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Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Christina Rossetti

Page 43

by Christina Rossetti


  Its bulwarks are salvation fully manned,

  All gems it hath for glad variety,

  And pearls for pureness radiant glimmeringly,

  And gold for grandeur where all good is grand.

  An inner ring of saints meets linked above,

  And linked of angels is an outer ring;

  For voice of waters or for thunders’ voice

  Lo! harps and songs wherewith all saints rejoice,

  And all the trembling there of any string

  Is but a trembling of enraptured love.

  JERUSALEM OF FIRE

  Jerusalem of fire

  And gold and pearl and gem,

  Saints flock to fill thy choir,

  Jerusalem.

  Lo, thrones thou hast for them;

  Desirous they desire

  Thy harp, thy diadem,

  Thy bridal white attire,

  A palm-branch from thy stem:

  Thy holiness their hire,

  Jerusalem.

  SHE SHALL BE BROUGHT UNTO THE KING

  The King’s Daughter is all glorious within,

  Her clothing of wrought gold sets forth her bliss;

  Where the endless choruses of heaven begin

  The King’s Daughter is;

  Perfect her notes in the perfect harmonies;

  With tears wiped away, no conscience of sin,

  Loss forgotten and sorrowful memories;

  Alight with Cherubin, afire with Seraphin,

  Lily for pureness, rose for charities,

  With joy won and with joy evermore to win,

  The King’s Daughter is.

  WHO IS THIS THAT COMETH UP NOT ALONE

  Who is this that cometh up not alone

  From the fiery-flying-serpent wilderness,

  Leaning upon her own Beloved One:

  Who is this:

  Lo, the King of king’s daughter, a high princess,

  Going home as bride to her Husband’s Throne,

  Virgin queen in perfected loveliness.

  Her eyes a dove’s eyes and her voice a dove’s moan,

  She shows like a full moon for heavenliness:

  Eager saints and angels ask in heaven’s zone,

  Who is this?

  WHO SITS WITH THE KING IN HIS THRONE? NOT A SLAVE BUT A BRIDE

  Who sits with the King in His Throne? Not a slave but a Bride,

  With this King of all Greatness and Grace Who reigns not alone;

  His Glory her glory, where glorious she glows at His side

  Who sits with the King in His Throne.

  She came from dim uttermost depths which no Angel hath known,

  Leviathan’s whirlpool and Dragon’s dominion worldwide,

  From the frost or the fire to Paradisiacal zone.

  Lo, she is fair as a dove, silvery, golden, dove-eyed:

  Lo, Dragon laments and Death laments, for their prey is flown:

  She dwells in the Vision of Peace, and her peace shall abide

  Who sits with the King in His Throne.

  ANTIPAS

  Hidden from the darkness of our mortal sight,

  Hidden in the Paradise of lovely light,

  Hidden in God’s Presence, worshipped face to face,

  Hidden in the sanctuary of Christ’s embrace.

  Up, O Wills! to track him home among the bless’d;

  Up, O Hearts! to know him in the joy of rest;

  Where no darkness more shall hide him from our sight,

  Where we shall be love with love, and light with light,

  Worshipping our God together face to face,

  Wishless in the sanctuary of Christ’s embrace.

  BEAUTIFUL FOR SITUATION

  A lovely city in a lovely land,

  Whose citizens are lovely, and whose King

  Is Very Love; to Whom all Angels sing;

  To Whom all saints sing crowned, their sacred band

  Saluting Love with palm-branch in their hand:

  Thither all doves on gold or silver wing

  Flock home thro’ agate windows glistering

  Set wide, and where pearl gates wide open stand.

  A bower of roses is not half so sweet,

  A cave of diamonds doth not glitter so,

  Nor Lebanon is fruitful set thereby:

  And thither thou, beloved, and thither I

  May set our heart and set our face and go,

  Faint yet pursuing, home on tireless feet.

  LORD, BY WHAT INCONCEIVABLE DIM ROAD

  Lord, by what inconceivable dim road

  Thou leadest man on footsore pilgrimage!

  Weariness is his rest from stage to stage,

  Brief halting-places are his sole abode.

  Onward he fares thro’ rivers overflowed,

  Thro’ deserts where all doleful creatures rage;

  Onward from year to year, from age to age,

  He groans and totters onward with his load.

  Behold how inconceivable his way;

  How tenfold inconceivable the goal,

  His goal of hope deferred, his promised peace:

  Yea, but behold him sitting down at ease,

  Refreshed in body and refreshed in soul,

  At rest from labour on the Sabbath Day.

  AS COLD WATERS TO A THIRSTY SOUL, SO IS GOOD NEWS FROM A FAR COUNTRY

  “Golden haired, lily white,

  Will you pluck me lilies?

  Or will you show me where they grow,

  Show where the limpid rill is?

  But is your hair of gold or light,

  And is your foot of flake or fire,

  And have you wings rolled up from sight

  And songs to slake desire?”

  “I pluck fresh flowers of Paradise,

  Lilies and roses red,

  A bending sceptre for my hand,

  A crown to crown my head.

  I sing my songs, I pluck my flowers

  Sweet-scented from their fragrant trees;

  I sing, we sing, amid the bowers

  And gather palm-branches.”

  “Is there a path to Heaven

  My stumbling foot may tread?

  And will you show that way to go,

  That bower and blossom bed?”

  “The path to Heaven is steep and straight

  And scorched, but ends in shade of trees,

  Where yet a while we sing and wait

  And gather palm-branches.”

  CAST DOWN BUT NOT DESTROYED, CHASTENED NOT SLAIN

  Cast down but not destroyed, chastened not slain:

  Thy Saints have lived that life, but how can I?

  I, who thro’ dread of death do daily die

  By daily foretaste of an unfelt pain.

  Lo, I depart who shall not come again;

  Lo, as a shadow I am flitting by;

  As a leaf trembling, as a wheel I fly,

  While death flies faster and my flight is vain.

  Chastened not slain, cast down but not destroyed: —

  If thus Thy Saints have struggled home to peace,

  Why should not I take heart to be as they?

  They too pent passions in a house of clay,

  Fear and desire, and pangs and ecstasies;

  Yea, thus they joyed who now are overjoyed.

  LIFT UP THINE EYES TO SEEK THE INVISIBLE

  Lift up thine eyes to seek the invisible:

  Stir up thy heart to choose the still unseen:

  Strain up thy hope in glad perpetual green

  To scale the exceeding height where all saints dwell.

  — Saints, it is well with you? — Yea, it is well. —

  Where they have reaped, by faith kneel thou to glean:

  Because they stooped so low to reap, they lean

  Now over golden harps unspeakable.

  — But thou purblind and deafened, knowest thou

  Those glorious beauties unexperienced

  By ear or eye or by heart hitherto? —

  I
know Whom I have trusted: wherefore now

  All amiable, accessible tho’ fenced,

  Golden Jerusalem floats full in view.

  LOVE IS STRONG AS DEATH

  As flames that consume the mountains, as winds that coerce the sea,

  Thy men of renown show forth Thy might in the clutch of death:

  Down they go into silence, yet the Trump of the Jubilee

  Swells not Thy praise as swells it the breathless pause of their breath.

  What is the flame of their fire, if so I may catch the flame;

  What the strength of their strength, if also I may wax strong?

  The flaming fire of their strength is the love of Jesu’s Name,

  In Whom their death is life, their silence utters a song.

  LET THEM REJOICE IN THEIR BEDS

  Crimson as the rubies, crimson as the roses,

  Crimson as the sinking sun,

  Singing on his crimsoned bed each saint reposes,

  Fought his fight, his battle won;

  Till the rosy east the day of days discloses,

  All his work, save waiting, done.

  Far above the stars, while underneath the daisies,

  Resting, for his race is run,

  Unto Thee his heart each quiet saint upraises,

  God the Father, Spirit, Son;

  Unto Thee his heart, unto Thee his praises,

  O Lord God, the Three in One.

  SLAIN IN THEIR HIGH PLACES: FALLEN ON REST

  Slain in their high places: fallen on rest

  Where the eternal peace lights up their faces,

  In God’s sacred acre breast to breast: —

  Slain in their high places.

  From all tribes, all families, all races,

  Gathered home together; east or west

  Sending home its tale of gifts and graces.

  Twine, oh twine, heaven’s amaranth for their crest,

  Raise their praise while home their triumph paces;

  Kings by their own King of kings confessed,

  Slain in their high places.

  WHAT HATH GOD WROUGHT!

  The shout of a King is among them. One day may I be

  Of that perfect communion of lovers contented and free

  In the land that is very far off, and far off from the sea.

  The shout of the King is among them. One King and one song,

  One thunder of manifold voices harmonious and strong,

  One King and one love, and one shout of one worshipping throng.

  BEFORE THE THRONE, AND BEFORE THE LAMB

  As the voice of many waters all saints sing as one,

  As the voice of an unclouded thundering;

  Unswayed by the changing moon and unswayed by the sun,

  As the voice of many waters all saints sing.

  Circling round the rainbow of their perfect ring,

  Twelve thousand times twelve thousand voices in unison

  Swell the triumph, swell the praise of Christ the King.

  Where raiment is white of blood-steeped linen slowly spun,

  Where crowns are golden of Love’s own largessing,

  Where eternally the ecstasy is but begun,

  As the voice of many waters all saints sing.

  HE SHALL GO NO MORE OUT

  Once within, within for evermore:

  There the long beatitudes begin:

  Overflows the still unwasting store,

  Once within.

  Left without are death and doubt and sin;

  All man wrestled with and all he bore,

  Man who saved his life, skin after skin.

  Blow the trumpet-blast unheard before,

  Shout the unheard-of shout for these who win,

  These, who cast their crowns on Heaven’s high floor

  Once within.

  YEA, BLESSED AND HOLY IS HE THAT HATH PART IN THE FIRST RESURRECTION!

  Yea, blessed and holy is he that hath part in the First Resurrection!

  We mark well his bulwarks, we set up his tokens, we gaze, even we,

  On this lustre of God and of Christ, this creature of flawless perfection:

  Yea, blessed and holy is he.

  But what? an offscouring of earth, a wreck from the turbulent sea,

  A bloodstone unflinchingly hewn for the Temple’s eternal erection,

  One scattered and peeled, one sifted and chastened and scourged and set free?

  Yea, this is that worshipful stone of the Wise Master Builder’s election,

  Yea, this is that King and that Priest where all Hallows bow down the knee,

  Yea, this man set nigh to the Throne is Jonathan of David’s delection,

  Yea, blessed and holy is he.

  THE JOY OF SAINTS, LIKE INCENSE TURNED TO FIRE

  The joy of Saints, like incense turned to fire

  In golden censers, soars acceptable;

  And high their heavenly hallelujahs swell

  Desirous still with still-fulfilled desire.

  Sweet thrill the harpstrings of the heavenly choir,

  Most sweet their voice while love is all they tell;

  Where love is all in all, and all is well

  Because their work is love and love their hire.

  All robed in white and all with palm in hand,

  Crowns too they have of gold and thrones of gold;

  The street is golden which their feet have trod,

  Or on a sea of glass and fire they stand:

  And none of them is young, and none is old,

  Except as perfect by the Will of God.

  WHAT ARE THESE LOVELY ONES, YEA, WHAT ARE THESE?

  What are these lovely ones, yea, what are these?

  Lo, these are they who for pure love of Christ

  Stripped off the trammels of soft silken ease,

  Beggaring themselves betimes, to be sufficed

  Throughout heaven’s one eternal day of peace:

  By golden streets, thro’ gates of pearl unpriced,

  They entered on the joys that will not cease,

  And found again all firstfruits sacrificed.

  And wherefore have you harps, and wherefore palms,

  And wherefore crowns, O ye who walk in white?

  Because our happy hearts are chanting psalms,

  Endless Te Deum for the ended fight;

  While thro’ the everlasting lapse of calms

  We cast our crowns before the Lamb our Might.

  THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY AND CHURCH OF THE FIRSTBORN

  Bring me to see, Lord, bring me yet to see

  Those nations of Thy glory and Thy grace

  Who splendid in Thy splendour worship Thee.

  Light in all eyes, content in every face,

  Raptures and voices one while manifold,

  Love and are well-beloved the ransomed race: —

  Great mitred priests, great kings in crowns of gold,

  Patriarchs who head the army of their sons,

  Matrons and mothers by their own extolled,

  Wise and most harmless holy little ones,

  Virgins who, making merry, lead the dance,

  Full-breathed victorious racers from all runs,

  Home-comers out of every change and chance,

  Hermits restored to social neighbourhood,

  Aspects which reproduce One Countenance,

  Life-losers with their losses all made good,

  All blessed hungry and athirst sufficed,

  All who bore crosses round the Holy Rood,

  Friends, brethren, sisters, of Lord Jesus Christ.

  EVERY ONE THAT IS PERFECT SHALL BE AS HIS MASTER

  How can one man, how can all men,

  How can we be like St. Paul,

  Like St. John, or like St. Peter,

  Like the least of all

  Blessed Saints? for we are small.

  Love can make us like St. Peter,

  Love can make us like St. Paul,

  Love can make us like the blessed

/>   Bosom friend of all,

  Great St. John, tho’ we are small.

  Love which clings and trusts and worships,

  Love which rises from a fall,

  Love which, prompting glad obedience,

  Labours most of all,

  Love makes great the great and small.

  AS DYING, AND BEHOLD WE LIVE!

  “As dying, and behold we live!”

  So live the Saints while time is flying;

  Make all they make, give all they give,

  As dying;

  Bear all they bear without replying;

  They grieve as tho’ they did not grieve,

  Uplifting praise with prayer and sighing.

  Patient thro’ life’s long-drawn reprieve,

  Aloof from strife, at peace from crying,

  The morrow to its day they leave,

  As dying.

  SO GREAT A CLOUD OF WITNESSES

  I think of the saints I have known, and lift up mine eyes

  To the far-away home of beautiful Paradise,

  Where the song of saints gives voice to an undividing sea

  On whose plain their feet stand firm while they keep their jubilee.

  As the sound of waters their voice, as the sound of thunderings,

  While they all at once rejoice, while all sing and while each one sings;

  Where more saints flock in, and more, and yet more, and again yet more,

  And not one turns back to depart thro’ the open entrance-door.

  O sights of our lovely earth, O sound of our earthly sea,

 

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