Verses on Various Occasions John Henry Newman (ebook reader android txt) đ
- Author: John Henry Newman
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Nay, from no fount impure these drops arise;
âTis but that sympathy with Adamâs race
When in each brotherâs history reads its own.
So let the cliffs and seas of this fair place
Be named manâs tomb and splendid record-stone,
High hope, pride-stainâd, the course without the prize.
Messina. February 9, 1833.
LXXII WarningsWhen Heaven sends sorrow,
Warnings go first,
Lest it should burst
With stunning might
On souls too bright
To fear the morrow.
Can science bear us
To the hid springs
Of human things?
Why may not dream,
Or thoughtâs day-gleam,
Startle, yet cheer us?
Are such thoughts fetters,
While Faith disowns
Dread of earthâs tones,
Reeks but Heavenâs call,
And on the wall
Reads but Heavenâs letters?
Between Calatafimi and Palermo. February 12, 1833.
LXXIII DreamsOh! miserable power
To dreams allowâd, to raise the guilty past,
And back awhile the illumined spirit to cast
On its youthâs twilight hour;
In mockery guiling it to act again
The revel or the scoff in Satanâs frantic train!
Nay, hush thee, angry heart!
An Angelâs grief ill fits a penitent;
Welcome the thornâ âit is divinely sent,
And with its wholesome smart
Shall pierce thee in thy virtueâs palmy home,
And warn thee what thou art, and whence thy wealth has come.
Paestum. February 26, 1833.
LXXIV TemptationO holy Lord, who with the Children Three
Didst walk the piercing flame,
Help, in those trial-hours, which, save to Thee,
I dare not name;
Nor let these quivering eyes and sickening heart
Crumble to dust beneath the Tempterâs dart.
Thou, who didst once Thy life from Maryâs breast
Renew from day to day,
Oh, might her smile, severely sweet, but rest
On this frail clay!
Till I am Thine with my whole soul; and fear,
Not feel a secret joy, that Hell is near.
Frascati. March 28, 1833.
LXXV Our FutureâWhat I do, thou knowest not now; but thou shalt know hereafter.â
Did we but see,
When life first openâd, how our journey lay
Between its earliest and its closing day,
Or view ourselves, as we one time shall be,
Who strive for the high prize, such sight would break
The youthful spirit, though bold for Jesuâs sake.
But Thou, dear Lord!
Whilst I traced out bright scenes which were to come,
Isaacâs pure blessings, and a verdant home,
Didst spare me, and withhold Thy fearful word;
Willing me year by year, till I am found
A pilgrim pale, with Paulâs sad girdle bound.
Tre Fontane. April 2, 1833.
LXXVI HeathenismâMid Balakâs magic fires
The Spirit spake, clear as in Israel;
With prayers untrue and covetous desires
Did God vouchsafe to dwell;
Who summonâd dreams, His earlier word to bring
To patient Jobâs vexâd friends, and Gerarâs guileless king.
If such oâerflowing grace
From Aaronâs vest eâen on the Sibyl ran,
Why should we fear, the Son now lacks His place
Where roams unchristenâd man?
As though, where faith is keen, He cannot make
Bread of the very stones, or thirst with ashes slake.
Messina. April 21, 1833.
LXXVII TaorminiâAnd Jacob went on his way, and the Angels of God met him.â
Say, hast thou trackâd a travellerâs round,
Nor visions met thee there,
Thou couldst but marvel to have found
This blighted world so fair?
And feel an awe within thee rise,
That sinful man should see
Glories far worthier Seraphâs eyes
Than to be shared by thee?
Store them in heart! thou shalt not faint
âMid coming pains and fears,
As the third heaven once nerved a Saint
For fourteen trial-years.
Magnisi. April 26, 1833.
LXXVIII SympathySouls of the Just, I call not you
To share this joy with me,
This joy and wonder at the view
Of mountain, plain, and sea;
Ye, on that loftier mountain old,
Safe lodged in Edenâs cell,
Whence run the rivers four, behold
This earth, as ere it fell.
Or, when ye think of those who stay
Still tried by the worldâs fight,
âTis but in looking for the day
Which shall the lost unite.
Ye rather, elder Spirits strong!
Who from the first have trod
This nether scene, manâs race among,
The while you live to God,
Ye see, and ye can sympathizeâ â
Vain thought! their mighty ken
Fills height and depth, the stars, the skies,
They smile at dim-eyed men.
Ah, Saviour! I perforce am Thine,
Angel and Saint apart:
Those searching Eyes are all-divine,
All-human is that Heart.
Agosta. April 29, 1833.
LXXIX Relics of SaintsâHe is not the God of the dead, but of the living; for all live unto Him.â
âThe Fathers are in dust, yet live to God:ââ â
So says the Truth; as if the motionless clay
Still held the seeds of life beneath the sod,
Smouldering and struggling till the judgment-day.
And hence we learn with reverence to esteem
Of these frail houses, though the grave confines;
Sophist may urge his cunning tests, and deem
That they are earth;â âbut they are heavenly shrines.
Palermo. June 1, 1833.
LXXX Day-LabourersâAnd He said, It is finished.â
One only, of Godâs messengers to man,
Finishâd the work of grace, which He began;
Eâen Moses wearied upon Neboâs height,
Though loth to leave the fight
With the doomâd foe, and yield the sun-bright land
To Joshuaâs armĂšd hand.
And David wrought in turn a strenuous part,
Zeal for Godâs house consuming him in heart;
And yet he might not build, but only bring
Gifts for the Heavenly King;
And these another rearâd, his peaceful son,
Till the full work was done.
List, Christian warrior! thou, whose soul is fain
To rid thy Mother of her present chain;â â
Christ will avenge His Bride; yea, even now
Begins the work, and thou
Shalt spend in it thy strength, but, ere He save,
Thy lot shall be the grave.
Palermo. June 2, 1833.
LXXXI WarfareâFreely ye have received; freely give.â
âGive any boon for peace!
Why should our fair-eyed Mother eâer engage
In the worldâs course and on a troubled stage,
From which her very call is a release?
No! in thy garden stand,
And tend with pious
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