LIFT up the lifeless trunk; | |
| The star of hope that lit the eastern sky | |
| Now in deep night is sunk, | |
| And all bright visions fade away and die. | |
| |
| We dreamt it had been he | 5 |
| Should lead us onward to a land of rest, | |
| Or give at least to see | |
| The wide fair valleys from the mountains crest. | |
| |
| Half hoped we that at last | |
| Had come the fulness of great joy unpriced, | 10 |
| That all the dreary past | |
| Would fade before the glory of the Christ. | |
| |
| Or had Elijah come | |
| With prophets garment rough and words of fire, | |
| To strike the murmurers dumb, | 15 |
| And turn the hearts of children to their sire? | |
| |
| Not so, he told us, no, | |
| Nor Christ, nor yet Elijah, was the seer, | |
| The friend who thus lies low, | |
| Who taught us how to love, and whom to fear. | 20 |
| |
| Only a voice, no more, | |
| Heard crying in the wilderness, Prepare, | |
| And then, its one work oer, | |
| Melting in silence of the midnight air. | |
| |
| And yet that voice could thrill | 25 |
| Through soul and brain with agony intense, | |
| Searching each thought of ill, | |
| Waking to rapture all the torpid sense, | |
| |
| Could stay the lust of greed | |
| In soldier rushing eager on the spoil, | 30 |
| Or meet the utmost need | |
| Of peasants worn by ceaseless, thankless toil. | |
| |
| We listened till we poured | |
| In all mens ears the story of our woes, | |
| And kneeling there adored, | 35 |
| Where the old river through the reed-bed flows. | |
| |
| Then casting off our shame, | |
| Naked we plunged beneath the cleansing stream, | |
| And lo! upon us came | |
| New thoughts and hopes that were not all a dream. | 40 |
| |
| We might not onward press, | |
| To where he dwelt upon the mountains height, | |
| Arrayed in holiness, | |
| True priest, great prophet, stainless Nazarite. | |
| |
| Yet still from that blest day | 45 |
| We strove to curb the promptings of the sense; | |
| Taught by him how to pray, | |
| We climbed the lower slopes of excellence. | |
| |
| And now a womans wiles, | |
| A girls soft movements in the winding dance, | 50 |
| A wantons wreathèd smiles, | |
| Stirring the tetrarchs blood with harlot glance, | |
| |
| These, these, O grief and woe, | |
| Have crushed our hopes, and laid them in the dust; | |
| Yes, these have brought him low, | 55 |
| The proud Herodias triumphs in her lust. | |
| |
| No heros death was his, | |
| Ten thousand warriors looking on to cheer; | |
| He might not taste the bliss | |
| Of those whose heart has known nor doubt nor fear. | 60 |
| |
| Weary the slow, slow days, | |
| The stifling dungeon, and the sultry air; | |
| Weary the long delays | |
| Of hopes that bordered almost on despair. | |
| |
| Once there had come to him, | 65 |
| With brow that told its tale of sinless youth, | |
| And speech not dark or dim, | |
| That showed Him born true vessel of the Truth, | |
| |
| One before whom he bowed, | |
| And fain had sought a blessing at His hand; | 70 |
| And lo! from out the cloud, | |
| The voice of power that few might understand. | |
| |
| Yea, from the opened sky | |
| He heard the words which bade him worship there | |
| The Son of God most high, | 75 |
| And saw the Spirit hover through the air; | |
| |
| And then, when forty days | |
| Had done the work of forty years of life, | |
| And, working highest praise, | |
| That prophet came victorious from his strife. | 80 |
| |
| We heard the witness clear, | |
| Behold the Lamb that bears the worlds great sin; | |
| And some who saw Him there, | |
| Went where He dwelt, and stayed all night within. | |
| |
| And these we saw no more, | 85 |
| They left the seer who raised their souls from earth; | |
| And on Gennesareths shore | |
| Gained, so they said, the gift of second birth. | |
| |
| Those men of Galilee, | |
| The peasants and the fishers of the lake, | 90 |
| They went to hear and see: | |
| But we our prophet guide might not forsake. | |
| |
| We saw the crowds grow thin, | |
| No more they came by hundreds to the stream; | |
| Hushed was their stir and din, | 95 |
| The fame and favour vanished as a dream. | |
| |
| We mourned, but he, our guide, | |
| Rejoiced in spirit, as the bridegrooms friend, | |
| When bridegroom meets his bride, | |
| And loves long hopes at last attain their end, | 100 |
| |
| He must increase, but I | |
| Am ready, so he spake, to wane and fade, | |
| Ready to fall and die, | |
| Or wither slowly in the blighting shade. | |
| |
| Needs must my soul rejoice | 105 |
| That now men list to Him their King and Lord, | |
| I but a wandering voice, | |
| He the true Christ, the everlasting Word. | |
| |
| So spake he then, but soon | |
| Came the sore heat and burden of the day; | 110 |
| As the sun strikes at noon, | |
| So fell on him the blasts that smite and slay. | |
| |
| He lost the peoples love, | |
| And would not turn to fawn upon the great; | |
| With crownéd guilt he strove, | 115 |
| And earned the guerdon of a harlots hate. | |
| |
| Then came the weary weeks, | |
| The fruitless strivings with a wavering will, | |
| The pain of one who seeks | |
| To wake to good a soul that cleaves to ill. | 120 |
| |
| So in his prison cell | |
| He lingered on, not knowing all that passed, | |
| If all things prospered well, | |
| Or the bright morning were with storms oercast. | |
| |
| At length, sore vexed and tried, | 125 |
| Worn down by dark perplexity and doubt, | |
| He called us to his side, | |
| And bade us go and ask the question out. | |
| |
| Weary he was and faint, | |
| And dark clouds gathered round his vision clear, | 130 |
| And just the nascent taint | |
| Of weakened faith had filled his soul with fear. | |
| |
| Art Thou, he asked, art Thou | |
| The one we looked for, coming to redeem? | |
| Or must another now | 135 |
| Rear the proud fabric of the glorious dream? | |
| |
| Why still from day to day | |
| Tarry the wheels that should the conqueror bring? | |
| Why this long, long delay, | |
| The halting of the chariots of the King? | 140 |
| |
| Why leave the prisoners still | |
| In dungeon dark and fetters sharp to lie? | |
| Why stays the all-loving Will | |
| To set the sufferers free, or bid them die? | |
| |
| We came, and looked, and lo! | 145 |
| Blind saw, deaf heard, and leapt as harts the lame, | |
| And a sweet voice and low | |
| With gentle words of love to poor men came. | |
| |
| We saw the fixéd eye | |
| Gush with hot tears of love and holiest joy, | 150 |
| The mans heart, seared and dry, | |
| Beat with the pulse and passion of the boy. | |
| |
| We saw the rough hands clasped, | |
| The sighs breathed forth upon the silent air, | |
| While many fondly grasped | 155 |
| His garments hem in agony of prayer. | |
| |
| He heard our speech, nor spake | |
| One word of anger at the quest oerbold, | |
| Nor would His friend forsake, | |
| Nor leave the tale of love and power untold. | 160 |
| |
| He bade us look and tell | |
| Yet once again to John the things we saw; | |
| And all at last was well, | |
| And the old faith was once more clear from flaw, | |
| |
| And then a few weeks more | 165 |
| And at the gate we heard the spearman knock, | |
| And too soon all was oer, | |
| The shepherd smitten, we a scattered flock. | |
| |
| But little time had he | |
| For parting words of hope, or faith, or love, | 170 |
| And none were there to see, | |
| The hero-greatness of his soul to prove. | |
| |
| And now the sun is set, | |
| The grave is hollowed in the caverns side, | |
| And we few friends are met | 175 |
| That bleeding form within the tomb to hide. | |
| |
| Yes, wrap him as he lies; | |
| But little cared he for the spice and balm; | |
| No hireling mourners cries | |
| Need break the stillness of the sunset calm. | 180 |
| |
| The linen fine and clear, | |
| Keep that for lordly burials of the great; | |
| As he lived, lay him here; | |
| He needs no pageant, and the hour is late. | |
| |
| As he lived, let him lie, | 185 |
| That garment rough his only winding-sheet, | |
| Just veiling from the eye | |
| The bleeding trunk and swathing round the feet. | |
| |
| Scarce thirty summers old, | |
| His sun goes down ere half the day is done, | 190 |
| And as a tale is told, | |
| So all his work is ended, scarce begun. | |
| |
| And what shall we do now? | |
| To whom shall we in doubt and sadness turn? | |
| Wilt Thou receive us, Thou, | 195 |
| Who madst our cold faint hearts within us burn? | |
| |
| The old has passed away, | |
| The new begins in clouds and darkness veiled; | |
| But we not far shall stray, | |
| If we but trust the Love that neer has failed. | 200 |
| |
| Yes, bearing with us still, | |
| Precept, and prayer, and hymn, and fast, and rite, | |
| All that our spirits fill | |
| With life and truth, with gladness and delight. | |
| |
| We to the Christ will go, | 205 |
| And bide our time till John arise again; | |
| We will not linger, no, | |
| We will not wait till all things are made plain. | |
| |
| Enough for us to live | |
| As those on whom the light of God has shone, | 210 |
| Till He more light shall give, | |
| Or through the darkness claim us as his own. | |
| |