A Hidden Life

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III.

Hills retreat on either hand, Sinking down into the plain; Slowly through the level land Glides the river to the main. What is that before me, white, Gleaming through the dusky air? Dimmer in the gathering night; Still beheld, I know not where?

Is it but a chalky ridge, Bared by many a trodden mark? Or a river-spanning bridge, Miles away into the dark? Or the foremost leaping waves Of the everlasting sea,
Where the Undivided laves Time with its eternity?

No, tis but an eye-made sight, In my brain a fancied gleam; Or a thousand things as white, Set in darkness, well might seem. There it wavers, shines, is gone; What it is I cannot tell; When the morning star hath shone, I shall see and know it well.

Onward, onward through the night! Matters it I cannot see?
I am moving in a might,
Dwelling in the dark and me. Up or down, or here or there, I can never be alone;
My own being tells me where God is as the Father known.



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