Time Travel

Happy Easter 2021

 Alleluia Christ is Risen

He is Risen Indeed, Alleluia


Happy Easter everyone! I hope you are having a great day and have loads of nice easter eggs to enjoy over today and probably the next few weeks. I am sure Easter eggs are perfect for a reading snack which is great. Obviously, there are two parts to easter. Firstly, it is an excuse to eat easter eggs; the eggs of which are symbolic themselves. Then we also have the celebration of Jesus resurrecting from the dead making this the second most important holiday for Christians. Sadly, we have not been able to go to church for the last few days to celebrate Easter week but we are all together still despite the Coronavirus. To help you celebrate Easter bookish style, below you will find a lovely public domain poem about easter which I hope you will enjoy!

Easter-Day

    By Robert Browning



I.

    How very hard it is to be
    A Christian! Hard for you and me,
    Not the mere task of making real
    That duty up to its ideal,
    Effecting thus complete and whole,
    A purpose or the human soul�
    For that is always hard to do;
    But hard, I mean, for me and you
    To realise it, more or less,
    With even the moderate success
    Which commonly repays our strife
    To carry out the aims of life.
    �This aim is greater,� you may say,
    �And so more arduous every way.�
    But the importance of the fruits
    Still proves to man, in all pursuits,
    Proportional encouragement.
    �Then, what if it be God�s intent
    �That labour to this one result
    �Shall seem unduly difficult?�
    Ah, that�s a question in the dark�
    And the sole thing that I remark
    Upon the difficulty, this;
    We do not see it where it is,
    At the beginning of the race:
    As we proceed, it shifts its place,
    And where we looked for palms to fall,
    We find the tug�s to come,�that�s all.

II.

    At first you say, �The whole, or chief
    �Of difficulties, is Belief.
    �Could I believe once thoroughly,
    �The rest were simple. What? Am I
    �An idiot, do you think? A beast?
    �Prove to me only that the least
    �Command of God is God�s indeed,
    �And what injunction shall I need
    �To pay obedience? Death so nigh
    �When time must end, eternity
    �Begin,�and cannot I compute?
    �Weigh loss and gain together? suit
    �My actions to the balance drawn,
    �And give my body to be sawn
    �Asunder, hacked in pieces, tied
    �To horses, stoned, burned, crucified,
    �Like any martyr of the list?
    �How gladly,�if I made acquist,
    �Through the brief minutes� fierce annoy,
    �Of God�s eternity of joy.�

III.

    And certainly you name the point
    Whereon all turns: for could you joint
    This flexile finite life once tight
    Into the fixed and infinite,
    You, safe inside, would spurn what�s out,
    With carelessness enough, no doubt�
    Would spurn mere life: but where time brings
    To their next stage your reasonings,
    Your eyes, late wide, begin to wink
    Nor see the path so well, I think.

IV.

    You say, �Faith may be, one agrees,
    �A touchstone for God�s purposes,
    �Even as ourselves conceive of them.
    �Could He acquit us or condemn
    �For holding what no hand can loose,
    �Rejecting when we can�t but choose?
    �As well award the victor�s wreath
    �To whosoever should take breath
    �Duly each minute while he lived�
    �Grant Heaven, because a man contrived
    �To see the sunlight every day
    �He walked forth on the public way.
    �You must mix some uncertainty
    �With faith, if you would have faith be.
    �Why, what but faith, do we abhor
    �And idolize each other for�
    �Faith in our evil, or our good,
    �Which is or is not understood
    �Aright by those we love or those
    �We hate, thence called our friends or foes?
    �Your mistress saw your spirit�s grace,
    �When, turning from the ugly face,
    �I found belief in it too hard;
    �And both of us have our reward.
    �Yet here a doubt peeps: well for us
    �Weak beings, to go using thus
    �A touchstone for our little ends,
    �And try with faith the foes and friends;
    �But God, bethink you! I would fain
    �Conceive of the Creator�s reign
    �As based upon exacter laws
    �Than creatures build by with applause.
    �In all God�s acts�(as Plato cries
    �He doth)�He should geometrise.
    �Whence, I desiderate . . .

V.

    I see!
    You would grow smoothly as a tree.
    Soar heavenward, straightly up like fire�
    God bless you�there�s your world entire
    Needing no faith, if you think fit;
    Go there, walk up and down in it!
    The whole creation travails, groans�
    Contrive your music from its moans,
    Without or let or hindrance, friend!
    That�s an old story, and its end
    As old�you come back (be sincere)
    With every question you put here
    (Here where there once was, and is still,
    We think, a living oracle,
    Whose answers you stood carping at)
    This time flung back unanswered flat,�
    Besides, perhaps, as many more
    As those that drove you out before,
    Now added, where was little need!
    Questions impossible, indeed,
    To us who sate still, all and each
    Persuaded that our earth had speech
    Of God�s, writ down, no matter if
    In cursive type or hieroglyph,�
    Which one fact frees us from the yoke
    Of guessing why He never spoke.
    You come back in no better plight
    Than when you left us,�am I right?

VI.

    So the old process, I conclude,
    Goes on, the reasoning�s pursued
    Further. You own. ��Tis well averred,
    �A scientific faith�s absurd,
    �Frustrates the very end �twas meant
    �To serve: so I would rest content
    �With a mere probability,
    �But, probable; the chance must lie
    �Clear on one side,�lie all in rough,
    �So long as there is just enough
    �To pin my faith to, though it hap
    �Only at points: from gap to gap
    �One hangs up a huge curtain so,
    �Grandly, nor seeks to have it go
    �Foldless and flat along the wall:
    �What care I that some interval
    �Of life less plainly might depend
    �On God? I�d hang there to the end;
    �And thus I should not find it hard
    �To be a Christian and debarred
    �From trailing on the earth, till furled
    �Away by death!�Renounce the world?
    �Were that a mighty hardship? Plan
    �A pleasant life, and straight some man
    �Beside you, with, if he thought fit,
    �Abundant means to compass it,
    �Shall turn deliberate aside
    �To try and live as, if you tried
    �You clearly might, yet most despise.
    �One friend of mine wears out his eyes,
    �Slighting the stupid joys of sense,
    �In patient hope that, ten years hence,
    �Somewhat completer he may see
    �His list of lepidopter�:
    �While just the other who most laughs
    �At him, above all epitaphs
    �Aspires to have his tomb describe
    �Himself as Sole among the tribe
    �Of snuffbox-fanciers, who possessed
    �A Grignon with the Regent�s crest.
    �So that, subduing as you want,
    �Whatever stands predominant
    �Among my earthly appetites
    �For tastes, and smells, and sounds, and sights,
    �I shall be doing that alone,
    �To gain a palm-branch and a throne,
    �Which fifty people undertake
    �To do, and gladly, for the sake
    �Of giving a Semitic guess,
    �Or playing pawns at blindfold chess.�

VII.

    Good! and the next thing is,�look round
    For evidence enough. �Tis found,
    No doubt: as is your sort of mind,
    So is your sort of search�you�ll find
    What you desire, and that�s to be
    A Christian: what says History?
    How comforting a point it were
    To find some mummy-scrap declare
    There lived a Moses! Better still,
    Prove Jonah�s whale translatable
    Into some quicksand of the seas,
    Isle, cavern, rock, or what you please,
    That Faith might clap her wings and crow
    From such an eminence! Or, no�
    The Human Heart�s best; you prefer
    Making that prove the minister
    To truth; you probe its wants and needs
    And hopes and fears, then try what creeds
    Meet these most aptly,�resolute
    That Faith plucks such substantial fruit
    Wherever these two correspond,
    She little needs to look beyond,
    To puzzle out what Orpheus was,
    Or Dionysius Zagrias.
    You�ll find sufficient, as I say,
    To satisfy you either way.
    You wanted to believe; your pains
    Are crowned�you do: and what remains?
    Renounce the world!�Ah, were it done
    By merely cutting one by one
    Your limbs off, with your wise head last,
    How easy were it!�how soon past,
    If once in the believing mood!
    Such is man�s usual gratitude,
    Such thanks to God do we return,
    For not exacting that we spurn
    A single gift of life, forego
    One real gain,�only taste them so
    With gravity and temperance,
    That those mild virtues may enhance
    Such pleasures, rather than abstract�
    Last spice of which, will be the fact
    Of love discerned in every gift;
    While, when the scene of life shall shift,
    And the gay heart be taught to ache,
    As sorrows and privations take
    The place of joy,�the thing that seems
    Mere misery, under human schemes,
    Becomes, regarded by the light
    Of Love, as very near, or quite
    As good a gift as joy before.
    So plain is it that all the more
    God�s dispensation�s merciful,
    More pettishly we try and cull
    Briars, thistles, from our private plot,
    To mar God�s ground where thorns are not!

VIII.

    Do you say this, or I?�Oh, you!
    Then, what, my friend,�(so I pursue
    Our parley)�you indeed opine
    That the Eternal and Divine
    Did, eighteen centuries ago,
    In very truth . . . Enough! you know
    The all-stupendous tale,�that Birth,
    That Life, that Death! And all, the earth
    Shuddered at,�all, the heavens grew black
    Rather than see; all, Nature�s rack
    And throe at dissolution�s brink
    Attested,�it took place, you think,
    Only to give our joys a zest,
    And prove our sorrows for the best?
    We differ, then! Were I, still pale
    And heartstruck at the dreadful tale,
    Waiting to hear God�s voice declare
    What horror followed for my share,
    As implicated in the deed,
    Apart from other sins,�concede
    That if He blacked out in a blot
    My brief life�s pleasantness, �twere not
    So very disproportionate!
    Or there might be another fate�
    I certainly could understand
    (If fancies were the thing in hand)
    How God might save, at that Day�s price,
    The impure in their impurities,
    Leave formal licence and complete
    To choose the fair, and pick the sweet.
    But there be certain words, broad, plain,
    Uttered again and yet again,
    Hard to mistake, to overgloss�
    Announcing this world�s gain for loss,
    And bidding us reject the same:
    The whole world lieth (they proclaim)
    In wickedness,�come out of it!�
    Turn a deaf ear, if you think fit,
    But I who thrill through every nerve
    At thought of what deaf ears deserve,�
    How do you counsel in the case?

IX.

    �I�d take, by all means, in your place,
    �The safe side, since it so appears:
    �Deny myself, a few brief years,
    �The natural pleasure, leave the fruit
    �Or cut the plant up by the root.
    �Remember what a martyr said
    �On the rude tablet overhead�
    ��I was born sickly, poor and mean,
    ��A slave: no misery could screen
    ��The holders of the pearl of price
    ��From C�sar�s envy; therefore twice
    ��I fought with beasts, and three times saw
    ��My children suffer by his law�
    ��At last my own release was earned:
    ��I was some time in being burned,
    ��But at the close a Hand came through
    ��The fire above my head, and drew
    ��My soul to Christ, whom now I see.
    ��Sergius, a brother, writes for me
    ��This testimony on the wall�
    ��For me, I have forgot it all.�
    �You say right; this were not so hard!
    �And since one nowise is debarred
    �From this, why not escape some sins
    �By such a method?�

X.

    Then begins
    To the old point, revulsion new�
    (For �tis just this, I bring you to)
    If after all we should mistake,
    And so renounce life for the sake
    Of death and nothing else? You hear
    Our friends we jeered at, send the jeer
    Back to ourselves with good effect�
    �There were my beetles to collect!�
    �My box�a trifle, I confess,
    �But here I hold it, ne�ertheless!�
    Poor idiots, (let us pluck up heart
    And answer) we, the better part
    Have chosen, though �twere only hope,�
    Nor envy moles like you that grope
    Amid your veritable muck,
    More than the grasshoppers would truck,
    For yours, their passionate life away,
    That spends itself in leaps all day
    To reach the sun, you want the eyes
    To see, as they the wings to rise
    And match the noble hearts of them!
    So, the contemner we contemn,�
    And, when doubt strikes us, so, we ward
    Its stroke off, caught upon our guard,
    Not struck enough to overturn
    Our faith, but shake it�make us learn
    What I began with, and, I wis,
    End, having proved,�how hard it is
    To be a Christian!

XI.

    �Proved, or not,
    �Howe�er you wis, small thanks, I wot,
    �You get of mine, for taking pains
    �To make it hard to me. Who gains
    �By that, I wonder? Here I live
    �In trusting ease; and do you drive
    �At causing me to lose what most
    �Yourself would mourn for when �twas lost?�

XII.

    But, do you see, my friend, that thus
    You leave St. Paul for �schylus?�
    Who made his Titan�s arch-device
    The giving men blind hopes to spice
    The meal of life with, else devoured
    In bitter haste, while lo! Death loured
    Before them at the platter�s edge!
    If faith should be, as we allege,
    Quite other than a condiment
    To heighten flavors with, or meant
    (Like that brave curry of his Grace)
    To take at need the victuals� place?
    If having dined you would digest
    Besides, and turning to your rest
    Should find instead . . .

XIII.

    Now, you shall see
    And judge if a mere foppery
    Pricks on my speaking! I resolve
    To utter . . . yes, it shall devolve
    On you to hear as solemn, strange
    And dread a thing as in the range
    Of facts,�or fancies, if God will�
    E�er happened to our kind! I still
    Stand in the cloud, and while it wraps
    My face, ought not to speak, perhaps;
    Seeing that as I carry through
    My purpose, if my words in you
    Find veritable listeners,
    My story, reason�s self avers
    Must needs be false�the happy chance!
    While, if each human countenance
    I meet in London streets all day,
    Be what I fear,�my warnings fray
    No one, and no one they convert,
    And no one helps me to assert
    How hard it is to really be
    A Christian, and in vacancy
    I pour this story!

XIV.

    I commence
    By trying to inform you, whence
    It comes that every Easter-night
    As now, I sit up, watch, till light
    Shall break, those chimney-stacks and roofs
    Give, through my window-pane, grey proofs
    That Easter-day is breaking slow.
    On such a night, three years ago,
    It chanced that I had cause to cross
    The common, where the chapel was,
    Our friend spoke of, the other day�
    You�ve not forgotten, I dare say.
    I fell to musing of the time
    So close, the blessed matin-prime
    All hearts leap up at, in some guise�
    One could not well do otherwise.
    Insensibly my thoughts were bent
    Toward the main point; I overwent
    Much the same ground of reasoning
    As you and I just now: one thing
    Remained, however�one that tasked
    My soul to answer; and I asked,
    Fairly and frankly, what might be
    That History, that Faith, to me�
    Me there�not me, in some domain
    Built up and peopled by my brain,
    Weighing its merits as one weighs
    Mere theories for blame or praise,
    The Kingcraft of the Lucumons,
    Or Fourier�s scheme, its pros and cons,�
    But as my faith, or none at all.
    �How were my case, now, should I fall
    �Dead here, this minute�do I lie
    �Faithful or faithless?��Note that I
    Inclined thus ever!�little prone
    For instance, when I slept alone
    In childhood, to go calm to sleep
    And leave a closet where might keep
    His watch perdue some murderer
    Waiting till twelve o�clock to stir,
    As good, authentic legends tell
    He might��But how improbable!
    �How little likely to deserve
    �The pains and trial to the nerve
    �Of thrusting head into the dark,��
    Urged my old nurse, and bade me mark
    Besides, that, should the dreadful scout
    Really lie hid there, to leap out
    At first turn of the rusty key,
    It were small gain that she could see
    In being killed upon the floor
    And losing one night�s sleep the more.
    I tell you, I would always burst
    The door ope, know my fate at first.�
    This time, indeed, the closet penned
    No such assassin: but a friend
    Rather, peeped out to guard me, fit
    For counsel, Common Sense, to-wit,
    Who said a good deal that might pass,�
    Heartening, impartial too, it was,
    Judge else: �For, soberly now,�who
    �Should be a Christian if not you?�
    (Hear how he smoothed me down). �One takes
    �A whole life, sees what course it makes
    �Mainly, and not by fits and starts�
    �In spite of stoppage which imparts
    �Fresh value to the general speed:
    �A life, with none, would fly indeed:
    �Your progressing is slower-right!
    �We deal with progressing, not flight.
    �Through baffling senses passionate,
    �Fancies as restless,�with a freight
    �Of knowledge cumbersome enough
    �To sink your ship when waves grow rough,
    �Not serve as ballast in the hold,
    �I find, �mid dangers manifold,
    �The good bark answers to the helm
    �Where Faith sits, easier to o�erwhelm
    �Than some stout peasant�s heavenly guide,
    �Whose hard head could not, if it tried,
    �Conceive a doubt, or understand
    �How senses hornier than his hand
    �Should �tice the Christian off, his guard�
    �More happy! But shall we award
    �Less honour to the hull, which, dogged
    �By storms, a mere wreck, waterlogged,
    �Masts by the board, and bulwarks gone,
    �And stanchions going, yet bears on,�
    �Than to mere life-boats, built to save,
    �And triumph o�er the breaking wave?
    �Make perfect your good ship as these,
    �And what were her performances!�
    I added��Would the ship reached home!
    �I wish indeed �God�s kingdom come��
    �The day when I shall see appear
    �His bidding, as my duty, clear
    �From doubt! And it shall dawn, that day,
    �Some future season; Easter may
    �Prove, not impossibly, the time�
    �Yes, that were striking�fates would chime
    �So aptly! Easter-morn, to bring
    �The Judgment!�deeper in the Spring
    �Than now, however, when there�s snow
    �Capping the hills; for earth must show
    �All signs of meaning to pursue
    �Her tasks as she was wont to do�
    �The lark, as taken by surprise
    �As we ourselves, shall recognise
    �Sudden the end: for suddenly
    �It comes�the dreadfulness must be
    �In that�all warrants the belief�
    ��At night it cometh like a thief.�
    �I fancy why the trumpet blows;
    �Plainly, to wake one. From repose
    �We shall start up, at last awake
    �From life, that insane dream we take
    �For waking now, because it seems.
    �And as, when now we wake from dreams,
    �We say, while we recall them, �Fool,
    ��To let the chance slip, linger cool
    ��When such adventure offered! Just
    ��A bridge to cross, a dwarf to thrust
    ��Aside, a wicked mage to stab�
    ��And, lo ye, I had kissed Queen Mab,��
    �So shall we marvel why we grudged
    �Our labours here, and idly judged
    �Of Heaven, we might have gained, but lose!
    �Lose? Talk of loss, and I refuse
    �To plead at all! I speak no worse
    �Nor better than my ancient nurse
    �When she would tell me in my youth
    �I well deserved that shapes uncouth
    �Should fright and tease me in my sleep�
    �Why did I not in memory keep
    �Her precept for the evil�s cure?
    ��Pinch your own arm, boy, and be sure
    ��You�ll wake forthwith!��

XV.

    And as I said
    This nonsense, throwing back my head
    With light complacent laugh, I found
    Suddenly all the midnight round
    One fire. The dome of Heaven had stood
    As made up of a multitude
    Of handbreadth cloudlets, one vast rack
    Of ripples infinite and black,
    From sky to sky. Sudden there went,
    Like horror and astonishment,
    A fierce vindictive scribble of red
    Quick flame across, as if one said
    (The angry scribe of Judgment) �There�
    �Burn it!� And straight I was aware
    That the whole ribwork round, minute
    Cloud touching cloud beyond compute,
    Was tinted each with its own spot
    Of burning at the core, till clot
    Jammed against clot, and spilt its fire
    Over all heaven, which �gan suspire
    As fanned to measure equable,�
    As when great conflagrations kill
    Night overhead, and rise and sink,
    Reflected. Now the fire would shrink
    And wither oft the blasted face
    Of heaven, and I distinct could trace
    The sharp black ridgy outlines left
    Unburned like network�then, each cleft
    The fire had been sucked back into,
    Regorged, and out it surging flew
    Furiously, and night writhed inflamed,
    Till, tolerating to be tamed
    No longer, certain rays world-wide
    Shot downwardly, on every side,
    Caught past escape; the earth was lit;
    As if a dragon�s nostril split
    And all his famished ire o�erflowed;
    Then, as he winced at his Lord�s goad,
    Back he inhaled: whereat I found
    The clouds into vast pillars bound,
    Based on the corners of the earth,
    Propping the skies at top: a dearth
    Of fire i� the violet intervals,
    Leaving exposed the utmost walls
    Of time, about to tumble in
    And end the world.

XVI.

    I felt begin
    The Judgment-Day: to retrocede
    Was too late now.��In very deed,
    (I uttered to myself) �that Day!�
    The intuition burned away
    All darkness from my spirit too�
    There, stood I, found and fixed, I knew,
    Choosing the world. The choice was made�
    And naked and disguiseless stayed,
    An unevadeable, the fact.
    My brain held ne�ertheless compact
    Its senses, nor my heart declined
    Its office�rather, both combined
    To help me in this juncture�I
    Lost not a second,�agony
    Gave boldness: there, my life had end
    And my choice with it�best defend,
    Applaud them! I resolved to say,
    So was I framed by Thee, this way
    �I put to use Thy senses here!
    �It was so beautiful, so near,
    �Thy world,�what could I do but choose
    �My part there? Nor did I refuse
    �To look above the transient boon
    �In time�but it was hard so soon
    �As in a short life, to give up
    �Such beauty: I had put the cup
    �Undrained of half its fullness, by;
    �But, to renounce it utterly,
    �That was too hard! Nor did the Cry
    �Which bade renounce it, touch my brain
    �Authentically deep and plain
    �Enough, to make my lips let go.
    �But Thou, who knowest all, dost know
    �Whether I was not, life�s brief while,
    �Endeavouring to reconcile
    �Those lips�too tardily, alas!
    �To letting the dear remnant pass,
    �One day,�some drops of earthly good
    �Untasted! Is it for this mood,
    �That Thou, whose earth delights so well,
    �Has made its complement a Hell?

XVII.

    A final belch of fire like blood,
    Overbroke all, next, in one flood
    Of doom. Then fire was sky, and sky
    Was fire, and both, one extasy,
    Then ashes. But I heard no noise
    (Whatever was) because a Voice
    Beside me spoke thus, �All is done,
    �Time end�s, Eternity�s begun,
    �And thou art judged for evermore!�

XVIII.

    I looked up; all was as before;
    Of that cloud-Tophet overhead,
    No trace was left: I saw instead
    The common round me, and the sky
    Above, stretched drear and emptily
    Of life: �twas the last watch of night,
    Except what brings the morning quite,
    When the armed angel, conscience-clear
    His task nigh done, leans o�er his spear
    And gazes on the earth he guards,
    Safe one night more through all its wards,
    Till God relieve him at his post.
    �A dream�a waking dream at most!�
    (I spoke out quick that I might shake
    The horrid nightmare off, and wake.)
    �The world�s gone, yet the world is here?
    �Are not all things as they appear?
    �Is Judgment past for me alone?
    �And where had place the Great White Throne?
    �The rising of the Quick and Dead?
    �Where stood they, small and great? Who read
    �The sentence from the Opened Book?�
    So, by degrees, the blood forsook
    My heart, and let it beat afresh:
    I knew I should break through the mesh
    Of horror, and breathe presently�
    When, lo, again, the Voice by me!

XIX.

    I saw . . . Oh, brother, �mid far sands
    The palm-tree-cinctured city stands,�
    Bright-white beneath, as Heaven, bright-blue,
    Above it, while the years pursue
    Their course, unable to abate
    Its paradisal laugh at fate:
    One morn,�the Arab staggers blind
    O�er a new tract of death, calcined
    To ashes, silence, nothingness,�
    Striving, with dizzy wits, to guess
    Whence fell the blow: what if, �twixt skies
    And prostrate earth, he should surprise
    The imaged Vapour, head to foot.
    Surveying, motionless and mute,
    Its work, ere, in a whirlwind rapt,
    It vanish up again?�So hapt
    My chance. HE stood there. Like the smoke
    Pillared o�er Sodom, when day broke,�
    I saw Him. One magnific pall
    Mantled in massive fold and fall
    His Dread, and coiled in snaky swathes
    About His feet: night�s black, that bathes
    All else, broke, grizzled with despair,
    Against the soul of blackness there.
    A gesture told the mood within�
    That wrapped right hand which based the chin,�
    That intense meditation fixed
    On His procedure,�pity mixed
    With the fulfilment of decree.
    Motionless, thus, He spoke to me,
    Who fell before His feet, a mass,
    No man now.

XX.

    �All is come to pass.
    �Such shows are over for each soul
    �They had respect to. In the roll
    �Of Judgment which convinced mankind
    �Of sin, stood many, bold and blind,
    �Terror must burn the truth into:
    �Their fate for them!�thou had�st to do
    �With absolute omnipotence,
    �Able its judgments to dispense
    �To the whole race, as every one
    �Were its sole object: that is done:
    �God is, thou art,�the rest is hurled
    �To nothingness for thee. This world,
    �This finite life, thou hast preferred,
    �In disbelief of God�s own word,
    �To Heaven and to Infinity.
    �Here, the probation was for thee,
    �To show thy soul the earthly mixed
    �With Heavenly, it must choose betwixt.
    �The earthly joys lay palpable,�
    �A taint, in each, distinct as well;
    �The Heavenly flitted, faint and rare,
    �Above them, but as truly were
    �Taintless, so in their nature, best.
    �Thy choice was earth: thou didst attest
    �Twas fitter spirit should subserve
    �The flesh, than flesh refine to nerve
    �Beneath the spirit�s play. Advance
    �No claim to their inheritance
    �Who chose the spirit�s fugitive
    �Brief gleams, and thought, �This were to live
    ��Indeed, if rays, completely pure
    ��From flesh that dulls them, should endure,�
    ��Not shoot in meteor-light athwart
    ��Our earth, to show how cold and swart
    ��It lies beneath their fire, but stand
    ��As stars should, destined to expand,
    ��Prove veritable worlds, our home!�
    �Thou said�st,��Let Spirit star the dome
    ��Of sky, that flesh may miss no peak,
    ��No nook of earth,�I shall not seek
    ��Its service further!� Thou art shut
    �Out of the Heaven of Spirit; glut
    �Thy sense upon the world: �tis thine
    �For ever�take it!�

XXI.

    �How? Is mine,
    �The world?� (I cried, while my soul broke
    Out in a transport) �Hast thou spoke
    �Plainly in that? Earth�s exquisite
    �Treasures of wonder and delight,
    �For me?�

XXII.

    The austere Voice returned,�
    �So soon made happy? Hadst thou learned
    �What God accounteth happiness,
    �Thou wouldst not find it hard to guess
    �What Hell may be His punishment
    �For those who doubt if God invent
    �Better than they. Let such men rest
    �Content with what they judged the best.
    �Let the Unjust usurp at will:
    �The Filthy shall be filthy still:
    �Miser, there waits the gold for thee!
    �Hater, indulge thine enmity!
    �And thou, whose heaven, self-ordained,
    �Was to enjoy earth unrestrained,
    �Do it! Take all the ancient show!
    �The woods shall wave, the rivers flow,
    �And men apparently pursue
    �Their works, as they were wont to do,
    �While living in probation yet:
    �I promise not thou shalt forget
    �The past, now gone to its account,
    �But leave thee with the old amount
    �Of faculties, nor less nor more,
    �Unvisited, as heretofore,
    �By God�s free spirit, that makes an end.
    �So, once more, take thy world; expend
    �Eternity upon its shows,�
    �Flung thee as freely as one rose
    �Out of a summer�s opulence,
    �Over the Eden-barrier whence
    �Thou art excluded, Knock in vain!�

XXIII.

    I sate up. All was still again.
    I breathed free: to my heart, back fled
    The warmth. �But, all the world!� (I said)
    I stooped and picked a leaf of fern,
    And recollected I might learn
    From books, how many myriad sorts
    Exist, if one may trust reports,
    Each as distinct and beautiful
    As this, the very first I cull.
    Think, from the first leaf to the last!
    Conceive, then, earth�s resources! Vast
    Exhaustless beauty, endless change
    Of wonder! and this foot shall range
    Alps, Andes,�and this eye devour
    The bee-bird and the aloe-flower?

XXIV.

    And the Voice, �Welcome so to rate
    �The arras-folds that variegate
    �The earth, God�s antechamber, well!
    �The wise, who waited there, could tell
    �By these, what royalties in store
    �Lay one step past the entrance-door.
    �For whom, was reckoned, not too much,
    �This life�s munificence? For such
    �As thou,�a race, whereof not one
    �Was able, in a million,
    �To feel that any marvel lay
    �In objects round his feet all day;
    �Nor one, in many millions more,
    �Willing, if able, to explore
    �The secreter, minuter charm!
    �Brave souls, a fern-leaf could disarm
    �Of power to cope with God�s intent,�
    �Or scared if the South Firmament
    �With North-fire did its wings refledge!
    �All partial beauty was a pledge
    �Of beauty in its plenitude:
    �But since the pledge sufficed thy mood,
    �Retain it�plenitude be theirs
    �Who looked above!�

XXV.

    Though sharp despairs
    Shot through me, I held up, bore on.
    �What is it though my trust is gone
    �From natural things? Henceforth my part
    �Be less with Nature than with Art!
    �For Art supplants, gives mainly worth
    �To Nature; �tis Man stamps the earth�
    �And I will seek his impress, seek
    �The statuary of the Greek,
    �Italy�s painting�there my choice
    �Shall fix!�

XXVI.

    �Obtain it,� said the Voice.
    �The one form with its single act,
    �Which sculptors laboured to abstract,
    �The one face, painters tried to draw,
    �With its one look, from throngs they saw!
    �And that perfection in their soul,
    �These only hinted at? The whole,
    �They were but parts of? What each laid
    �His claim to glory on?�afraid
    �His fellow-men should give him rank
    �By the poor tentatives he shrank
    �Smitten at heart from, all the more,
    �That gazers pressed in to adore!
    ��Shall I be judged by only these?�
    �If such his soul�s capacities,
    �Even while he trod the earth,�think, now
    �What pomp in Buonarotti�s brow,
    �With its new palace-brain where dwells
    �Superb the soul, unvexed by cells
    �That crumbled with the transient clay!
    �What visions will his right hand�s sway
    �Still turn to form, as still they burst
    �Upon him? How will he quench thirst,
    �Titanically infantine,
    �Laid at the breast of the Divine?
    �Does it confound thee,�this first page
    �Emblazoning man�s heritage?�
    �Can this alone absorb thy sight,
    �As if they were not infinite,�
    �Like the omnipotence which tasks
    �Itself, to furnish all that asks
    �The soul it means to satiate?
    �What was the world, the starry state
    �Of the broad skies,�what, all displays
    �Of power and beauty intermixed,
    �Which now thy soul is chained betwixt,�
    �What, else, than needful furniture
    �For life�s first stage? God�s work, be sure,
    �No more spreads wasted, than falls scant:
    �He filled, did not exceed, Man�s want
    �Of beauty in this life. And pass
    �Life�s line,�and what has earth to do,
    �Its utmost beauty�s appanage,
    �With the requirements of next stage?
    �Did God pronounce earth �very good�?
    �Needs must it be, while understood
    �For man�s preparatory state;
    �Nothing to heighten nor abate:
    �But transfer the completeness here,
    �To serve a new state�s use,�and drear
    �Deficiency gapes every side!
    �The good, tried once, were bad, retried.
    �See the enwrapping rocky niche,
    �Sufficient for the sleep, in which
    �The lizard breathes for ages safe:
    �Split the mould�and as this would chafe
    �The creature�s new world-widened sense,
    �One minute after you dispense
    �The thousand sounds and sights that broke
    �In, on him, at the chisel�s stroke,�
    �So, in God�s eyes, the earth�s first stuff
    �Was, neither more nor less, enough
    �To house man�s soul, man�s need fulfil.
    �You reckoned it immeasurable:
    �So thinks the lizard of his vault!
    �Could God be taken in default,
    �Short of contrivances, by you,�
    �Or reached, ere ready to pursue
    �His progress through eternity?
    �That chambered rock, the lizard�s world,
    �Your easy mallet�s blow has hurled
    �To nothingness for ever; so,
    �Has God abolished at a blow
    �This world, wherein his saints were pent,�
    �Who, though, found grateful and content,
    �With the provision there, as thou,
    �Yet knew He would not disallow
    �Their spirit�s hunger, felt as well,�
    �Unsated,�not unsatable,
    �As Paradise gives proof.        Deride
    �Their choice now, thou who sit�st outside!�

XXVII.

    I cried in anguish, �Mind, the mind,
    �So miserably cast behind,
    �To gain what had been wisely lost!
    �Oh, let me strive to make the most
    �Of the poor stinted soul, I nipped
    �Of budding wings, else well equipt
    �For voyage from summer isle to isle!
    �And though she needs must reconcile
    �Ambition to the life on ground,
    �Still, I can profit by late found
    �But precious knowledge. Mind is best�
    �I will seize mind, forego the rest
    �And try how far my tethered strength
    �May crawl in this poor breadth and length.
    �Let me, since I can fly no more,
    �At least spin dervish-like about
    �(Till giddy rapture almost doubt
    �I fly) through circling sciences,
    �Philosophies and histories!
    �Should the whirl slacken there, then Verse,
    �Fining to music, shall asperse
    �Fresh and fresh fire-dew, till I strain
    �Intoxicate, half-break my chain!
    �Not joyless, though more favoured feet
    �Stand calm, where I want wings to beat
    �The floor? At least earth�s bond is broke!�

XXVIII.

    Then, (sickening even while I spoke
    �Let me alone! No answer, pray,
    �To this! I know what Thou wilt say
    �All still is earth�s,�to Know, as much
    �As Feel its truths, which if we touch
    �With sense or apprehend in soul,
    �What matter? I have reached the goal�
    ��Whereto does Knowledge serve!� will burn
    �My eyes, too sure, at every turn!
    �I cannot look back now, nor stake
    �Bliss on the race, for running�s sake.
    �The goal�s a ruin like the rest!��
    �And so much worse thy latter quest,
    (Added the Voice) �that even on earth
    �Whenever, in man�s soul, had birth
    �Those intuitions, grasps of guess,
    �That pull the more into the less,
    �Making the finite comprehend
    �Infinity, the bard would spend
    �Such praise alone, upon his craft,
    �As, when wind-lyres obey the waft,
    �Goes to the craftsman who arranged
    �The seven strings, changed them and rechanged�
    �Knowing it was the South that harped.
    �He felt his song, in singing, warped,
    �Distinguished his and God�s part: whence
    �A world of spirit as of sense
    �Was plain to him, yet not too plain,
    �Which he could traverse, not remain
    �A guest in:�else were permanent
    �Heaven upon earth, its gleams were meant
    �To sting with hunger for the light,�
    �Made visible in Verse, despite
    �The veiling weakness,-truth by means
    �Of fable, showing while it screens,�
    �Since highest truth, man e�er supplied,
    �Was ever fable on outside.
    �Such gleams made bright the earth an age;
    �Now, the whole sum�s his heritage!
    �Take up thy world, it is allowed,
    �Thou who hast entered in the cloud!

XXIX.

    Then I��Behold, my spirit bleeds,
    �Catches no more at broken reeds,�
    �But lilies flower those reeds above�
    �I let the world go, and take love!
    �Love survives in me, albeit those
    �I loved are henceforth masks and shows,
    �Not loving men and women: still
    �I mind how love repaired all ill,
    �Cured wrong, soothed grief, made earth amends
    �With parents, brothers, children, friends!
    �Some semblance of a woman yet
    �With eyes to help me to forget,
    �Shall live with me; and I will match
    �Departed love with love, attach
    �Its fragments to my whole, nor scorn
    �Tho poorest of the grains of corn
    �I save from shipwreck on this isle,
    �Trusting its barrenness may smile
    �With happy foodful green one day,
    �More precious for the pains. I pray,
    �For love, then, only!�

XXX.

    At the word,
    The Form, I looked to have been stirred
    With pity and approval, rose
    O�er me, as when the headsman throws
    Axe over shoulder to make end�
    I fell prone, letting Him expend
    His wrath, while, thus, the inflicting Voice
    Smote me. �Is this thy final choice?
    Love is the best? �Tis somewhat late!
    �And all thou dost enumerate
    �Of power and beauty in the world,
    �The mightiness of love was curled
    �Inextricably round about.
    �Love lay within it and without,
    �To clasp thee,�but in vain! Thy soul
    �Still shrunk from Him who made the whole,
    �Still set deliberate aside
    �His love!�Now take love! Well betide
    �Thy tardy conscience! Haste to take
    �The show of love for the name�s sake,
    �Remembering every moment Who
    �Reside creating thee unto
    �These ends, and these for thee, was said
    �To undergo death in thy stead
    �In flesh like thine: so ran the tale.
    �What doubt in thee could countervail
    �Belief in it? Upon the ground
    ��That in the story had been found
    ��Too much love? How could God love so?�
    �He who in all his works below
    �Adapted to the needs of man,
    �Made love the basis of the plan,�
    �Did love, as was demonstrated:
    �While man, who was so fit instead,
    �To hate, as every day gave proof,�
    �You thought man, for his kind�s behoof,
    �Both could and would invent that scheme
    �Of perfect love��twould well beseem
    �Cain�s nature thou wast wont to praise,
    �Not tally with God�s usual ways!�

XXXI.

    And I cowered deprecatingly�
    �Thou Love of God! Or let me die,
    �Or grant what shall seem Heaven almost!
    �Let me not know that all is lost,
    �Though lost it be�leave me not tied
    �To this despair, this corpse-like bride!
    �Let that old life seem mine�no more�
    �With limitation as before,
    �With darkness, hunger, toil, distress:
    �Be all the earth a wilderness!
    �Only let me go on, go on,
    �Still hoping ever and anon
    �To reach one eve the Better Land!�

XXXII.

    Then did the Form expand, expand�
    I knew Him through the dread disguise,
    As the whole God within his eyes
    Embraced me.

XXXIII.

    When I lived again,
    The day was breaking,�the grey plain
    I rose from, silvered thick with dew.
    Was this a vision? False or true?
    Since then, three varied years are spent,
    And commonly my mind is bent
    To think it was a dream�be sure
    A mere dream and distemperature�
    The last day�s watching: then the night,�
    The shock of that strange Northern Light
    Set my head swimming, bred in me
    A dream. And so I live, you see,
    Go through the world, try, prove, reject,
    Prefer, still struggling to effect
    My warfare; happy that I can
    Be crossed and thwarted as a man,
    Not left in God�s contempt apart,
    With ghastly smooth life, dead at heart,
    Tame in earth�s paddock as her prize.
    Thank God she still each method tries
    To catch me, who may yet escape,
    She knows, the fiend in angel�s shape!
    Thank God, no paradise stands barred
    To entry, and I find it hard
    To be a Christian, as I said!
    Still every now and then my head
    Raised glad, sinks mournful�all grows drear
    Spite of the sunshine, while I fear
    And think, �How dreadful to be grudged
    �No ease henceforth, as one that�s judged,
    �Condemned to earth for ever, shut
    �From Heaven� . .
    But Easter-Day breaks! But
    Christ rises! Mercy every way
    Is infinite,�and who can say?

Please also see my second easter blog post which will be another easter poem because I like many of the easter poems and I want to share many.

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