The Vision

By Thomas Traherne

FLIGHT is but preparative. The sight  

   Is deep and infinite,  

Ah me! ’tis all the glory, love, light, space,  

   Joy, beauty and variety  

That doth adorn the Godhead’s dwelling-place;

   â€™Tis all that eye can see.  

Even trades themselves seen in celestial light,  

 And cares and sins and woes are bright.  

 

Order the beauty even of beauty is,  

   It is the rule of bliss,

The very life and form and cause of pleasure;  

   Which if we do not understand,  

Ten thousand heaps of vain confused treasure  

   Will but oppress the land.  

In blessedness itself we that shall miss,

 Being blind, which is the cause of bliss.  

 

First then behold the world as thine, and well  

   Note that where thou dost dwell.  

See all the beauty of the spacious case,  

   Lift up thy pleas’d and ravisht eyes,

Admire the glory of the Heavenly place  

   And all its blessings prize.  

That sight well seen thy spirit shall prepare,  

 The first makes all the other rare.  

 

Men’s woes shall be but foils unto thy bliss,

   Thou once enjoying this:  

Trades shall adorn and beautify the earth,  

   Their ignorance shall make thee bright;  

Were not their griefs Democritus his mirth?  

   Their faults shall keep thee right:

All shall be thine, because they all conspire  

 To feed and make thy glory higher.  

 

To see a glorious fountain and an end,  

   To see all creatures tend  

To thy advancement, and so sweetly close

   In thy repose: to see them shine  

In use, in worth, in service, and even foes  

   Among the rest made thine:  

To see all these unite at once in thee  

 Is to behold felicity.  

 

To see the fountain is a blessed thing,  

   It is to see the King  

Of Glory face to face: but yet the end,  

   The glorious, wondrous end is more;  

And yet the fountain there we comprehend,

   The spring we there adore:  

For in the end the fountain best is shown,  

 As by effects the cause is known.  

 

From one, to one, in one to see all things,  

   To see the King of Kings  

But once in two; to see His endless treasures  

   Made all mine own, myself the end  

Of all his labours! ’Tis the life of pleasures!  

   To see myself His friend!  

Who all things finds conjoined in Him alone,

 Sees and enjoys the Holy One.