Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume I. by Jean Ingelow
page 26 of 413 (06%)
page 26 of 413 (06%)
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O that some power would give me Adam's eyes! O for the straight simplicity of Eve! For I see nought, or grow, poor fool, too wise With seeing to believe. Exemplars may be heaped until they hide The rules that they were made to render plain; Love may be watched, her nature to decide, Until love's self doth wane. Ah me! and when forgotten and foregone We leave the learning of departed days, And cease the generations past to con, Their wisdom and their ways,-- When fain to learn we lean into the dark, And grope to feel the floor of the abyss, Or find the secret boundary lines which mark Where soul and matter kiss-- Fair world! these puzzled souls of ours grow weak With beating their bruised wings against the rim That bounds their utmost flying, when they seek The distant and the dim. We pant, we strain like birds against their wires; Are sick to reach the vast and the beyond;-- And what avails, if still to our desires Those far-off gulfs respond? |
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