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The Hound of Heaven,
by Francis Thompson (1859-1907)
- I fled Him, down the nights and
down the days;
- I fled Him, down the arches of the
years;
- I fled Him, down the labyrinthine
ways
- Of my own mind; and in the mist of
tears
- I hid from Him, and under running
laughter.
-
-
- Up vistaed hopes I sped;
- And shot, precipitated,
- Adown Titanic glooms of chasmèd
fears,
- From those strong Feet that
followed, followed after.
-
-
- But with unhurrying chase,
- And unperturbèd pace,
- Deliberate speed, majestic
instancy,
-
- They beat -- and a voice
beat
- More instant than the Feet
--
- "All things betray thee, who
betrayest Me."
-
-
- I pleaded, outlaw-wise,
- By many a hearted casement,
curtained red,
- Trellised with intertwining
charities;
- (For, though I knew His love Who
followèd,
-
-
- Yet was I sore adread
- Lest, having Him, I must have
naught beside.)
- But, if one little casement parted
wide,
- The gust of his approach would
clash it to :
- Fear wist not to evade, as Love
wist to pursue.
- Across the margent of the world I
fled,
- And troubled the gold gateways of
the stars,
- Smiting for shelter on their
clangèd bars ;
-
-
- Fretted to dulcet jars
- And silvern chatter the pale ports
o' the moon.
- I said to Dawn : Be sudden -- to
Eve : Be soon ;
- With thy young skiey blossoms heap
me over
-
-
- From this tremendous
Lover--
- Float thy vague veil about me,
lest He see !
- I tempted all His servitors, but
to find
- My own betrayal in their
constancy,
- In faith to Him their fickleness
to me,
- Their traitorous trueness, and
their loyal deceit.
- To all swift things for swiftness
did I sue ;
- Clung to the whistling mane of
every wind.
-
- But whether they swept,
smoothly fleet,
- The long savannahs of the blue
;
-
- Or whether,
Thunder-driven,
- They clanged his chariot
'thwart a heaven,
- Plashy with flying lightnings
round the spurn o' their feet :--
- Fear wist not to evade as Love
wist to pursue.
-
-
- Still with unhurrying
chase,
- And unperturbèd pace,
- Deliberate speed, majestic
instancy,
-
- Came on the following
Feet,
- And a Voice above their
beat--
- "Naught shelters thee, who
wilt not shelter Me."
- I sought no more that after which
I strayed,
-
- In face of man or maid ;
- But still within the little
children's eyes
-
- Seems something, something
that replies,
- They at least are for me,
surely for me !
- I turned me to them very wistfully
;
- But just as their young eyes grew
sudden fair
-
- With dawning answers there,
- Their angel plucked them from me
by the hair.
- "Come then, ye other children,
Nature's -- share
- With me" (said I) "your delicate
fellowship ;
-
- Let me greet you lip to lip,
- Let me twine with you
caresses,
-
- Wantoning
- With our Lady-Mother's vagrant
tresses,
-
- Banqueting
- With her in her wind-walled
palace,
- Underneath her azured daïs,
- Quaffing, as your taintless
way is,
-
- From a chalice
- Lucent-weeping out of the
dayspring."
-
-
- So it was done :
- I in their delicate
fellowship was one --
- Drew the bolt of Nature's
secrecies.
-
- I knew all the swift
importings
- On the wilful face of skies ;
- I knew how the clouds arise
- Spumèd of the wild sea-snortings
;
-
- All that's born or dies
- Rose and drooped with ; made
them shapers
- Of mine own moods, or wailful or
divine ;
-
- With them joyed and was
bereaven.
- I was heavy with the even,
- When she lit her glimmering
tapers
- Round the day's dead
sanctities.
- I laughed in the morning's
eyes.
- I triumphed and I saddened with
all weather,
-
-
- Heaven and I wept
together,
- And its sweet tears were salt with
mortal mine ;
- Against the red throb of its
sunset-heart
-
-
- I laid my own to beat,
- And share commingling heat
;
- But not by that, by that, was
eased my human smart.
- In vain my tears were wet on
Heaven's grey cheek.
- For ah ! we know not what each
other says,
-
- These things and I ; in sound
I speak--
- Their sound is but their
stir, they speak by silences.
- Nature, poor stepdame, cannot
slake my drouth ;
-
- Let her, if she would owe me,
- Drop yon blue bosom-veil of sky,
and show me
-
- The breasts o' her tenderness
;
- Never did any milk of hers once
bless
-
-
- My thirsting mouth.
- Nigh and nigh draws the
chase,
- With unperturbèd pace,
- Deliberate speed, majestic
instancy ;
-
- And past those noisèd Feet
- A Voice comes yet more
fleet --
- "Lo ! naught contents thee,
who content'st not Me."
- Naked I wait thy Love's uplifted
stroke !
- My harness piece by piece Thou
hast hewn from me,
-
-
- And smitten me to my knee
;
- I am defenceless utterly.
- I slept, methinks, and woke,
- And, slowly gazing, find me
stripped in sleep.
- In the rash lustihead of my young
powers,
-
- I shook the pillaring hours
- And pulled my life upon me ;
grimed with smears,
- I stand amid the dust o' the
mounded years --
- My mangled youth lies dead beneath
the heap.
- My days have crackled and gone up
in smoke,
- Have puffed and burst as
sun-starts on a stream.
-
- Yea, faileth now even dream
- The dreamer, and the lute the
lutanist ;
- Even the linked fantasies, in
whose blossomy twist
- I swung the earth a trinket at my
wrist,
- Are yielding ; cords of all too
weak account
- For earth with heavy griefs so
overplussed.
-
- Ah ! is Thy love indeed
- A weed, albeit an amaranthine
weed,
- Suffering no flowers except its
own to mount ?
-
- Ah ! must --
- Designer infinite !--
- Ah ! must Thou char the wood ere
Thou canst limn with it ?
- My freshness spent its wavering
shower i' the dust ;
- And now my heart is as a broken
fount,
- Wherein tear-drippings stagnate,
spilt down ever
-
- From the dank thoughts that
shiver
- Upon the sighful branches of my
mind.
-
- Such is ; what is to be ?
- The pulp so bitter, how shall
taste the rind ?
- I dimly guess what Time in mists
confounds ;
- Yet ever and anon a trumpet sounds
- From the hid battlements of
Eternity ;
- Those shaken mists a space
unsettle, then
- Round the half-glimpsed turrets
slowly wash again.
-
- But not ere him who summoneth
- I first have seen, enwound
- With glooming robes purpureal,
cypress-crowned ;
- His name I know, and what his
trumpet saith.
- Whether man's heart or life it be
which yields
-
- Thee harvest, must Thy
harvest-fields
- Be dunged with rotten death ?
-
-
- Now of that long pursuit
- Comes on at hand the bruit
;
- That Voice is round me like a
bursting sea :
-
- "And is thy earth so
marred,
- Shattered in shard on
shard ?
- Lo, all things fly thee, for
thou fliest me !
- "Strange, piteous, futile
thing !
- Wherefore should any set thee love
apart ?
- Seeing none but I makes much of
naught" (He said),
- "And human love needs human
meriting :
-
- How hast thou merited --
- Of all man's clotted clay the
dingiest clot ?
-
- Alack, thou knowest not
- How little worthy of any love thou
art !
- Whom wilt thou find to love
ignoble thee,
-
- Save Me, save only Me ?
- All which I took from thee I did
but take,
-
- Not for thy harms,
- But just that thou might'st seek
it in My arms.
-
- All which thy child's mistake
- Fancies as lost, I have stored for
thee at home :
-
- Rise, clasp My hand, and come
!"
- Halts by me that footfall :
- Is my gloom, after all,
- Shade of His hand, outstretched
caressingly ?
-
- "Ah, fondest, blindest,
weakest,
- I am He Whom thou seekest !
- Thou dravest love from thee, who
dravest me."
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