John Keble

The Christian Year


Скачать книгу

heart of childhood is all mirth:

       We frolic to and fro

       As free and blithe, as if on earth

       Were no such thing as woe.

      But if indeed with reckless faith

       We trust the flattering voice,

       Which whispers, “Take thy fill ere death,

       Indulge thee and rejoice;”

      Too surely, every setting day,

       Some lost delight we mourn;

       The flowers all die along our way

       Till we, too, die forlorn.

      Such is the world’s gay garish feast,

       In her first charming bowl

       Infusing all that fires the breast,

       And cheats the unstable soul.

      And still, as loud the revel swells,

       The fevered pulse beats higher,

       Till the seared taste from foulest wells

       Is fain to slake its fire.

      Unlike the feast of heavenly love

       Spread at the Saviour’s word

       For souls that hear His call, and prove

       Meet for His bridal board.

      Why should we fear, youth’s draught of joy

       If pure would sparkle less?

       Why should the cup the sooner cloy,

       Which God hath deigned to bless?

      For, is it Hope, that thrills so keen

       Along each bounding vein,

       Still whispering glorious things unseen?—

       Faith makes the vision plain.

      The world would kill her soon: but Faith

       Her daring dreams will cherish,

       Speeding her gaze o’er time and death

       To realms where nought can perish.

      Or is it Love, the dear delight

       Of hearts that know no guile,

       That all around see all things bright

       With their own magic smile?

      The silent joy that sinks so deep,

       Of confidence and rest,

       Lulled in a father’s arms to sleep,

       Clasped to a mother’s breast?

      Who, but a Christian, through all life

       That blessing may prolong?

       Who, through the world’s sad day of strife,

       Still chant his morning song?

      Fathers may hate us or forsake,

       God’s foundlings then are we:

       Mother on child no pity take,

       But we shall still have Thee.

      We may look home, and seek in vain

       A fond fraternal heart,

       But Christ hath given His promise plain

       To do a Brother’s part.

      Nor shall dull age, as worldlings say,

       The heavenward flame annoy:

       The Saviour cannot pass away,

       And with Him lives our joy.

      Ever the richest, tenderest glow

       Sets round the autumnal sun—

       But there sight fails: no heart may know

       The bliss when life is done.

      Such is Thy banquet, dearest Lord;

       O give us grace, to cast

       Our lot with Thine, to trust Thy word,

       And keep our best till last.

       Table of Contents

      When Jesus heard it, He marvelled, and said to them that followed, Verily I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel. St. Matthew viii. 10.

      I marked a rainbow in the north,

       What time the wild autumnal sun

       From his dark veil at noon looked forth,

       As glorying in his course half done,

       Flinging soft radiance far and wide

       Over the dusky heaven and bleak hill-side.

      It was a gleam to Memory dear,

       And as I walk and muse apart,

       When all seems faithless round and drear,

       I would revive it in my heart,

       And watch how light can find its way

       To regions farthest from the fount of day.

      Light flashes in the gloomiest sky,

       And Music in the dullest plain,

       For there the lark is soaring high

       Over her flat and leafless reign,

       And chanting in so blithe a tone,

       It shames the weary heart to feel itself alone.

      Brighter than rainbow in the north,

       More cheery than the matin lark,

       Is the soft gleam of Christian worth,

       Which on some holy house we mark;

       Dear to the pastor’s aching heart

       To think, where’er he looks, such gleam may have a part;

      May dwell, unseen by all but Heaven,

       Like diamond blazing in the mine;

       For ever, where such grace is given,

       It fears in open day to shine,

       Lest the deep stain it owns within

       Break out, and Faith be shamed by the believer’s sin.

      In silence and afar they wait,

       To find a prayer their Lord may hear:

       Voice of the poor and desolate,

       You best may bring it to His ear;

       Your grateful intercessions rise

       With more than royal pomp, and pierce the skies.

      Happy the soul whose precious cause

       You in the Sovereign Presence plead—

       “This is the lover of Thy laws,

       The friend of Thine in fear and need,”

       For to the poor Thy mercy lends

       That solemn style, “Thy nation and Thy friends.”

      He too is blest whose outward eye

       The graceful lines of art may trace,

       While his free spirit, soaring high,

       Discerns the glorious from the base;

       Till out of dust his magic raise

       A home for prayer and love, and full harmonious praise,

      Where far away and high above,

       In maze on maze the trancèd sight

       Strays, mindful of that heavenly love