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Rampolli. George MacDonaldЧитать онлайн книгу.

Rampolli - George MacDonald


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A happy dream, through every heart;

           We, to his love and joy devoted,

           Scarce know the moment we depart.

           Still standeth, in his wondrous glory,

           The holy loved one with his own;

           His crown of thorns, his faithful story

           Still move our hearts, still make us groan.

           Whoso from deadly sleep will waken,

           And grasp his hand of sacrifice,

           Into his heart with us is taken,

           To ripen a fruit of Paradise.

      II

           Dawn, far eastward, on the mountain!

           Gray old times are growing young:

           From the flashing colour-fountain

           I will quaff it deep and long!—

           Granted boon to Longing’s long privation!

           Sweet love in divine transfiguration!

           Comes at last, our old Earth’s native,

           All-Heaven’s one child, simple, kind!

           Blows again, in song creative,

           Round the earth a living wind;

           Blows to clear new flames that rush together

           Sparks extinguished long by earthly weather.

           Everywhere, from graves upspringing,

           Rises new-born life, new blood!

           Endless peace up to us bringing,

           Dives he underneath life’s flood;

           Stands in midst, with full hands, eyes caressing—

           Hardly waits the prayer to grant the blessing.

           Let his mild looks of invading

           Deep into thy spirit go;

           By his blessedness unfading

           Thou thy heart possessed shalt know.

           Hearts of all men, spirits all, and senses

           Mingle, and a new glad dance commences.

           Grasp his hands with boldness yearning;

           Stamp his face thy heart upon;

           Turning toward him, ever turning,

           Thou, the flower, must face thy sun.

           Who to him his heart’s last fold unfoldeth,

           True as wife’s his heart for ever holdeth.

           Ours is now that Godhead’s splendour

           At whose name we used to quake!

           South and north, its breathings tender

           Heavenly germs at once awake!

           Let us then in God’s full garden labour,

           And to every bud and bloom be neighbour!

      III

           Who in his chamber sitteth lonely,

             And weepeth heavy, bitter tears;

           To whom in doleful colours, only

             Of want and woe, the world appears;

           Who of the Past, gulf-like receding,

             Would search with questing eyes the core,

           Down into which a sweet woe, pleading,

             Wiles him from all sides evermore—

           As if a treasure past believing

             Lay there below, for him high-piled,

           After whose lock, with bosom heaving,

             He breathless grasps in longing wild:

           He sees the Future, waste and arid,

             In hideous length before him stretch;

           About he roams, alone and harried,

             And seeks himself, poor restless wretch!—

           I fall upon his bosom, tearful:

             I once, like thee, with woe was wan;

           But I grew well, am strong and cheerful,

             And know the eternal rest of man.

           Thou too must find the one consoler

             Who inly loved, endured, and died—

           Even for them that wrought his dolour

             With thousand-fold rejoicing died.

           He died—and yet, fresh each to-morrow,

             His love and him thy heart doth hold;

           Thou mayst, consoled for every sorrow,

             Him in thy arms with ardour fold.

           New blood shall from his heart be driven

             Through thy dead bones like living wine;

           And once thy heart to him is given,

             Then is his heart for ever thine.

           What thou didst lose, he keeps it for thee;

             With him thy lost love thou shalt find;

           And what his hand doth once restore thee,

             That hand to thee will changeless bind.

      IV

           Of the thousand hours me meeting,

           And with gladsome promise greeting,

             One alone hath kept its faith—

           One wherein—ah, sorely grieved!—

           In my heart I first perceived

             Who for us did die the death.

           All to dust my world was beaten;

           As a worm had through them eaten

             Withered in me bud and flower;

           All my life had sought or cherished

           In the grave had sunk and perished;

             Pain sat in my ruined bower.

           While I thus, in silence sighing,

           Ever wept, on Death still crying,

             Still to sad delusions tied,

           All at once the night was cloven,

           From my grave the stone was hoven,

             And my inner doors thrown wide.

          


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