Thursday 17 March 2016

A Prayer for the Past by George MacDonald




A Prayer for the Past 

ALL sights and sounds of day and year, 
All groups and forms, each leaf and gem, 
Are thine, O God, nor will I fear 
To talk to Thee of them. 

Too great Thy heart is to despise,
Whose day girds centuries about; 
From things which we name small, Thine eyes 
See great things looking out. 

Therefore the prayerful song I sing 
May come to Thee in ordered words:
Though lowly born, it needs not cling 
In terror to its chords. 

I think that nothing made is lost; 
That not a moon has ever shone, 
That not a cloud my eyes hath crossed
But to my soul is gone. 

That all the lost years garnered lie 
In this Thy casket, my dim soul; 
And Thou wilt, once, the key apply, 
And show the shining whole. 

But were they dead in me, they live 
In Thee, Whose Parable is—Time, 
And Worlds, and Forms—all things that give 
Me thoughts, and this my rime. 

Father, in joy our knees we bow: 
This earth is not a place of tombs: 
We are but in the nursery now; 
They in the upper rooms. 

For are we not at home in Thee, 
And all this world a visioned show; 
That, knowing what Abroad is, we 
What Home is too may know?


George MacDonald   (1824–1905)

Image courtesy of holohololand at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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