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    Death and Birth

    by George MacDonald
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    Page 1 of 6
    A Symbol.

    [Sidenote: He looks from his window on the midnight town.]

    'Tis the midnight hour; I heard
    The city clocks give out the word.
    Seldom are the lamp-rays shed
    On the quick foot-farer's head,
    As I sit at my window old,
    Looking out into the cold,
    Down along the narrowing street
    Stretching out below my feet,
    From base of this primeval block,
    My old home's foundation rock.

    [Sidenote: He renounces Beauty the body for Truth the soul.]

    How her windows are uplighted!
    God in heaven! for this I slighted,
    Star-profound immensity
    Brooding ever in the sky!
    What an earthly constellation
    Fills those chambers with vibration!
    Fleeting, gliding, weaving, parting;
    Light of jewels! flash of eyes!
    Meeting, changing, wreathing, darting,
    In a cloud of rainbow-dyes.
    Soul of light, her eyes are floating
    Hither, thither, through the cloud,
    Wandering planets, seeking, noting
    Chosen stars amid the crowd.
    Who, as centre-source of motion
    Draws those dark orbs' spirit-ocean?
    All the orbs on which they turn
    Sudden with shooting radiance burn;
    Mine I felt grow dim with sheen,
    Sending tribute to their queen:
    Queen of all the slaves of show--
    Queen of Truth's free nobles--no.
    She my wandering eyes might chain,
    Fill my throbbing burning brain:
    Beauty lacking Truth within

    Spirit-homage cannot win.
    Will is strong, though feeling waver
    Like the sea to its enslaver--
    Strong as hills that bar the sea
    With the word of the decree.

    [Sidenote: The Resentment of Genius at the thumbscrews of worldly talent.]

    That passing shadow in the street!
    Well I know it, as is meet!
    Did he not, before her face,
    Seek to brand me with disgrace?
    From the chiselled lips of wit
    Let the fire-flakes lightly flit,
    Scorching as the snow that fell
    On the damned in Dante's hell?
    With keen-worded opposition,
    playful, merciless precision,
    Mocking the romance of Youth,
    Standing on the sphere of Truth,
    He on worldly wisdom's plane
    Rolled it to and fro amain.--
    Doubtless there it could not lie,
    Or walk an orbit but the sky.--
    I, who glowed in every limb,
    Knowing, could not answer him;
    But I longed yet more to be
    What I saw he could not see.
    So I thank him, for he taught
    What his wisdom never sought.
    It were sweet to make him burn
    With his poverty in turn,
    Shaming him in those bright eyes,
    Which to him are more than skies!
    Whither? whither? Heart, thou knowest
    Side by side with him thou goest,
    If thou lend thyself to aught
    But forgiving, saving thought.

    [Sidenote: Repentance.]

    [Sidenote: The recess of the window a niche, wherein he
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