Page:Poems Rossetti.djvu/412

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384
"IF THOU SAYEST . . ."
Or seek or find or hold or cleave unto:
We cannot do or undo; Lord, undo
Our self-undoing, for Thine is the key
Of all we are not though we might have been.
Dear Lord, if ever mercy moved Thy mind,
  If so be love of us can move Thee yet,
If still the nail-prints in Thy Hands are seen,
  Remember us,—yea, how shouldst Thou forget?
Remember us for good, and seek, and find.

3.

Each soul I might have succoured, may have slain,
All souls shall face me at the last Appeal,
That great last moment poised for woe or weal,
That final moment for man's bliss or bane.
Vanity of vanities, yea all is vain
Which then will not avail or help or heal:
Disfeatured faces, worn-out knees that kneel,
Will more avail than strength or beauty then.
Lord, by Thy Passion,—when Thy Face was marred
In sight of earth and hell tumultuous,
  And Thy heart failed in Thee like melting wax,
And Thy Blood dropped more precious than the nard,—
  Lord, for Thy sake, not our's, supply our lacks,
For Thine own sake, not our's, Christ, pity us.