Page:The Prelude, Wordsworth, 1850.djvu/162

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140
CAMBRIDGE AND THE ALPS.
[BOOK VI.

To carry meaning to the natural heart;
To tell us what is passion, what is truth,
What reason, what simplicity and sense.


Yet may we not entirely overlook
The pleasure gathered from the rudiments
Of geometric science. Though advanced
In these inquiries, with regret I speak,
No farther than the threshold, there I found
Both elevation and composed delight:
With Indian awe and wonder, ignorance pleased
With its own struggles, did I meditate
On the relation those abstractions bear
To Nature's laws, and by what process led,
Those immaterial agents bowed their heads
Duly to serve the mind of earth-born man;
From star to star, from kindred sphere to sphere,
From system on to system without end.


More frequently from the same source I drew
A pleasure quiet and profound, a sense
Of permanent and universal sway,
And paramount belief; there, recognised
A type, for finite natures, of the one

Supreme Existence, the surpassing life