To nourish with one sign.
Nor can imagination throw
The penetrative shaft: we pass
The breath of thought, who would divine
If haply they may grow
As Earth; have our desire to know;
If life comes there to grain from grass,
And flowers like ours of toil and pain;
Has passion to beat bar,
Win space from cleaving brain;
The mystic link attain,
Whereby star holds on star.
Those visible immortals
beam
Allurement to the dream:
Ireful at human hungers
brook
No question in the look.
For ever virgin to our
sense,
Remote they wane to
gaze intense:
Prolong it, and in ruthlessness
they smite
The beating heart behind
the ball of sight:
Till we conceive their
heavens hoar,
Those lights they raise
but sparkles frore,
And Earth, our blood-warm
Earth, a shuddering prey
To that frigidity of
brainless ray.
Yet space is given for
breath of thought
Beyond our bounds when
musing: more
When to that musing
love is brought,
And love is asked of
love’s wherefore.
’Tis Earth’s,
her gift; else have we nought:
Her gift, her secret,
here our tie.
And not with her and
yonder sky?
Bethink you: were
it Earth alone
Breeds love, would not
her region be
The sole delight and
throne
Of generous Deity?
To deeper than this
ball of sight
Appeal the lustrous
people of the night.
Fronting yon shoreless,
sown with fiery sails,
It is our ravenous that
quails,
Flesh by its craven
thirsts and fears distraught.
The spirit leaps alight,
Doubts not in them is
he,
The binder of his sheaves,
the sane, the right:
Of magnitude to magnitude
is wrought,
To feel it large of
the great life they hold:
In them to come, or
vaster intervolved,
The issues known in
us, our unsolved solved:
That there with toil
Life climbs the self-same Tree,
Whose roots enrichment
have from ripeness dropped.
So may we read and little
find them cold:
Let it but be the lord
of Mind to guide
Our eyes; no branch
of Reason’s growing lopped;
Nor dreaming on a dream;
but fortified
By day to penetrate
black midnight; see,
Hear, feel, outside
the senses; even that we,
The specks of dust upon
a mound of mould,
We who reflect those
rays, though low our place,
To them are lastingly
allied.
So may we read, and
little find them cold:
Not frosty lamps illumining
dead space,
Not distant aliens,
not senseless Powers.
The fire is in them
whereof we are born;
The music of their motion
may be ours.
Spirit shall deem them


