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Home  »  The English Poets  »  A Poet’s Prayer

Thomas Humphry Ward, ed. The English Poets. 1880–1918.rnVol. V. Browning to Rupert Brooke

Stephen Phillips (1868–1915)

A Poet’s Prayer

THAT I have felt the rushing wind of Thee:

That I have run before Thy blast to sea;

That my one moment of transcendent strife

Is more than many years of listless life;

Beautiful Power, I praise Thee: yet I send

A prayer that sudden strength be not the end.

Desert me not when from my flagging sails

Thy breathing dies away, and virtue fails:

When Thou hast spent the glory of that gust,

Remember still the body of this dust.

Not then when I am boundless, without bars,

When I am rapt in hurry to the stars;

When I anticipate an endless bliss,

And feel before my time the final kiss,

Not then I need Thee: for delight is wise,

I err not in the freedom of the skies;

I fear not joy, so joy might ever be,

And rapture finish in felicity.

But when Thy joy is past; comes in the test,

To front the life that lingers after zest:

To live in mere negation of Thy light,

A more than blindless after more than sight.

’Tis not in flesh so swiftly to descend,

And sudden from the spheres with earth to blend;

And I, from splendour thrown, and dashed from dream,

Into the flare pursue the former gleam.

Sustain me in that hour with Thy left hand,

And aid me, when I cease to soar, to stand;

Make me Thy athlete even in my bed,

Thy girded runner though the course be sped;

Still to refrain that I may more bestow,

From sternness to a larger sweetness grow.

I ask not that false calm which many feign,

And call that peace which is a dearth of pain.

True calm doth quiver like the calmest star;

It is that white where all the colours are;

And for its very vestibule doth own

The tree of Jesus and the pyre of Joan.

Thither I press: but O do Thou meanwhile

Support me in privations of Thy smile.

Spaces Thou hast ordained the stars between

And silences where melody hath been:

Teach me those absences of fire to face,

And Thee no less in silence to embrace,

Else shall Thy dreadful gift still people Hell,

And men not measure from what height I fell.