THIRTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY

By John Keble

On Sinai's top, in prayer and trance,

Full forty nights and forty days

The Prophet watched for one dear glance

Of thee and of Thy ways:

Fasting he watched and all alone,

Wrapt in a still, dark, solid cloud,

The curtain of the Holy One

Drawn round him like a shroud:

So, separate from the world, his breast

Might duly take and strongly keep

The print of Heaven, to be expressed

Ere long on Sion's steep.

There one by one his spirit saw

Of things divine the shadows bright,

The pageant of God's perfect law;

Yet felt not full delight.

Through gold and gems, a dazzling maze,

From veil to veil the vision led,

And ended, where unearthly rays

From o'er the ark were shed.

Yet not that gorgeous place, nor aught

Of human or angelic frame,

Could half appease his craving thought;

The void was still the same.

“Show me Thy glory, gracious Lord!

‘ Tis Thee,” he cries, “not Thine, I seek.”

Na, start not at so bold a word

From man, frail worm and weak:

The spark of his first deathless fire

Yet buoys him up, and high above

The holiest creature, dares aspire

To the Creator's love.

The eye in smiles may wander round,

Caught by earth's shadows as they fleet;

But for the soul no help is found,

Save Him who made it, meet.

Spite of yourselves, ye witness this,

Who blindly self or sense adore;

Else wherefore leaving your own bliss

Still restless ask ye more?

This witness bore the saints of old

When highest rapt and favoured most,

Still seeking precious things untold,

Not in fruition lost.

Canaan was theirs; and in it all

The proudest hope of kings dare claim:

Sion was theirs; and at their call

Fire from Jehovah came.

Yet monarchs walked as pilgrims still

In their own land, earth's pride and grace:

And seers would mourn on Sion's hill

Their Lord's averted face.

Vainly they tried the deeps to sound

E'en of their own prophetic thought,

When of Christ crucified and crowned

His Spirit in them taught:

But He their aching gaze repressed,

Which sought behind the veil to see,

For not without us fully blest

Or perfect might they be.

The rays of the Almighty's face

No sinner's eye might then receive;

Only the meekest man found grace

To see His skirts and live.

But we as in a glass espy

The glory of His countenance,

Not in a whirlwind hurrying by

The too presumptuous glance,

But with mild radiance every hour,

From our dear Saviour's face benign

Bent on us with transforming power,

Till we, too, faintly shine.

Sprinkled with His atoning blood

Safely before our God we stand,

As on the rock the Prophet stood,

Beneath His shadowing hand. -

Blessed eyes, which see the things we see!

And yet this tree of life hath proved

To many a soul a poison tree,

Beheld, and not beloved.

So like an angel's is our bliss

( Oh! thought to comfort and appal )

It needs must bring, if used amiss,

An angel's hopeless fall.