br/>
<br/>
For out imagination is, in small,<br/>
And with the making-difference that must be,<br/>
Mirror of God's creating mirror; all<br/>
That shows itself therein, that formeth he,<br/>
And there is Christ, no bodiless vanity,<br/>
Though, face to face, the mighty perfectness<br/>
With glory blurs the dim-reflected less.<br/>
<br/>
28.<br/>
<br/>
I clasp thy feet, O father of the living!<br/>
Thou wilt not let my fluttering hopes be more,<br/>
Or lovelier, or greater, than thy giving!<br/>
Surely thy ships will bring to my poor shore,<br/>
Of gold and peacocks such a shining store<br/>
As will laugh all the dreams to holy scorn,<br/>
Of love and sorrow that were ever born.<br/>
<br/>
29.<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes it seems pure natural to trust,<br/>
And trust right largely, grandly, infinitely,<br/>
Daring the splendour of the giver's part;<br/>
At other times, the whole earth is but dust,<br/>
The sky is dust, yea, dust the human heart;<br/>
Then art thou nowhere, there is no room for thee<br/>
In the great dust-heap of eternity.<br/>
<br/>
30.<br/>
<br/>
But why should it be possible to mistrust—<br/>
Nor possible only, but its opposite hard?<br/>
Why should not man believe because he must—<br/>
By sight's compulsion? Why should he be scarred<br/>
With conflict? worn with doubting fine and long?—<br/>
No man is fit for heaven's musician throng<br/>
Who has not tuned an instrument all shook and jarred.<br/>
<br/>
31.<br/>
<br/>
Therefore, O Lord, when all things common seem,<br/>
When all is dust, and self the centre clod,<br/>
When grandeur is a hopeless, foolish dream,<br/>
And anxious care more reasonable than God,—<br/>
Out of the ashes I will call to thee—<br/>
In spite of dead distrust call earnestly:—<br/>
Oh thou who livest, call, then answer dying me.<br/></p>
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