Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Souls' Rising. by George MacDonald
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

The Souls' Rising.

    By George MacDonald



        See how the storm of life ascends
    Up through the shadow of the world!
    Beyond our gaze the line extends,
    Like wreaths of vapour tempest-hurled!
    Grasp tighter, brother, lest the storm
    Should sweep us down from where we stand,
    And we may catch some human form
    We know, amongst the straining band.

        See! see in yonder misty cloud
    One whirlwind sweep, and we shall hear
    The voice that waxes yet more loud
    And louder still approaching near!

        Tremble not, brother, fear not thou,
    For yonder wild and mystic strain
    Will bring before us strangely now
    The visions of our youth again!

        Listen! oh listen!
    See how its eyeballs roll and glisten
    With a wild and fearful stare
    Upwards through the shining air,
    Or backwards with averted look,
    As a child were gazing at a book
    Full of tales of fear and dread,
    When the thick night-wind came hollow and dead.

        Round about it, wavering and light.
    As the moths flock round a candle at night,
    A crowd of phantoms sheeted and dumb
    Strain to its words as they shrilly come:
    Brother, my brother, dost thou hear?
    They pierce through the tumult sharp and clear!

        "The rush of speed is on my soul,
    My eyes are blind with things I see;
    I cannot grasp the awful whole,
    I cannot gird the mystery!
    The mountains sweep like mist away;
    The great sea shakes like flakes of fire;
    The rush of things I cannot see
    Is mounting upward higher and higher!
    Oh! life was still and full of calm
    In yonder spot of earthly ground,
    But now it rolls a thunder-psalm,
    Its voices drown my ear in sound!
    Would God I were a child again
    To nurse the seeds of faith and power;
    I might have clasped in wisdom then
    A wing to beat this awful hour!
    The dullest things would take my marks--
    They took my marks like drifted snow--
    God! how the footsteps rise in sparks,
    Rise like myself and onward go!
    Have pity, O ye driving things
    That once like me had human form!
    For I am driven for lack of wings
    A shreddy cloud before the storm!"

        How its words went through me then,
    Like a long forgotten pang,
    Till the storm's embrace again
    Swept it far with sudden clang!--
    Ah, methinks I see it still!
    Let us follow it, my brother,
    Keeping close to one another,
    Blessing God for might of will!
    Closer, closer, side by side!
    Ours are wings that deftly glide
    Upwards, downwards, and crosswise
    Flashing past our ears and eyes,
    Splitting up the comet-tracks
    With a whirlwind at our backs!

        How the sky is blackening!
    Yet the race is never slackening;
    Swift, continual, and strong,
    Streams the torrent slope along,
    Like a tidal surge of faces
    Molten into one despair;
    Each the other now displaces,
    A continual whirl of spaces;
    Ah, my fainting eyesight reels
    As I strive in vain to stare
    On a thousand turning wheels
    Dimly in the gloom descending,
    Faces with each other blending!--
    Let us beat the vapours back,
    We are yet upon his track.

        Didst thou see a spirit halt
    Upright on a cloudy peak,
    As the lightning's horrid fault
    Smote a gash into the cheek
    Of the grinning thunder-cloud
    Which doth still besiege and crowd
    Upward from the nether pits
    Where the monster Chaos sits,
    Building o'er the fleeing rack
    Roofs of thunder long and black?
    Yes, I see it! I will shout
    Till I stop the horrid rout.
    Ho, ho! spirit-phantom, tell
    Is thy path to heaven or hell?
    We would hear thee yet again,
    What thy standing amongst men,
    What thy former history,
    And thy hope of things to be!
    Wisdom still we gain from hearing:
    We would know, we would know
    Whither thou art steering--
    Unto weal or woe!


        Ah, I cannot hear it speaking!
    Yet it seems as it were seeking
    Through our eyes our souls to reach
    With a quaint mysterious speech,
    As with stretched and crossing palms
    One were tracing diagrams
    On the ebbing of the beach,
    Till with wild unmeasured dance
    All the tiptoe waves advance,
    Seize him by the shoulder, cover,
    Turn him up and toss him over:
    He is vanished from our sight,
    Nothing mars the quiet night
    Save a speck of gloom afar
    Like the ruin of a star!

        Brother, streams it ever so,
    Such a torrent tide of woe?
    Ah, I know not; let us haste
    Upwards from this dreary waste,
    Up to where like music flowing
    Gentler feet are ever going,
    Streams of life encircling run
    Round about the spirit-sun!
    Up beyond the storm and rush
    With our lesson let us rise!
    Lo, the morning's golden flush
    Meets us midway in the skies!
    Perished all the dream and strife!
    Death is swallowed up of Life!



Extra Info:



Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 350 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites