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<h2> JUNE. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
FROM thine, as then, the healing virtue goes<br/>
Into our hearts—that is the Father's plan.<br/>
From heart to heart it sinks, it steals, it flows,<br/>
From these that know thee still infecting those.<br/>
Here is my heart—from thine, Lord, fill it up,<br/>
That I may offer it as the holy cup<br/>
Of thy communion to my every man.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
When thou dost send out whirlwinds on thy seas,<br/>
Alternatest thy lightning with its roar,<br/>
Thy night with morning, and thy clouds with stars<br/>
Or, mightier force unseen in midst of these,<br/>
Orderest the life in every airy pore;<br/>
Guidest men's efforts, rul'st mishaps and jars,—<br/>
'Tis only for their hearts, and nothing more.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
This, this alone thy father careth for—<br/>
That men should live hearted throughout with thee—<br/>
Because the simple, only life thou art,<br/>
Of the very truth of living, the pure heart.<br/>
For this, deep waters whelm the fruitful lea,<br/>
Wars ravage, famine wastes, plague withers, nor<br/>
Shall cease till men have chosen the better part.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
But, like a virtuous medicine, self-diffused<br/>
Through all men's hearts thy love shall sink and float;<br/>
Till every feeling false, and thought unwise,<br/>
Selfish, and seeking, shall, sternly disused,<br/>
Wither, and die, and shrivel up to nought;<br/>
And Christ, whom they did hang 'twixt earth and skies,<br/>
Up in the inner world of men arise.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
Make me a fellow worker with thee, Christ;<br/>
Nought else befits a God-born energy;<br/>
Of all that's lovely, only lives the highest,<br/>
Lifing the rest that it shall never die.<br/>
Up I would be to help thee—for thou liest<br/>
Not, linen-swathed in Joseph's garden-tomb,<br/>
But walkest crowned, creation's heart and bloom.<br/>
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6.<br/>
<br/>
My God, when I would lift my heart to thee,<br/>
Imagination instantly doth set<br/>
A cloudy something, thin, and vast, and vague,<br/>
To stand for him who is the fact of me;<br/>
Then up the Will, and doth her weakness plague<br/>
To pay the heart her duty and her debt,<br/>
Showing the face that hearkeneth to the plea.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
And hence it comes that thou at times dost seem<br/>
To fade into an image of my mind;<br/>
I, dreamer, cover, hide thee up with dream,—<br/>
Thee, primal, individual entity!—<br/>
No likeness will I seek to frame or find,<br/>
But cry to that which thou dost choose to be,<br/>
To that which is my sight, therefore I cannot see.<br/>
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8.<br/>
<br/>
No likeness? Lo, the Christ! Oh, large Enough!<br/>
I see, yet fathom not the face he wore.<br/>
He is—and out of him there is no stuff<br/>
To make a man. Let fail me every spark<br/>
Of blissful vision on my pathway rough,<br/>
I have seen much, and trust the perfect more,<br/>
While to his feet my faith crosses the wayless dark.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
Faith is the human shadow of thy might.<br/>
Thou art the one self-perfect life, and we<br/>
Who trust thy life, therein join on to thee,<br/>
Taking our part in self-creating light.<br/>
To trust is to step forward out of the night—<br/>
To be—to share in the outgoing Will<br/>
That lives and is, because outgoing still.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
I am lost before thee, Father! yet I will<br/>
Claim of thee my birthright ineffable.<br/>
Thou lay'st it on me, son, to claim thee, sire;<br/>
To that which thou hast made me, I aspire;<br/>
To thee, the sun, upflames thy kindled fire.<br/>
No man presumes in that to which he was born;<br/>
Less than the gift to claim, would be the giver to scorn.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
Henceforth all things thy dealings are with me<br/>
For out of thee is nothing, or can be,<br/>
And all things are to draw us home to thee.<br/>
What matter that the knowers scoffing say,<br/>
"This is old folly, plain to the new day"?—<br/>
If thou be such as thou, and they as they,<br/>
Unto thy Let there be, they still must answer Nay.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
<br/>
They will not, therefore cannot, do not know him.<br/>
Nothing they could know, could be God. In sooth,<br/>
Unto the true alone exists the truth.<br/>
They say well, saying Nature doth not show him:<br/>
Truly she shows not what she cannot show;<br/>
And they deny the thing they cannot know.<br/>
Who sees a glory, towards it will go.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
<br/>
Faster no step moves God because the fool<br/>
Shouts to the universe God there is none;<br/>
The blindest man will not preach out the sun,<br/>
Though on his darkness he should found a school.<br/>
It may be, when he finds he is not dead,<br/>
Though world and body, sight and sound are fled,<br/>
Some eyes may open in his foolish head.<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
<br/>
When I am very weary with hard thought,<br/>
And yet the question burns and is not quenched,<br/>
My heart grows cool when to remembrance wrought<br/>
That thou who know'st the light-born answer sought<br/>
Know'st too the dark where the doubt lies entrenched—<br/>
Know'st with what seemings I am sore perplexed,<br/>
And that with thee I wait, nor needs my soul be vexed.<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
<br/>
Who sets himself not sternly to be good,<br/>
Is but a fool, who judgment of true things<br/>
Has none, however oft the claim renewed.<br/>
And he who thinks, in his great plenitude,<br/>
To right himself, and set his spirit free,<br/>
Without the might of higher communings,<br/>
Is foolish also—save he willed himself to be.<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
<br/>
How many helps thou giv'st to those would learn!<br/>
To some sore pain, to others a sinking heart;<br/>
To some a weariness worse than any smart;<br/>
To some a haunting, fearing, blind concern;<br/>
Madness to some; to some the shaking dart<br/>
Of hideous death still following as they turn;<br/>
To some a hunger that will not depart.<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
<br/>
To some thou giv'st a deep unrest—a scorn<br/>
Of all they are or see upon the earth;<br/>
A gaze, at dusky night and clearing morn,<br/>
As on a land of emptiness and dearth;<br/>
To some a bitter sorrow; to some the sting<br/>
Of love misprized—of sick abandoning;<br/>
To some a frozen heart, oh, worse than anything!<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
<br/>
To some a mocking demon, that doth set<br/>
The poor foiled will to scoff at the ideal,<br/>
But loathsome makes to them their life of jar.<br/>
The messengers of Satan think to mar,<br/>
But make—driving the soul from false to feal—<br/>
To thee, the reconciler, the one real,<br/>
In whom alone the would be and the is are met.<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
<br/>
Me thou hast given an infinite unrest,<br/>
A hunger—not at first after known good,<br/>
But something vague I knew not, and yet would—<br/>
The veiled Isis, thy will not understood;<br/>
A conscience tossing ever in my breast;<br/>
And something deeper, that will not be expressed,<br/>
Save as the Spirit thinking in the Spirit's brood.<br/>
<br/>
20.<br/>
<br/>
But now the Spirit and I are one in this—<br/>
My hunger now is after righteousness;<br/>
My spirit hopes in God to set me free<br/>
From the low self loathed of the higher me.<br/>
Great elder brother of my second birth,<br/>
Dear o'er all names but one, in heaven or earth,<br/>
Teach me all day to love eternally.<br/>
<br/>
21.<br/>
<br/>
Lo, Lord, thou know'st, I would not anything<br/>
That in the heart of God holds not its root;<br/>
Nor falsely deem there is any life at all<br/>
That doth in him nor sleep nor shine nor sing;<br/>
I know the plants that bear the noisome fruit<br/>
Of burning and of ashes and of gall—<br/>
From God's heart torn, rootless to man's they cling.<br/>
<br/>
22.<br/>
<br/>
Life-giving love rots to devouring fire;<br/>
Justice corrupts to despicable revenge;<br/>
Motherhood chokes in the dam's jealous mire;<br/>
Hunger for growth turns fluctuating change;<br/>
Love's anger grand grows spiteful human wrath,<br/>
Hunting men out of conscience' holy path;<br/>
And human kindness takes the tattler's range.<br/>
<br/>
23.<br/>
<br/>
Nothing can draw the heart of man but good;<br/>
Low good it is that draws him from the higher—<br/>
So evil—poison uncreate from food.<br/>
Never a foul thing, with temptation dire,<br/>
Tempts hellward force created to aspire,<br/>
But walks in wronged strength of imprisoned Truth,<br/>
Whose mantle also oft the Shame indu'th.<br/>
<br/>
24.<br/>
<br/>
Love in the prime not yet I understand—<br/>
Scarce know the love that loveth at first hand:<br/>
Help me my selfishness to scatter and scout;<br/>
Blow on me till my love loves burningly;<br/>
Then the great love will burn the mean self out,<br/>
And I, in glorious simplicity,<br/>
Living by love, shall love unspeakably.<br/>
<br/>
25.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, make my anger pure—let no worst wrong<br/>
Rouse in me the old niggard selfishness.<br/>
Give me thine indignation—which is love<br/>
Turned on the evil that would part love's throng;<br/>
Thy anger scathes because it needs must bless,<br/>
Gathering into union calm and strong<br/>
All things on earth, and under, and above.<br/>
<br/>
26.<br/>
<br/>
Make my forgiveness downright—such as I<br/>
Should perish if I did not have from thee;<br/>
I let the wrong go, withered up and dry,<br/>
Cursed with divine forgetfulness in me.<br/>
'Tis but self-pity, pleasant, mean, and sly,<br/>
Low whispering bids the paltry memory live:—<br/>
What am I brother for, but to forgive!<br/>
<br/>
27.<br/>
<br/>
"Thou art my father's child—come to my heart:"<br/>
Thus must I say, or Thou must say, "Depart;"<br/>
Thus I would say—I would be as thou art;<br/>
Thus I must say, or still I work athwart<br/>
The absolute necessity and law<br/>
That dwells in me, and will me asunder draw,<br/>
If in obedience I leave any flaw.<br/>
<br/>
28.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, I forgive—and step in unto thee.<br/>
If I have enemies, Christ deal with them:<br/>
He hath forgiven me and Jerusalem.<br/>
Lord, set me from self-inspiration free,<br/>
And let me live and think from thee, not me—<br/>
Rather, from deepest me then think and feel,<br/>
At centre of thought's swift-revolving wheel.<br/>
<br/>
29.<br/>
<br/>
I sit o'ercanopied with Beauty's tent,<br/>
Through which flies many a golden-winged dove,<br/>
Well watched of Fancy's tender eyes up bent;<br/>
A hundred Powers wait on me, ministering;<br/>
A thousand treasures Art and Knowledge bring;<br/>
Will, Conscience, Reason tower the rest above;<br/>
But in the midst, alone, I gladness am and love.<br/>
<br/>
30.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis but a vision, Lord; I do not mean<br/>
That thus I am, or have one moment been—<br/>
'Tis but a picture hung upon my wall,<br/>
To measure dull contentment therewithal,<br/>
And know behind the human how I fall;—<br/>
A vision true, of what one day shall be,<br/>
When thou hast had thy very will with me.<br/></p>
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