Page:The collected poems, lyrical and narrative, of A. Mary F. Robinson.djvu/212

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Antiphon to the Holy Spirit


Men.

The mass of unborn matter knew Thee,
And lo! the splendid silent sun
Sprang out to be a witness to Thee
Who art the All, who art the One;
The airy plants unseen that flourish
Their floating strands of filmy rose,
Too small for sight, are Thine to nourish;
For Thou art all that breathes and grows.

Women.

Thou art the ripening of the fallows,
The swelling of the buds in rain;
Thou art the joy of birth that hallows
The rending of the flesh in twain;
O Life, O Love, how undivided
Thou broodest o'er this world of Thine,
Obscure and strange, yet surely guided
To reach a distant end divine!

Men.

We know Thee in the doubt and terror
That reels before the world we see;
We knew Thee in the faiths of error;
We know Thee most who most are free.
This phantom of the world around Thee
Is vast, divine, but not the whole:
We worship Thee, and we have found Thee
In all that satisfies the soul!

Men and Women.

How shall we serve, how shall we own Thee,
O breath of Love and Life and Thought?
How shall we praise, who are not shown Thee?
How shall we serve, who are as nought?
Yet, though Thy worlds maintain unbroken
The silence of their awful round,
A voice within our souls hath spoken.
And we who seek have more than found.

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