Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Reasonable Protestation by John Collings Squire, Sir
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A Reasonable Protestation

    By John Collings Squire, Sir




        [To F., who complained of his vagueness and lack of dogmatic statement]

        Not, I suppose, since I deny
        Appearance is reality,
        And doubt the substance of the earth
        Does your remonstrance come to birth;
        Not that at once I both affirm
        'Tis not the skin that makes the worm
        And every tactile thing with mass
        Must find its symbol in the grass
        And with a cool conviction say
        Even a critic's more than clay
        And every dog outlives his day.
        This kind of vagueness suits your view,
        You would not carp at it; for you
        Did never stand with those who take
        Their pleasures in a world opaque.
        For you a tree would never be
        Lovely were it but a tree,
        And earthly splendours never splendid
        If by transience unattended.
        Your eyes are on a farther shore
        Than any of earth; nor do adore
        As godhead God's dead hieroglyph.
        Nor would you be perturbed if
        Some prophet with a voice of thunder
        And avalanche arm should blast and founder
        The logical pillars that maintain
        This visible world which loads the brain,
        Loads the brain and withers the heart
        And holds man from his God apart.

        But still with you remains the craving
        For some more solid substance, having
        Surface to touch, colour to see,
        And form compact in symmetry.
        You are not satisfied with these
        Vague throbbings, nameless ecstasies,
        Nor can your spirit find delight
        In an amorphic great white light.
        Not with such sickles can you reap;
        If a dense earth you cannot keep
        You want a dense heaven as substitute
        With trees of plump celestial fruit,
        Red apples, golden pomegranates,
        And a river flowing by tall gates
        Of topaz and of chrysolite
        And walls of twenty cubits height.

        Frank, you cry out against the age!
        Nor you nor I can disengage
        Ourselves from that in which we live
        Nor seize on things God does not give.
        Thirsty as you, perhaps, I long
        For courtyards of eternal song,
        Even as yours my feet would stray
        In a city where 'tis always day
        And a green spontaneous leafy garden
        With God in the middle for a warden;
        But though I hope with strengthening faith
        To taste when I have traversed death
        The unimaginable sweetness
        Of certitude of such concreteness,
        How should I draw the hue and scope
        Of substances I only hope
        Or blaze upon a paper screen
        The evidence of things not seen?
        This art of ours but grows and stirs
        Experience when it registers,
        And you know well as I know well
        This autumn of time in which we dwell
        Is not an age of revelations
        Solid as once, but intimations
        That touch us with warm misty fingers
        Leaving a nameless sense that lingers
        That sight is blind and Time's a snare
        And earth less solid than the air
        And deep below all seeming things
        There sits a steady king of kings
        A radiant ageless permanence,
        A quenchless fount of virtue whence
        We draw our life; a sense that makes
        A staunch conviction nothing shakes
        Of our own immortality.
        And though, being man, with certain glee
        I eat and drink, though I suffer pain,
        And love and hate and love again
        Well or in mode contemptible,
        Thus shackled by the body's spell
        I see through pupils of the beast
        Though it be faint and blurred with mist
        A Star that travels in the East.
        I see what I can, not what I will.
        In things that move, things that are still;
        Thin motion, even cloudier rest,
        I see the symbols God hath drest.
        The moveless trees, the trees that wave
        The clouds that heavenly highways have,
        Horses that run, rocks that are fixt,
        Streams that have rest and motion mixt,
        The main with its abiding flux,
        The wind that up my chimney sucks
        A mounting waterfall of flame,
        Sticks, straws, dust, beetles and that same
        Old blazing sun the Psalmist saw
        A testifier to the law:
        Divinely to the heart they speak
        Saying how they are but weak,
        Wan will-o'-the-wisps on the crystal sea;
        But stays that sea still dark to me.

        Did I now glibly insolent
        Chart the ulterior firmament,
        Would you not know my words were lies,
        Where not my testimonial eyes
        Mortal or spiritual lodge,
        Mere uncorroborated fudge?
        Praise me, though praise I do not want,
        Rather, that I have cast much cant,
        That what I see and feel I write,
        Read what I can in this dim light
        Granted to me in nether night.
        And though I am vague and shrink to guess
        God's everlasting purposes,
        And never save in perplext dream
        Have caught the least clear-shapen gleam
        Of the great kingdom and the throne
        In the world that lies behind our own,
        I have not lacked my certainties,
        I have not haggard moaned the skies,
        Nor waged unnecessary strife
        Nor scorned nor overvalued life.
        And though you say my attitude
        Is questioning, concede my mood
        Does never bring to tongue or pen
        Accents of gloomy modern men
        Who wail or hail the death of God
        And weigh and measure man the clod,
        Or say they draw reluctant breath
        And musically mourn that Death
        Is a queen omnipotent of woe
        And Life her lean cicisbeo,
        Abject and pale, whom vampire-like
        She playeth with ere she shall strike,
        And pose sad riddles to the Sphinx
        With raven quills in purple inks,
        Then send the boy to fetch more drinks.



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