Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Peccavi, Domine by Archibald Lampman
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Peccavi, Domine

    By Archibald Lampman



    O Power to whom this earthly clime
    Is but an atom in the whole,
    O Poet-heart of Space and Time,
    O Maker and Immortal Soul,
    Within whose glowing rings are bound,
    Out of whose sleepless heart had birth
    The cloudy blue, the starry round,
    And this small miracle of earth:

    Who liv'st in every living thing,
    And all things are thy script and chart,
    Who rid'st upon the eagle's wing,
    And yearnest in the human heart;
    O Riddle with a single clue,
    Love, deathless, protean, secure,
    The ever old, the ever new,
    O Energy, serene and pure.

    Thou, who art also part of me,
    Whose glory I have sometime seen,
    O Vision of the Ought-to-be,
    O Memory of the Might-have-been,
    I have had glimpses of thy way,
    And moved with winds and walked with stars,
    But, weary, I have fallen astray,
    And, wounded, who shall count my scars?

    O Master, all my strength is gone;
    Unto the very earth I bow;
    I have no light to lead me on;
    With aching heart and burning brow,
    I lie as one that travaileth
    In sorrow more than he can bear;
    I sit in darkness as of death,
    And scatter dust upon my hair.

    The God within my soul hath slept,
    And I have shamed the nobler rule;
    O Master, I have whined and crept;
    O Spirit, I have played the fool.
    Like him of old upon whose head
    His follies hung in dark arrears,
    I groan and travail in my bed,
    And water it with bitter tears.

    I stand upon thy mountain-heads,
    And gaze until mine eyes are dim;
    The golden morning glows and spreads;
    The hoary vapours break and swim.
    I see thy blossoming fields, divine,
    Thy shining clouds, thy blessed trees -
    And then that broken soul of mine -
    How much less beautiful than these!

    O Spirit, passionless, but kind,
    Is there in all the world, I cry,
    Another one so base and blind,
    Another one so weak as I?
    O Power, unchangeable, but just,
    Impute this one good thing to me,
    I sink my spirit to the dust
    In utter dumb humility.



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