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Youth cannot find, age will not seek,-- Oh weakness is the heart's worst weariness: But weakest hearts can lift their thoughts to Thee; It makes us strong to think of Thine eternity. Thou hadst no youth, great God! An Unbeginning End Thou art; Thy glory in itself abode, And still abides in its own tranquil heart: No age can heap its outward years on Thee: Dear God! Thou art Thyself Thine own eternity! Without an end or bound Thy life lies all outspread in light; Our lives feel Thy life all around, Making our weakness strong, our darkness bright; Yet is it neither wilderness nor sea, But the calm gladness of a full eternity. Oh Thou art very great To set Thyself so far above! But we partake of Thine estate, Established in Thy strength and in Thy love: That love hath made eternal room for me In the sweet vastness of its own eternity. Oh Thou art very meek To overshade Thy creatures thus! Thy grandeur is the shade we seek; To be eternal is Thy use to us: Ah, Blessed God! what joy it is to me To lose all thought of self in Thine eternity. Self-wearied, Lord! I come; For I have lived my life too fast: Now that years bring me nearer home Grace must be slowly used to make it last; When my heart beats too quick I think of Thee, And of the leisure of Thy long eternity. Farewell, vain joys of earth! Farewell, all love that it not His! Dear God! be Thou my only mirth, Thy majesty my single timid bliss! Oh in the bosom of eternity Thou dost not weary of Thyself, nor we of Thee! How easily his words flow, even when he is saying the deepest things! The poem is full of the elements of the finest mystical metaphysics, and yet there is no effort in their expression. The tendency to find God beyond, rather than in our daily human conditions, is discernible; but only as a tendency. What a pity that the sects are so slow to become acquainted with the grand best in each other! I do not find in Dr. Newman either a depth or a precision equal to that of Dr. Faber. His earlier poems indicate a less healthy condition of mind. His _Dream of Gerontius_ is, however, a finer, as more ambitious poem than any of Faber's. In my judgment there are weak passages in it, with others of real grandeur. But
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