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Facing of unread riddles dark and hard, And mastering not their majesty austere, Their meaning locked and barred: How would it make the weight and wonder less, If, lifted from immortal shoulders down, The worlds were cast on seas of emptiness In realms without a crown. And (if there were no God) were left to rue Dominion of the air and of the fire? Then if there be a God, "Let God be true, And every man a liar." But as for me, I do not speak as one That is exempt: I am with life at feud: My heart reproacheth me, as there were none Of so small gratitude. Wherewith shall I console thee, heart o' mine. And still thy yearning and resolve thy doubt? That which I know, and that which I divine, Alas! have left thee out. I have aspired to know the might of God, As if the story of His love was furled, Nor sacred foot the grasses e'er had trod Of this redeemed world:-- Have sunk my thoughts as lead into the deep, To grope for that abyss whence evil grew, And spirits of ill, with eyes that cannot weep, Hungry and desolate flew; As if their legions did not one day crowd The death-pangs of the Conquering Good to see! As if a sacred head had never bowed In death for man--for me; Nor ransomed back the souls beloved, the sons Of men, from thraldom with the nether kings In that dark country where those evil ones Trail their unhallowed wings. And didst Thou love the race that loved not Thee, And didst Thou take to heaven a human brow? Dost plead with man's voice by the marvellous sea? Art Thou his kinsman now? O God, O kinsman loved, but not enough! O man, with eyes majestic after death, Whose feet have toiled along our pathways rough, Whose lips drawn human breath! By that one likeness which is ours and Thine, By that one nature which doth hold us kin, By that high heaven where, sinless, Thou dost shine To draw us sinners in, By Thy last silence in the judgment-hall, By long foreknowledge of the deadly tree, By darkness, by the wormwood and the gall, I pray Thee visit me. Come, lest this heart should, cold and cast away, Die ere the guest adored she entertain-- Lest eyes which never saw Thine earthly day Should miss Thy heavenly reign. Come, weary-eyed from seeking in the night Thy wanderers strayed upon the pathless wold, Who wounded, dying, cry to Thee for light, And cann
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