Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 3).djvu/212

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All my piteous prayer repell'd!—
  Great shall be the House of God;
In my confidence I swore it;
Fearless, smote and wreck'd and tore it,
Swept it level with the sod.
Now the finish'd work stands fast.
As the people throng before it,
Still they cry: "How vast! how vast!"
Is it they see true or I,
Who no vastness can descry?
Is it great? The thing I will'd,
Is it in <g>this</g> House fulfill'd?
Can the rushing fire of passion
That begot it, <g>here</g> be still'd?
Was the Temple of this fashion
That I dream'd should overspan
All the misery of Man?
  Ah, had Agnes stay'd with me,
Not thus vainly had I striven!
Small things greatly she could see,
From doubt's anguish set me free,
Clasp together Earth and Heaven
Like the green roof of the tree.


[He observes the preparations for the festival.]


All with wreaths and banners hung;
Children practising their song;
So the Manse they surge and throng,—
Festal greetings they would bring me;—
Yonder gleams my name in gold!—
Give me light, O God, or fling me
Fathom-deep beneath this mould!
In an hour begins the Feast
Every thought and every tongue
Will be ringing with "the priest
All their thoughts I can discern;
All their words I feel them burn;