Desire

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Desire

Thou, who dost dwell alone⁠—

Thou, who dost know thine own⁠—

Thou, to whom all are known

From the cradle to the grave⁠—

Save, oh, save.

From the world’s temptations,

From tribulations;

From that fierce anguish

Wherein we languish;

From that torpor deep

Wherein we lie asleep,

Heavy as death, cold as the grave;

Save, oh, save.

When the Soul, growing clearer,

Sees God no nearer:

When the Soul, mounting higher,

To God comes no nigher:

But the arch-fiend Pride

Mounts at her side,

Foiling her high emprize,

Sealing her eagle eyes,

And, when she fain would soar,

Makes idols to adore;

Changing the pure emotion

Of her high devotion,

To a skin-deep sense

Of her own eloquence:

Strong to deceive, strong to enslave⁠—

Save, oh, save.

From the ingrain’d fashion

Of this earthly nature

That mars thy creature.

From grief, that is but passion;

From mirth, that is but feigning;

From tears, that bring no healing;

From wild and weak complaining;

Thine old strength revealing,

Save, oh, save.

From doubt, where all is double:

Where wise men are not strong:

Where comfort turns to trouble:

Where just men suffer wrong:

Where sorrow treads on joy:

Where sweet things soonest cloy:

Where faiths are built on dust:

Where Love is half mistrust,

Hungry, and barren, and sharp as the sea;

Oh, set us free.

O let the false dream fly

Where our sick souls do lie

Tossing continually.

O where thy voice doth come

Let all doubts be dumb:

Let all words be mild:

All strifes be reconcil’d:

All pains beguil’d.

Light bring no blindness;

Love no unkindness;

Knowledge no ruin;

Fear no undoing.

From the cradle to the grave,

Save, oh, save.