Page:King Alfred's Version of the Consolations of Boethius.djvu/279

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The swift firmament fleetly whirling,

Every day, by the Lord's great doing,

This earth encircling. So does man's soul

Like to a wheel she whirls round herself,

Ofttimes thinking of that which is earthly,

The Lord's creatures daily and nightly;

Sometimes in thought she seeks herself,

At others gives heed to God Eternal,

Her own Creator. In course she goes

Most like to a wheel, on herself whirling.

When deeply she muses on Him who made her,

Then up she is raised over herself;

But in her own self she ever abides,

When in her fancy she follows herself.

Lastly she falls beneath herself far

When she admires these frail things earthly,

And loves them all more than law eternal.

O God of ages, You gave a home

in heaven to souls; You send them freely

Glorious gifts, God Almighty,

In measure fitting the merits of each

These all are beaming bright in the heavens

In the clear night, but nevertheless

Not equal in light lo! we see often,

When serene is the night, the stars in heaven,

Not all beaming with equal brightness.

O God Everlasting! You did also unite

A thing of heaven to the earthly here,

Soul to body; ever since they abide,

Both the eternal and earthly together,