'T was but a phantom-life That seemed to think and will, By some subjective skill; But knew no whence, and knows no whither. If this be all in all; Life but one mode of force; Law but the plan which binds The sequences in course: All essence, all design Shut out from mortal ken :- And drop the style of men! But if our life be life, And thought, and will, and love Not vague unconscious airs That o'er wild harp-strings move; If consciousness be aught Of all it seems to be, And souls are something more Than lights that gleam and flee: Though dark the road that leads us thither, The heart must ask its whence and whither. To matter or to force The All is not confined; Beside the law of things Is set the law of mind; One speaks in rock and star, And one within the brain; In unison at times, And then apart again : And both in one have brought us hither, That we may know our whence and whither. WHENCE AND WHITHER. The sequences of law We learn through mind alone; Of what we touch and see Proclaiming One who brought us hither, O shrine of God that now Must learn itself with awe! A larger, deeper law Claims also soul and heart. The force that framed and bore us hither We may not hope to read Or comprehend the whole Or of the law of soul: Dim perturbations rise; He who has framed and brought us hither He in his science plans What no known laws foretell; The wandering fires and fixed The common death of all, The life renewed above, Then, though the sun go up And bless his world to-day; The law of mind enthrone, FRANCIS T. PALGRAVE. The Ascension. UR Lord is risen from the dead, There his triumphal chariot waits, And angels chant the solemn lay! "Loose all your bars of massy light, And wide unfold the ethereal scene; GETHSEMANE. Who is the King of Glory, who?— The Lord that all our foes o'ercame : Lo! his triumphal chariot waits, Who is the King of Glory, who?— The Lord of boundless power possessed; CHARLES WESLEY. Gethsemane. I READ how, in Gethsemane, The suffering Saviour bowed the knee : Through all thy shades, Gethsemane, I too had my Gethsemane : I found the One who died for me. 335 Pilgrimage. G IVE me my scallop-shell of quiet, My gown of glory, hope's true gage; Blood must be my body's balmer, Over the silver mountains, Where spring the nectar fountains, The bowle of blisse, And drink mine everlasting fill My soul will be a-dry before; SIR WALTER RaleigH. Litany. SA AVIOUR, when in dust to Thee |