The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 1. George MacDonald

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The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 1 - George MacDonald

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        Thank thee for those enlightenings of my spirit

        That let me know thy thought was toward me;

        Those moments fore-enjoyed from future years,

        Telling what converse I should hold with God.

        I thank thee for the sorrow and the care,

        Through which they gleamed, bright phosphorescent sparks

        Crushed from the troubled waters, borne on which

        Through mist and dark my soul draws nigh to thee.

        Five years ago, I prayed in agony

        That thou wouldst speak to me. Thou wouldst not then,

        With that close speech I craved so hungrily.

        Thy inmost speech is heart embracing heart;

        And thou wast all the time instructing me

        To know the language of thy inmost speech.

        I thought thou didst refuse, when every hour

        Thou spakest every word my heart could hear,

        Though oft I did not know it was thy voice.

        My prayer arose from lonely wastes of soul;

        As if a world far-off in depths of space,

        Chaotic, had implored that it might shine

        Straightway in sunlight as the morning star.

        My soul must be more pure ere it could hold

        With thee communion. 'Tis the pure in heart

        That shall see God. As if a well that lay

        Unvisited, till water-weeds had grown

        Up from its depths, and woven a thick mass

        Over its surface, could give back the sun!

        Or, dug from ancient battle-plain, a shield

        Could be a mirror to the stars of heaven!

        And though I am not yet come near to him,

        I know I am more nigh; and am content

        To walk a long and weary road to find

        My father's house once more. Well may it be

        A long and weary—I had wandered far.

        My God, I thank thee, thou dost care for me.

        I am content, rejoicing to go on,

        Even when my home seems very far away;

        For over grief, and aching emptiness,

        And fading hopes, a higher joy arises.

        In cloudiest nights, one lonely spot is bright,

        High overhead, through folds and folds of space;

        It is the earnest-star of all my heavens;

        And tremulous in the deep well of my being

        Its image answers, gazing eagerly.

        Alas, my Lilia!—But I'll think of Jesus,

        Not of thee now; him who hath led my soul

        Thus far upon its journey home to God.

        By poor attempts to do the things he said,

        Faith has been born; free will become a fact;

        And love grown strong to enter into his,

        And know the spirit that inhabits there.

        One day his truth will spring to life in me,

        And make me free, as God says "I am free."

        When I am like him, then my soul will dawn

        With the full glory of the God revealed—

        Full as to me, though but one beam from him;

        The light will shine, for I shall comprehend it:

        In his light I shall see light. God can speak,

        Yea, will speak to me then, and I shall hear.

        Not yet like him, how can I hear his words?

      [Stopping by the crib, and bending over the child.]

        My darling child! God's little daughter, drest

        In human clothes, that light may thus be clad

        In shining, so to reach my human eyes!

        Come as a little Christ from heaven to earth,

        To call me father, that my heart may know

        What father means, and turn its eyes to God!

        Sometimes I feel, when thou art clinging to me,

        How all unfit this heart of mine to have

        The guardianship of a bright thing like thee,

        Come to entice, allure me back to God

        By flitting round me, gleaming of thy home,

        And radiating of thy purity

        Into my stained heart; which unto thee

        Shall ever show the father, answering

        The divine childhood dwelling in thine eyes.

        O how thou teachest me with thy sweet ways,

        All ignorant of wherefore thou art come,

        And what thou art to me, my heavenly ward,

        Whose eyes have drunk that secret place's light

        And pour it forth on me! God bless his own!

      [He resumes his walk, singing in a low voice.]

          My child woke crying from her sleep;

          I bended o'er her bed,

          And soothed her, till in slumber deep

          She from the darkness fled.

          And as beside my child I stood,

          A still voice said in me—

          "Even thus thy Father, strong and good,

          Is bending over thee."

      SCENE

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