The Altar or, Meditations in Verse On The Great Christian Sacrifice By The Author of "The Cathedral," [i.e. Isaac Williams] |
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The Altar | ||
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“Enter thou into thy chamber, and shut thy doors about
thee: hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the
indignation be overpast.”
But onward yet—a little onward still—
Must we withdraw from kindred and from friends
To know that mystery which thought transcends:
Therefore so oft to wilderness or hill
Did our High-Priest retire, Who knew no ill,
To teach that he who 'neath the burden bends
Of sore transgressions,—knowing not the ends
Of love or hate, which shall the chalice fill
Of his eternity,—hath so great need
To seek for refuge, that he must forego
And cast aside all shadows, which below
The undisturbéd vision may impede
Of that unseen hereafter; and give heed
To those realities he soon must know.
The Altar | ||