decorative METHOUGHT that unto God I prayed: Oh, Lord! If thou wouldst deign to let poor me behold Thy greatness, so that with my human brain I understood it! Thus I spoke, and Lo! I stood alone upon a mountain rock, In utter darkness, towering rocks beyond The dread abyss, that at my feet lay black And fathomless, yielding no answer to The searching eye. And, measureless, the sky Above was dark'ning into endless night. In white procession, denser, and yet denser, Until into a rising column they Began to form—a column like a mountain, That rose and rose and rose up to the vaults Of darkness which it seemed to carry, all One mass of light. And when I looked again, That column built itself of millions and Millions of milk-white stars that moved and shone And seemed to lift the skies unto a height That human sight and human word could not Attain. And whilst I looked and wondered at The seething worlds, the column changed and formed Itself into the statue Buonarroti Has made of Moses, only reaching from The deep into the heavens, white and bright, As if three suns, themselves invisible, As if an inner light shone out from it. The socle, not on earth, but far beyond, Was standing on the Parthenon, that shone As bright again with endless rows of columns. Here was the answer: Millions and yet millions Of rising worlds, and every people's art, And all religions may but serve to form My human likeness, so that men behold Me great as mortal eye and brain encompass. For days I walked on clouds, I lived my dream. I heard not, saw not, thought not, but beheld The world's Creator in the silent night, And felt the blessing so unspeakable Of God's own answer to my childish prayer. |