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<h2> SEPTEMBER. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
WE are a shadow and a shining, we!<br/>
One moment nothing seems but what we see,<br/>
Nor aught to rule but common circumstance—<br/>
Nought is to seek but praise, to shun but chance;<br/>
A moment more, and God is all in all,<br/>
And not a sparrow from its nest can fall<br/>
But from the ground its chirp goes up into his hall.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
I know at least which is the better mood.<br/>
When on a heap of cares I sit and brood,<br/>
Like Job upon his ashes, sorely vext,<br/>
I feel a lower thing than when I stood<br/>
The world's true heir, fearless as, on its stalk,<br/>
A lily meeting Jesus in his walk:<br/>
I am not all mood—I can judge betwixt.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
Such differing moods can scarce to one belong;<br/>
Shall the same fountain sweet and bitter yield?<br/>
Shall what bore late the dust-mood, think and brood<br/>
Till it bring forth the great believing mood?<br/>
Or that which bore the grand mood, bald and peeled,<br/>
Sit down to croon the shabby sensual song,<br/>
To hug itself, and sink from wrong to meaner wrong?<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
In the low mood, the mere man acts alone,<br/>
Moved by impulses which, if from within,<br/>
Yet far outside the centre man begin;<br/>
But in the grand mood, every softest tone<br/>
Comes from the living God at very heart—<br/>
From thee who infinite core of being art,<br/>
Thee who didst call our names ere ever we could sin.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
There is a coward sparing in the heart,<br/>
Offspring of penury and low-born fear:—<br/>
Prayer must take heed nor overdo its part,<br/>
Asking too much of him with open ear!<br/>
Sinners must wait, not seek the very best,<br/>
Cry out for peace, and be of middling cheer:—<br/>
False heart! thou cheatest God, and dost thy life molest.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
<br/>
Thou hungerest not, thou thirstest not enough.<br/>
Thou art a temporizing thing, mean heart.<br/>
Down-drawn, thou pick'st up straws and wretched stuff,<br/>
Stooping as if the world's floor were the chart<br/>
Of the long way thy lazy feet must tread.<br/>
Thou dreamest of the crown hung o'er thy head—<br/>
But that is safe—thou gatherest hairs and fluff!<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
Man's highest action is to reach up higher,<br/>
Stir up himself to take hold of his sire.<br/>
Then best I love you, dearest, when I go<br/>
And cry to love's life I may love you so<br/>
As to content the yearning, making love,<br/>
That perfects strength divine in weakness' fire,<br/>
And from the broken pots calls out the silver dove.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
<br/>
Poor am I, God knows, poor as withered leaf;<br/>
Poorer or richer than, I dare not ask.<br/>
To love aright, for me were hopeless task,<br/>
Eternities too high to comprehend.<br/>
But shall I tear my heart in hopeless grief,<br/>
Or rise and climb, and run and kneel, and bend,<br/>
And drink the primal love—so love in chief?<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
Then love shall wake and be its own high life.<br/>
Then shall I know 'tis I that love indeed—<br/>
Ready, without a moment's questioning strife,<br/>
To be forgot, like bursting water-bead,<br/>
For the high good of the eternal dear;<br/>
All hope, all claim, resting, with spirit clear,<br/>
Upon the living love that every love doth breed.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
Ever seem to fail in utterance.<br/>
Sometimes amid the swift melodious dance<br/>
Of fluttering words—as if it had not been,<br/>
The thought has melted, vanished into night;<br/>
Sometimes I say a thing I did not mean,<br/>
And lo! 'tis better, by thy ordered chance,<br/>
Than what eluded me, floating too feathery light.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
If thou wouldst have me speak, Lord, give me speech.<br/>
So many cries are uttered now-a-days,<br/>
That scarce a song, however clear and true,<br/>
Will thread the jostling tumult safe, and reach<br/>
The ears of men buz-filled with poor denays:<br/>
Barb thou my words with light, make my song new,<br/>
And men will hear, or when I sing or preach.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
<br/>
Can anything go wrong with me? I ask—<br/>
And the same moment, at a sudden pain,<br/>
Stand trembling. Up from the great river's brim<br/>
Comes a cold breath; the farther bank is dim;<br/>
The heaven is black with clouds and coming rain;<br/>
High soaring faith is grown a heavy task,<br/>
And all is wrong with weary heart and brain.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
<br/>
"Things do go wrong. I know grief, pain, and fear.<br/>
I see them lord it sore and wide around."<br/>
From her fair twilight answers Truth, star-crowned,<br/>
"Things wrong are needful where wrong things abound.<br/>
Things go not wrong; but Pain, with dog and spear,<br/>
False faith from human hearts will hunt and hound.<br/>
The earth shall quake 'neath them that trust the solid ground."<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
<br/>
Things go not wrong when sudden I fall prone,<br/>
But when I snatch my upheld hand from thine,<br/>
And, proud or careless, think to walk alone.<br/>
Then things go wrong, when I, poor, silly sheep,<br/>
To shelves and pits from the good pasture creep;<br/>
Not when the shepherd leaves the ninety and nine,<br/>
And to the mountains goes, after the foolish one.<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
<br/>
Lo! now thy swift dogs, over stone and bush,<br/>
After me, straying sheep, loud barking, rush.<br/>
There's Fear, and Shame, and Empty-heart, and Lack,<br/>
And Lost-love, and a thousand at their back!<br/>
I see thee not, but know thou hound'st them on,<br/>
And I am lost indeed—escape is none.<br/>
See! there they come, down streaming on my track!<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
<br/>
I rise and run, staggering—double and run.—<br/>
But whither?—whither?—whither for escape?<br/>
The sea lies all about this long-necked cape—<br/>
There come the dogs, straight for me every one—<br/>
Me, live despair, live centre of alarms!—<br/>
Ah! lo! 'twixt me and all his barking harms,<br/>
The shepherd, lo!—I run—fall folded in his arms.<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
<br/>
There let the dogs yelp, let them growl and leap;<br/>
It is no matter—I will go to sleep.<br/>
Like a spent cloud pass pain and grief and fear,<br/>
Out from behind it unchanged love shines clear.—<br/>
Oh, save me, Christ!—I know not what I am,<br/>
I was thy stupid, self-willed, greedy lamb,<br/>
Would be thy honest and obedient sheep.<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
<br/>
Why is it that so often I return<br/>
From social converse with a spirit worn,<br/>
A lack, a disappointment—even a sting<br/>
Of shame, as for some low, unworthy thing?—<br/>
Because I have not, careful, first of all,<br/>
Set my door open wide, back to the wall,<br/>
Ere I at others' doors did knock and call.<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
<br/>
Yet more and more of me thou dost demand;<br/>
My faith and hope in God alone shall stand,<br/>
The life of law—not trust the rain and sun<br/>
To draw the golden harvest o'er the land.<br/>
I must not say—"This too will pass and die,"<br/>
"The wind will change," "Round will the seasons run."<br/>
Law is the body of will, of conscious harmony.<br/>
<br/>
20.<br/>
<br/>
Who trusts a law, might worship a god of wood;<br/>
Half his soul slumbers, if it be not dead.<br/>
He is a live thing shut in chaos crude,<br/>
Hemmed in with dragons—a remorseless head<br/>
Still hanging over its uplifted eyes.<br/>
No; God is all in all, and nowhere dies—<br/>
The present heart and thinking will of good.<br/>
<br/>
21.<br/>
<br/>
Law is our schoolmaster. Our master, Christ,<br/>
Lived under all our laws, yet always prayed—<br/>
So walked the water when the storm was highest.—<br/>
Law is Thy father's; thou hast it obeyed,<br/>
And it thereby subject to thee hast made—<br/>
To rule it, master, for thy brethren's sakes:—<br/>
Well may he guide the law by whom law's maker makes.<br/>
<br/>
22.<br/>
<br/>
Death haunts our souls with dissolution's strife;<br/>
Soaks them with unrest; makes our every breath<br/>
A throe, not action; from God's purest gift<br/>
Wipes off the bloom; and on the harp of faith<br/>
Its fretted strings doth slacken still and shift:<br/>
Life everywhere, perfect, and always life,<br/>
Is sole redemption from this haunting death.<br/>
<br/>
23.<br/>
<br/>
God, thou from death dost lift me. As I rise,<br/>
Its Lethe from my garment drips and flows.<br/>
Ere long I shall be safe in upper air,<br/>
With thee, my life—with thee, my answered prayer<br/>
Where thou art God in every wind that blows,<br/>
And self alone, and ever, softly dies,<br/>
There shall my being blossom, and I know it fair.<br/>
<br/>
24.<br/>
<br/>
I would dig, Master, in no field but thine,<br/>
Would build my house only upon thy rock,<br/>
Yet am but a dull day, with a sea-sheen!<br/>
Why should I wonder then that they should mock,<br/>
Who, in the limbo of things heard and seen,<br/>
Hither and thither blowing, lose the shine<br/>
Of every light that hangs in the firmament divine.<br/>
<br/>
25.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, loosen in me the hold of visible things;<br/>
Help me to walk by faith and not by sight;<br/>
I would, through thickest veils and coverings,<br/>
See into the chambers of the living light.<br/>
Lord, in the land of things that swell and seem,<br/>
Help me to walk by the other light supreme,<br/>
Which shows thy facts behind man's vaguely hinting dream.<br/>
<br/>
26.<br/>
<br/>
I see a little child whose eager hands<br/>
Search the thick stream that drains the crowded street<br/>
For possible things hid in its current slow.<br/>
Near by, behind him, a great palace stands,<br/>
Where kings might welcome nobles to their feet.<br/>
Soft sounds, sweet scents, fair sights there only go—<br/>
There the child's father lives, but the child does not know.<br/>
<br/>
27.<br/>
<br/>
On, eager, hungry, busy-seeking child,<br/>
Rise up, turn round, run in, run up the stair.<br/>
Far in a chamber from rude noise exiled,<br/>
Thy father sits, pondering how thou dost fare.<br/>
The mighty man will clasp thee to his breast:<br/>
Will kiss thee, stroke the tangles of thy hair,<br/>
And lap thee warm in fold on fold of lovely rest.<br/>
<br/>
28.<br/>
<br/>
The prince of this world came, and nothing found<br/>
In thee, O master; but, ah, woe is me!<br/>
He cannot pass me, on other business bound,<br/>
But, spying in me things familiar, he<br/>
Casts over me the shadow of his flight,<br/>
And straight I moan in darkness—and the fight<br/>
Begins afresh betwixt the world and thee.<br/>
<br/>
29.<br/>
<br/>
In my own heart, O master, in my thought,<br/>
Betwixt the woolly sheep and hairy goat<br/>
Not clearly I distinguish; but I think<br/>
Thou knowest that I fight upon thy side.<br/>
The how I am ashamed of; for I shrink<br/>
From many a blow—am borne on the battle-tide,<br/>
When I should rush to the front, and take thy foe by the throat.<br/>
<br/>
30.<br/>
<br/>
The enemy still hath many things in me;<br/>
Yea, many an evil nest with open hole<br/>
Gapes out to him, at which he enters free.<br/>
But, like the impact of a burning coal,<br/>
His presence mere straight rouses the garrison,<br/>
And all are up in arms, and down on knee,<br/>
Fighting and praying till the foe is gone.<br/></p>
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