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<h2> JULY. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
ALAS, my tent! see through it a whirlwind sweep!<br/>
Moaning, poor Fancy's doves are swept away.<br/>
I sit alone, a sorrow half asleep,<br/>
My consciousness the blackness all astir.<br/>
No pilgrim I, a homeless wanderer—<br/>
For how canst Thou be in the darkness deep,<br/>
Who dwellest only in the living day?<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
It must be, somewhere in my fluttering tent,<br/>
Strange creatures, half tamed only yet, are pent—<br/>
Dragons, lop-winged birds, and large-eyed snakes!<br/>
Hark! through the storm the saddest howling breaks!<br/>
Or are they loose, roaming about the bent,<br/>
The darkness dire deepening with moan and scream?—<br/>
My Morning, rise, and all shall be a dream.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
Not thine, my Lord, the darkness all is mine—<br/>
Save that, as mine, my darkness too is thine:<br/>
All things are thine to save or to destroy—<br/>
Destroy my darkness, rise my perfect joy;<br/>
Love primal, the live coal of every night,<br/>
Flame out, scare the ill things with radiant fright,<br/>
And fill my tent with laughing morn's delight.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
Master, thou workest with such common things—<br/>
Low souls, weak hearts, I mean—and hast to use,<br/>
Therefore, such common means and rescuings,<br/>
That hard we find it, as we sit and muse,<br/>
To think thou workest in us verily:<br/>
Bad sea-boats we, and manned with wretched crews—<br/>
That doubt the captain, watch the storm-spray flee.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
Thou art hampered in thy natural working then<br/>
When beings designed on freedom's holy plan<br/>
Will not be free: with thy poor, foolish men,<br/>
Thou therefore hast to work just like a man.<br/>
But when, tangling thyself in their sore need,<br/>
Thou hast to freedom fashioned them indeed,<br/>
Then wilt thou grandly move, and Godlike speed.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
<br/>
Will this not then show grandest fact of all—<br/>
In thy creation victory most renowned—<br/>
That thou hast wrought thy will by slow and small,<br/>
And made men like thee, though thy making bound<br/>
By that which they were not, and could not be<br/>
Until thou mad'st them make along with thee?—<br/>
Master, the tardiness is but in me.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
Hence come thy checks—because I still would run<br/>
My head into the sand, nor flutter aloft<br/>
Towards thy home, with thy wind under me.<br/>
'Tis because I am mean, thy ways so oft<br/>
Look mean to me; my rise is low begun;<br/>
But scarce thy will doth grasp me, ere I see,<br/>
For my arrest and rise, its stern necessity.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
<br/>
Like clogs upon the pinions of thy plan<br/>
We hang—like captives on thy chariot-wheels,<br/>
Who should climb up and ride with Death's conqueror;<br/>
Therefore thy train along the world's highway steals<br/>
So slow to the peace of heart-reluctant man.<br/>
What shall we do to spread the wing and soar,<br/>
Nor straiten thy deliverance any more?<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
The sole way to put flight into the wing,<br/>
To preen its feathers, and to make them grow,<br/>
Is to heed humbly every smallest thing<br/>
With which the Christ in us has aught to do.<br/>
So will the Christ from child to manhood go,<br/>
Obedient to the father Christ, and so<br/>
Sweet holy change will turn all our old things to new.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
Creation thou dost work by faint degrees,<br/>
By shade and shadow from unseen beginning;<br/>
Far, far apart, in unthought mysteries<br/>
Of thy own dark, unfathomable seas,<br/>
Thou will'st thy will; and thence, upon the earth—<br/>
Slow travelling, his way through centuries winning—<br/>
A child at length arrives at never ending birth.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
Well mayst thou then work on indocile hearts<br/>
By small successes, disappointments small;<br/>
By nature, weather, failure, or sore fall;<br/>
By shame, anxiety, bitterness, and smarts;<br/>
By loneliness, by weary loss of zest:—<br/>
The rags, the husks, the swine, the hunger-quest,<br/>
Drive home the wanderer to the father's breast.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
<br/>
How suddenly some rapid turn of thought<br/>
May throw the life-machine all out of gear,<br/>
Clouding the windows with the steam of doubt,<br/>
Filling the eyes with dust, with noise the ear!<br/>
Who knows not then where dwells the engineer,<br/>
Rushes aghast into the pathless night,<br/>
And wanders in a land of dreary fright.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
<br/>
Amazed at sightless whirring of their wheels,<br/>
Confounded with the recklessness and strife,<br/>
Distract with fears of what may next ensue,<br/>
Some break rude exit from the house of life,<br/>
And plunge into a silence out of view—<br/>
Whence not a cry, no wafture once reveals<br/>
What door they have broke open with the knife.<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
<br/>
Help me, my Father, in whatever dismay,<br/>
Whatever terror in whatever shape,<br/>
To hold the faster by thy garment's hem;<br/>
When my heart sinks, oh, lift it up, I pray;<br/>
Thy child should never fear though hell should gape,<br/>
Not blench though all the ills that men affray<br/>
Stood round him like the Roman round Jerusalem.<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
<br/>
Too eager I must not be to understand.<br/>
How should the work the master goes about<br/>
Fit the vague sketch my compasses have planned?<br/>
I am his house—for him to go in and out.<br/>
He builds me now—and if I cannot see<br/>
At any time what he is doing with me,<br/>
'Tis that he makes the house for me too grand.<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
<br/>
The house is not for me—it is for him.<br/>
His royal thoughts require many a stair,<br/>
Many a tower, many an outlook fair,<br/>
Of which I have no thought, and need no care.<br/>
Where I am most perplexed, it may be there<br/>
Thou mak'st a secret chamber, holy-dim,<br/>
Where thou wilt come to help my deepest prayer.<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
<br/>
I cannot tell why this day I am ill;<br/>
But I am well because it is thy will—<br/>
Which is to make me pure and right like thee.<br/>
Not yet I need escape—'tis bearable<br/>
Because thou knowest. And when harder things<br/>
Shall rise and gather, and overshadow me,<br/>
I shall have comfort in thy strengthenings.<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
<br/>
How do I live when thou art far away?—<br/>
When I am sunk, and lost, and dead in sleep,<br/>
Or in some dream with no sense in its play?<br/>
When weary-dull, or drowned in study deep?—<br/>
O Lord, I live so utterly on thee,<br/>
I live when I forget thee utterly—<br/>
Not that thou thinkest of, but thinkest me.<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
<br/>
Thou far!—that word the holy truth doth blur.<br/>
Doth the great ocean from the small fish run<br/>
When it sleeps fast in its low weedy bower?<br/>
Is the sun far from any smallest flower,<br/>
That lives by his dear presence every hour?<br/>
Are they not one in oneness without stir—<br/>
The flower the flower because the sun the sun?<br/>
<br/>
20.<br/>
<br/>
"Dear presence every hour"!—what of the night,<br/>
When crumpled daisies shut gold sadness in;<br/>
And some do hang the head for lack of light,<br/>
Sick almost unto death with absence-blight?—<br/>
Thy memory then, warm-lingering in the ground,<br/>
Mourned dewy in the air, keeps their hearts sound,<br/>
Till fresh with day their lapsed life begin.<br/>
<br/>
21.<br/>
<br/>
All things are shadows of the shining true:<br/>
Sun, sea, and air—close, potent, hurtless fire—<br/>
Flowers from their mother's prison—dove, and dew—<br/>
Every thing holds a slender guiding clue<br/>
Back to the mighty oneness:—hearts of faith<br/>
Know thee than light, than heat, endlessly nigher,<br/>
Our life's life, carpenter of Nazareth.<br/>
<br/>
22.<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes, perhaps, the spiritual blood runs slow,<br/>
And soft along the veins of will doth flow,<br/>
Seeking God's arteries from which it came.<br/>
Or does the etherial, creative flame<br/>
Turn back upon itself, and latent grow?—<br/>
It matters not what figure or what name,<br/>
If thou art in me, and I am not to blame.<br/>
<br/>
23.<br/>
<br/>
In such God-silence, the soul's nest, so long<br/>
As all is still, no flutter and no song,<br/>
Is safe. But if my soul begin to act<br/>
Without some waking to the eternal fact<br/>
That my dear life is hid with Christ in God—<br/>
I think and move a creature of earth's clod,<br/>
Stand on the finite, act upon the wrong.<br/>
<br/>
24.<br/>
<br/>
My soul this sermon hence for itself prepares:—<br/>
"Then is there nothing vile thou mayst not do,<br/>
Buffeted in a tumult of low cares,<br/>
And treacheries of the old man 'gainst the new."—<br/>
Lord, in my spirit let thy spirit move,<br/>
Warning, that it may not have to reprove:—<br/>
In my dead moments, master, stir the prayers.<br/>
<br/>
25.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, let my soul o'erburdened then feel thee<br/>
Thrilling through all its brain's stupidity.<br/>
If I must slumber, heedless of ill harms,<br/>
Let it not be but in my Father's arms;<br/>
Outside the shelter of his garment's fold,<br/>
All is a waste, a terror-haunted wold.—<br/>
Lord, keep me. 'Tis thy child that cries. Behold.<br/>
<br/>
26.<br/>
<br/>
Some say that thou their endless love host won<br/>
By deeds for them which I may not believe<br/>
Thou ever didst, or ever willedst done:<br/>
What matter, so they love thee? They receive<br/>
Eternal more than the poor loom and wheel<br/>
Of their invention ever wove and spun.—<br/>
I love thee for I must, thine all from head to heel.<br/>
<br/>
27.<br/>
<br/>
The love of thee will set all notions right.<br/>
Right save by love no thought can be or may;<br/>
Only love's knowledge is the primal light.<br/>
Questions keep camp along love's shining coast—<br/>
Challenge my love and would my entrance stay:<br/>
Across the buzzing, doubting, challenging host,<br/>
I rush to thee, and cling, and cry—Thou know'st.<br/>
<br/>
28.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, let me live in thy realities,<br/>
Nor substitute my notions for thy facts,<br/>
Notion with notion making leagues and pacts;<br/>
They are to truth but as dream-deeds to acts,<br/>
And questioned, make me doubt of everything.—<br/>
"O Lord, my God," my heart gets up and cries,<br/>
"Come thy own self, and with thee my faith bring."<br/>
<br/>
29.<br/>
<br/>
O master, my desires to work, to know,<br/>
To be aware that I do live and grow—<br/>
All restless wish for anything not thee,<br/>
I yield, and on thy altar offer me.<br/>
Let me no more from out thy presence go,<br/>
But keep me waiting watchful for thy will—<br/>
Even while I do it, waiting watchful still.<br/>
<br/>
30.<br/>
<br/>
Thou art the Lord of life, the secret thing.<br/>
Thou wilt give endless more than I could find,<br/>
Even if without thee I could go and seek;<br/>
For thou art one, Christ, with my deepest mind,<br/>
Duty alive, self-willed, in me dost speak,<br/>
And to a deeper purer being sting:<br/>
I come to thee, my life, my causing kind.<br/>
<br/>
31.<br/>
<br/>
Nothing is alien in thy world immense—<br/>
No look of sky or earth or man or beast;<br/>
"In the great hand of God I stand, and thence"<br/>
Look out on life, his endless, holy feast.<br/>
To try to feel is but to court despair,<br/>
To dig for a sun within a garden-fence:<br/>
Who does thy will, O God, he lives upon thy air.<br/></p>
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