WHAT is the soul He would save? -- The being, with all its powers; The root, with its leaves and flowers: All possible good we can crave In this God-given life of ours. From what would He save the soul? -- From contented selfishness, And from bleak unlovingness; From the lower aim's control, From the downward passion's stress. From the hell of an evil choice, When our eyes on His Presence close; From an earth-clogged ear that knows No tone of His tender voice; From a void heart's waste of woes. He saveth thee, soul, for what? -- To be born anew, as a child, In the clear and open thought; In the love that envieth not; The desires all undefiled. To enrich thee with every gift That His fatherly thought can plan: Front belittling sins to lift Thee up to the angel swift, And the stature of a man! He saveth thee, soul, to be As the cleansing salt and the leaven: His mind and His will to see; To be faithful and strong and free In the truth, which alone is heaven. Not to wait for the Far-away, Wrapped in Eden-dreams, -- but now To become a warmth, a ray, O Christ, of Thy deathless day! For the Life of our life art Thou! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: JOSEPH DIXON by EDGAR LEE MASTERS TO MY MYRTLE [MIRTLE] by WILLIAM BLAKE A CELEBRATION OF CHARIS: 5. HIS DISCOURSE WITH CUPID by BEN JONSON WHAT THE SONNET IS by EUGENE JACOB LEE-HAMILTON JOURNEY by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY THE EAGLE AND THE MOLE by ELINOR WYLIE THE BARD'S EXCUSE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE MORAL FABLES: THE FOX, THE WOLF, AND THE CADGER by AESOP |