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[CVI. I know that I shall never cease]
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210

[CVI. I know that I shall never cease]

I know that I shall never cease,
Dear Soul, to walk one path with thee;
Though on my head the years increase,
Thy image lives in all I see.
Thou risest with the vernal bud,
Thy footstep shakes the summer grain,
Thy lips with autumn's fruity blood
Are wet, and through the wintry rain,
And rigid ice, and driving snow,
Thy ghost stands solemnly apart,
With thoughtful eyes that sternly glow
Their light upon my inmost heart.
I murmur not. I would not fly,
Dear, dreadful vision of my brain,
Thy awful love and ruling eye
To save one twinge of selfish pain.

211

It strengthens me, thus living half
Within the brightness of thy soul,
To see the age's tear or laugh,
Yet live supreme above the whole.
No change of fickle time can be,
By which the race is saved or wrecked,
That I shall not desire to see
Swept over by thy intellect;
And all its secrets clearly shown
Before thy wide supernal eyes,
That I may catch some truth unknown,
And grow, beneath thy wisdom, wise.
I hold my lot a higher one,
If not a happier, than to stand
The blazing point in fortune's sun,
The mortal idol of the land.
For though 'tis joyless, thus unfit,
To bide so near heaven's open gate,
Such chance as mine had never lit
The darkness of our earthly state,

212

Hadst thou not drawn me by thy love
Half from this chrysalis of clay,
And taught my feeble wings to move,—
Wings pinioned still, and scant of play.
Following thy will, I onward bear,
Through aid above my strength or worth,
With wings that cleave the heavenly air,
With feet that drag the common earth.