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[LVI. Eternal God, before Thy face]
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123

[LVI. Eternal God, before Thy face]

Eternal God, before Thy face
How nature and Thy creature, man,
Shrink their proportions! time and space
Contract, and narrow to a span!
What is man's life within Thy sight?—
The moment that we climbers stand
Toppling upon a dizzy height,
With yawning death on every hand.
We vaunt the knowledge gained by sense,
We bound creation with our pride,
Forgetting, in our ignorance,
That what reflects must also hide.
Our mirror shows a glorious sight:
A re-created world we find
Within ourselves; its forms delight;
We ask not what may be behind.

124

And man, the vain, presuming fool,
Who measures all by time and space,
Picks up his little ell-wand rule,
And gravely marks a planet's place.
And yet why will the soul assail,
With anxious, stubborn questionings,
The secret of this polished veil,
And beat it with her fiery wings?
Until the glass, in which we see
The world so fair, be ground to dust,
The greater sight and mystery
Is hidden, and received on trust.
O Lord, break down this blinding bar,
And let my struggling spirit pass
Beyond the orbit of the star
Just glimmering through the optic glass!
I pine for knowledge unperceived,
I doubt the evidence of sense;
I trust the truth will be achieved
When, in the soul, I journey hence!