Suggested by Matthew Arnold's Stanzas - Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse

I

    That one long dirge-moan sad and deep,
    Low, muffled by the solemn stress
    Of such emotion as doth steep
    The soul in brooding quietness,
    Befits our anguished time too well,
    Whose Life-march is a funeral knell.

    Dirge for a mighty Creed outworn
    Its spirit fading from the earth,
    Its mouldering body left forlorn:
    Weak idol! feeding scornful mirth
    In shallow hearts; divine no more
    Save to some ignorant pagan poor;

    And some who know how by Its light
    The past world well did walk and live,
    And feel It even now more bright
    Than any lamp mere men can give;
    So cling to It with yearning faith,
    Yet own It almost quenched in death:

    While many who win wealth and power
    And honours serving at Its shrine,
    Rather than lose their worldly dower
    Proclaim their dead thing 'Life divine';
    And sacrifice to coward lust
    Their own souls' truth, a people's trust.

    And will none mourn the mighty Dead,
    Pillar of heavenly fire and cloud,
    Which through this life's wild desert led
    For whole millenniums each grand crowd
    Of sages, bards, saints, heroes, all
    Whose names we glory to recall?

    None mourn Him, dead, with deep-moved soul,
    Whom, living, all our sires adored?
    None feel the heavy darkness roll
    Stifling about us, when the Lord
    Leaves us to walk by our own light,
    That one pale speck in boundless Night?

    That earthly lamp when sun and star,
    When all the heavenly lights are lost:
    Does it shed radiance round afar?
    Our pathway is by deep gulfs cross'd
    It fathoms none. We lift it high:
    It casts not one beam on the sky.

    If He thus died as no more fit
    To lead the modern march of thought,
    Supreme, commanding, guiding it,
    With noblest love and wisdom fraught;
    He was at least Divine; and none
    Of human souls can lead it on.

    We pine in our dark living tomb,
    Waiting the God-illumined One
    Who, only, can disperse the gloom;
    Completing what the Dead begun,
    Or farther leading us some space
    Toward our eternal resting-place.

    But Israel wanders shepherdless,
    Or gloom-involved unloving lies,
    And in despair's stark sinfulness
    Reviles the promised Paradise
    It cannot reach Father divine!
    Let us not long thus hopeless pine.

    Still the deep dirge-notes long and low
    Breathe forth strange anguish to recall
    Could we forget our direst woe:
    A proud strong Age fast losing all
    Earth has of heaven; bereft of faith;
    And living in Eternal Death.

    And loudly boastful of such life:
    Blinded by our material might,
    Absorbed in frantic worldly strife,
    Unconscious of the utter Night
    Whose palpable and monstrous gloom
    Is gathering for our spirits' tomb.

    We feel as gods in our own hearts;
    Seeming to conquer Time and Space;
    Wealth gorging our imperial marts,
    Earth pregnant, from the fierce embrace
    Our matter-lusting spirits press,
    With unexampled fruitfulness.

    God, answering well our worldly prayer,
    Our hearts' chief prayer through all the hours
    Of selfish joy and sordid care,
    Comes down to us in golden showers:
    God turns to Mammon at our cry;
    Our souls wealth-crushed, dross-stifled lie.

    Those few, how rich! while this great mass,
    Myriads with equal greed for gold,
    Sink in such want and woe, alas!
    As never can on earth be told:
    These starve, and those yet wealthier rise
    Meanwhile in both the spirit dies.

    Hear now the thrilling dirge-notes peal
    The anguished cry in thunder rolls:-
    The few yet left who think and feel,
    Who yearn with strenuous soaring souls
    For more than earth or time can grant;
    Where, where shall they appease their want?

    Black disbelief, substantial doubt
    Wreathe-blent into one louring cloud
    Through which Heaven's light can scarce shine out
    Round all the Faiths: all in such shroud
    Fade ghostlike to th' entombing Past:
    Our Heaven is wildly overcast.

    Yet each Creed, senile, sick, half-dead,
    With bitter spite and doting rage
    Reviles all others, Whoso, led
    By thirst of love to pilgrimage,
    Seeks now old God-given Wells of Life,
    Finds drought-dry centres of vain strife;

    And turns away in blank despair,
    To scoff or weep as fits his mood.
    0 God in Heaven, hear our prayer!
    We know Thou art, Allwise, Allgood,
    Yet sink in godless misery:
    Oh, teach us how to worship Thee!



II

    The great Form lies there nerveless still:
    But as we fix our longing gaze
    It grows in grandest beauty, till
    We worship in entranced amaze;
    Such holy love and wisdom seem
    To be there rapt in heavenly dream
    .
    Oh, if He may once more awake!
    Oh, if it be not death, but sleep!
    And He from that dread slumber break
    Refreshed and strong, full-powered to sweep
    The darkness from our path again;
    Once more the Guiding Star of men!

    Yet, though it be death, view It well.
    The brow, how nobly high and broad
    What love on those shut lips might well!
    This Form sublimely templed God:
    And, if not perfect, is a shrine
    Approaching well the most divine.

    Do not turn hastily away
    From mighty death to petty life;
    Gaze in deep reverence on the clay
    With such a soul's expression rife:
    Read here, read long, the features worn
    By One incarnate Heavenly-born.

    So may we hope to recognise
    That Greater One who shall succeed
    This death-bound Monarch, who now lies
    In mute appealing for our need:
    God cannot long desert His earth;
    In the Old's death the New has birth.

    What say we? we know well this truth,
    There is no death for the Divine,
    Which lives in ever-perfect youth:
    The Form alone, its earthly shrine
    Is subject to earth's mortal sway;
    Sickens, and dies, and rots away.

    Thus each Form in its turn expires,
    No more with all revealed Truth rife,
    Which even at that time inspires
    Some new and nobler form with life,
    Grander and vaster to express
    More of Its infinite heavenliness.

    Thus has it been since Time's first birth,
    Thus must it be for evermore:
    Still lie, moth-eaten, on the earth
    Old garments which this Spirit wore;
    Till, soiled and rent, they were off-thrown,
    And wider-flowing robes put on.

    They could not grow with His great growth,
    Pauseless though slow throughout the years;
    And vainly worshippers-so loath
    To leave what lengthened use endears
    May still the empty robes adore;
    Their virtue was from Him who wore.

    Let none say the Divine is dead,
    Although this Form be soul-less quite:
    The Heavenly Sun doth ever shed
    His lifeful heat, His saving light;
    Never our earth doth lose His ray,
    Save when she turns herself away.

    Let none say the Divine is dumb,
    Although His voice no more we hear:
    It is that we are deaf become.
    For measured to each eye and ear
    His glory shines, His voice outspeaks;
    To each He gives the most it seeks.

    Our spirits may for ever grow;
    And He will fill them as before,
    And still their measure overflow
    With His unlessened infinite More:
    He gives us all we can receive;
    He teaches all we can believe.

    The pure can see Him perfect, pure;
    The strong feel Him, Omnipotence;
    The wise, All-wise; He is obscure
    But to the gross and earth-bound sense:
    Alas for us with blinded sight
    Who dare to cry, There is no light!



III

    Nay, ask us not to rise and leave
    Him from whom power and life seem gone;
    Say not that it is weak to grieve;
    Duty does not, now, urge us on:
    In vain ye urge; too well we know
    We cannot by our own strength go.

    Vainly ye choose you Saviours now
    Of men, however good and wise
    Be those your mean faith would endow
    With power to which no man can rise:
    No best men living lure our faith
    From the Divine though veiled in death.

    Vainly ye wander every way
    Throughout the earth in search of Heaven,
    Changing your useless path each day
    With each new transient impulse given
    By human guides, who still agree
    In naught but fallibility.

    We should know better from the lore
    Of worldly wisdom, keen mistrust
    On which our minds so love to pore;
    Nor leave for any child of dust
    This One Divine: to Him adhere
    Till the diviner One appear.

    My brothers, let us own the truth,
    Bitter and mournful though it be,
    That we who spent our dreary youth
    In foul and sensual slavery,
    Are all too slavish, too unmanned,
    For Conquerors of the Promised Land.

    In unprogressive wanderings
    We plod the desert to and fro;
    And fiery serpents' mortal stings,
    Earthquake and sword and weary woe
    And pestilence deal fearful death
    Amongst us for our want of faith.

    Far-scattered o'er the Waste forlorn
    Our bones shall whiten through the years,
    And startle pilgrims yet unborn;
    Our noblest captains, priests and seers,
    Dark death shall one by one remove,
    For lack of wisdom, faith, or love.

    Yet be we patient, meek and pure,
    Unselfishly resigned to God's
    Mysterious judgements; and endure
    Our sore scarce-intermitted loads
    Of grief and weary pain, imbued
    With sternly passive fortitude:

    And pray that those who shall succeed
    Prove worthy of a happier life
    Than we dare ask for as our meed;
    That they a constant noble strife
    Victorious against Ill may wage,
    And gain the glorious heritage.

    Cease now to cry and storm, and move,
    By such tumultuous toil opprcst
    As, without guidance, vain must prove.
    When God keeps still can ye not rest?
    When He sends night so dark and deep,
    Why shrink from renovating sleep?

    Sleep, to His care resigned, a space;
    That when He rises in His might
    To lead our hosts from this dire place,
    We may have strength and heart to fight
    All evils that would bar our way,
    And march unfaltering all the day.

    Yes, let us stay in loving grief,
    Which patient hope and trust yet cheer,
    Silent beside our silent Chief,
    Till His Successor shall appear;
    Till death's veil fall from off His face,
    Or One anointed take His place.

    Nay, our adoring love should have
    More faith than to believe that He,
    Before Another comes to save,
    Can leave us in blind misery
    Without a Guide: God never can
    So utterly depart from man.

    We will move onward! Let us trust
    That there is life and saving power
    In this dear Form which seems but dust.
    Arise, arise! though darkness lower,
    Earnest, bold-hearted, cease to mourn;
    It shall before our hosts be borne.

    Triumphantly He ever led
    Our faithful armies while alive;
    What though His form be cold and dead,
    His Spirit doth that death survive:
    We conquer by that Soul this Form
    Enshrined, not ill, while free and warm.

    Thus men have honoured fellow men,
    Who dying left a lofty fame;
    And won most glorious victories then
    By inspiration of a Name:
    If in men's names such life abode,
    Shall there not in His, Son of God?

    A dawn-light creeps throughout the gloom,
    Sullenly sinks the storm of wrath;
    Life blossoms in our desert tomb;
    Mysteriously we find a path
    Which leadeth on to Paradise.
    Thus to our love's faith He replies!

    But, while the dirge still rolls away
    In passionate thunders wildly blent
    With mournful moanings, let us pray
    Still on our Holy War intent
    'O God, revive the seeming Dead;
    Or send Another in His stead!

    'The wintry midnight drear is past,
    But still the dawn gleams grey and cold;
    Dread phantoms haunt each restless blast,
    Our stumblings still are manifold:
    Oh, let Thy cloudless Sun rise soon,
    And flood us with His summer noon!'