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d inly swell such mighty floods of love, Unutterable longing and desire, For that celestial, blessed home above, The soul springs upward like the mounting fire, Up, through the lessening shadows on its way, While, in its raptured vision, grows more clear The calm, the high, illimitable day To which it draws more near and yet more near. Draws near? Alas! its brief, its waning strength Upward no more the fetters' weight can bear: It falters,--pauses,--sinks; and, sunk at length, Plucks at its chain in frenzy and despair. Not forever fallen! Not in eternal prison! No! hell with fire of pain Melteth apart its chain; Heaven doth once more constrain: It hath arisen! And never, never again, thus to fall low? Ah, no! Terror, Remorse, and Woe, Vainly they pierced it through with many sorrows; Hell shall regain it,--thousand times regain it; But can detain it Only awhile from ruthful Heaven's to-morrows. That sin is suffering, It knows,--it knows this thing; And yet it courts the sting That deeply pains it; It knows that in the cup The sweet is but a sup, That Sorrow fills it up, And who drinks drains it. It knows; who runs may read. But, when the fetters dazzle, heaven's far joy seems dim; And 'tis not life but so to be inwound. A little while, and then--behold it bleed With madness of its throes to be unbound! It knows. But when the sudden stress Of passion is resistlessness, It drags the flood that sweeps away, For anchorage, or hold, or stay, Or saving rock of stableness, And there is none,-- No underlying fixedness to fasten on: Unsounded depths; unsteadfast seas; Wavering, yielding, bottomless depths: But these! Yea, sometimes seemeth gone The Everlasting Arm we lean upon! So blind, as well as maimed and halt and lame, What sometimes makes it see? Oppressed with guilt and gnawed upon of shame, What comes upon it so, Faster and faster stealing, Flooding it like an air or sea Of warm and golden feeling?
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