The Two Lovers of Heaven: Chrysanthus and Daria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 133 pages of information about The Two Lovers of Heaven.

The Two Lovers of Heaven: Chrysanthus and Daria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 133 pages of information about The Two Lovers of Heaven.
Have in vain tried to unriddle!—­
“In the beginning was the Word".—­
Yes, but when was this beginning? 
Was it when Jove, Neptune, Pluto
Shared the triple zones betwixt them,
When the one took to himself
Heaven supreme, one hell’s abysses,
And the sea the third, to Ceres
Leaving earth, the ever-wing`ed
Time to Saturn, fire to Phoebus,
And the air to Jove’s great sister?[5]—­
No, it could not have been then,
For the fact of their partition
Shows that heaven and earth then were,
Shows that sea and land existed:—­
The beginning then must be
Something more remote and distant: 
He who has expressly said
‘The beginning,’ must have hinted
At the primal cause of all things,
At the first and great beginning,
All things growing out of him,
He himself the pre-existent:—­
Yes, but then a new beginning
Must we seek for this beginner,
And so on ad infinitum;
Since if I, on soaring pinion
Seek from facts to rise to causes,
Rising still from where I had risen,
I will find at length there is
No beginning to the beginning,
And the inference that time
Somehow was, ere time existed,
And that that which ne’er begun
Ne’er can end, is plain and simple. 
But, my thought, remain not here,
Rest not in those narrow limits,
But rise up with me and dare
Heights that make the brain grow dizzy:—­
And at once to enter there,
Other things being pretermitted,
Let us venture where the mind,
As the darkness round it thickens,
Almost faints as we resume
What this mystic scribe has written. 
“And the Word”, this writer says,
“Was made flesh!” Ah! how can this be? 
Could the Word that in the beginning
Was with God, was God, was gifted
With such power as to make all things,
Could it be made flesh?  In pity,
Heavens! or take from me at once
All the sense that you have given me,
Or at once on me bestow
Some intelligence, some glimmer
Of clear light through these dark shadows:—­
Deity, unknown and hidden,
God or Word, whate’er thou beest,
Of Thyself the great beginner,
Of Thyself the end, if, Thou
Being Thyself beyond time’s sickle,
Still in time the world didst fashion,
If Thou ’rt life, O living spirit,
If Thou ’rt light, my darkened senses
With Thy life and light enkindle!—­
(The voices of two spirits are heard from within, one at each side.)

First Voice. 
Hear, Chrysanthus . . .

Second Voice. 
                        Listen . . .

Chrysanthus
                                     Two
Voices, if they are not instincts,
Shadows without soul or body,
Which my fancy forms within me,
Are contending in my bosom
Each with each at the same instant. 
(Two figures appear on high, one clothed in a dark robe dotted with
stars; the other in a bright and beautiful mantle:  Chrysanthus does not
see them, but in the following scene ever speaks to himself.)

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The Two Lovers of Heaven: Chrysanthus and Daria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.