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out-poured As from my soul will break at thy feet, Lord, Like a great tide from sea-heart shoreward hurled. 9. For then thou wilt be able, then at last, To glad me as thou hungerest to do; Then shall thy life my heart all open find, A thoroughfare to thy great spirit-wind; Then shall I rest within thy holy vast, One with the bliss of the eternal mind; And all creation rise in me created new. 10. What makes thy being a bliss shall then make mind For I shall love as thou, and love in thee; Then shall I have whatever I desire, My every faintest wish being all divine; Power thou wilt give me to work mightily, Even as my Lord, leading thy low men nigher, With dance and song to cast their best upon thy fire. 11. Then shall I live such an essential life That a mere flower will then to me unfold More bliss than now grandest orchestral strife-- By love made and obedience humble-bold, I shall straight through its window God behold. God, I shall feed on thee, thy creature blest With very being--work at one with sweetest rest. 12. Give me a world, to part for praise and sunder. The brooks be bells; the winds, in caverns dumb, Wake fife and flute and flageolet and voice; The fire-shook earth itself be the great drum; And let the air the region's bass out thunder; The firs be violins; the reeds hautboys; Rivers, seas, icebergs fill the great score up and under! 13. But rather dost thou hear the blundered words Of breathing creatures; the music-lowing herds Of thy great cattle; thy soft-bleating sheep; O'erhovered by the trebles of thy birds, Whose Christ-praised carelessness song-fills the deep; Still rather a child's talk who apart doth hide him, And make a tent for God to come and sit beside him. 14. This is not life; this being is not enough. But thou art life, and thou hast life for me. Thou mad'st the worm--to cast the wormy slough, And fly abroad--a glory flit and flee. Thou hast me, statue-like, hewn in the rough, Meaning at last to shape me perfectly. Lord, thou hast called me fourth, I turn and call on thee. 15. 'Tis thine to make, mine to rejoice in thine. As, hungering for his mother's face and eyes, The child th
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