WILD air, world-mothering air, | |
Nestling me everywhere, | |
That each eyelash or hair | |
Girdles; goes home betwixt | |
The fleeciest, frailest-flixed | |
Snowflake; that ’s fairly mixed | |
With, riddles, and is rife | |
In every least thing’s life; | |
This needful, never spent, | |
And nursing element; | |
My more than meat and drink, | |
My meal at every wink; | |
This air, which, by life’s law, | |
My lung must draw and draw | |
Now but to breathe its praise, | |
Minds me in many ways | |
Of her who not only | |
Gave God’s infinity | |
Dwindled to infancy | |
Welcome in womb and breast, | |
Birth, milk, and all the rest | |
But mothers each new grace | |
That does now reach our race— | |
Mary Immaculate, | |
Merely a woman, yet | |
Whose presence, power is | |
Great as no goddess’s | |
Was deemèd, dreamèd; who | |
This one work has to do— | |
Let all God’s glory through, | |
God’s glory which would go | |
Through her and from her flow | |
Off, and no way but so. | |
|
I say that we are wound | |
With mercy round and round | |
As if with air: the same | |
Is Mary, more by name. | |
She, wild web, wondrous robe, | |
Mantles the guilty globe, | |
Since God has let dispense | |
Her prayers his providence: | |
Nay, more than almoner, | |
The sweet alms’ self is her | |
And men are meant to share | |
Her life as life does air. | |
If I have understood, | |
She holds high motherhood | |
Towards all our ghostly good | |
And plays in grace her part | |
About man’s beating heart, | |
Laying, like air’s fine flood, | |
The deathdance in his blood; | |
Yet no part but what will | |
Be Christ our Saviour still. | |
Of her flesh he took flesh: | |
He does take fresh and fresh, | |
Though much the mystery how, | |
Not flesh but spirit now | |
And makes, O marvellous! | |
New Nazareths in us, | |
Where she shall yet conceive | |
Him, morning, noon, and eve; | |
New Bethlems, and he born | |
There, evening, noon, and morn— | |
Bethlem or Nazareth, | |
Men here may draw like breath | |
More Christ and baffle death; | |
Who, born so, comes to be | |
New self and nobler me | |
In each one and each one | |
More makes, when all is done, | |
Both God’s and Mary’s Son. | |
Again, look overhead | |
How air is azurèd; | |
O how! nay do but stand | |
Where you can lift your hand | |
Skywards: rich, rich it laps | |
Round the four fingergaps. | |
Yet such a sapphire-shot, | |
Charged, steepèd sky will not | |
Stain light. Yea, mark you this: | |
It does no prejudice. | |
The glass-blue days are those | |
When every colour glows, | |
Each shape and shadow shows. | |
Blue be it: this blue heaven | |
The seven or seven times seven | |
Hued sunbeam will transmit | |
Perfect, not alter it. | |
Or if there does some soft, | |
On things aloof, aloft, | |
Bloom breathe, that one breath more | |
Earth is the fairer for. | |
Whereas did air not make | |
This bath of blue and slake | |
His fire, the sun would shake, | |
A blear and blinding ball | |
With blackness bound, and all | |
The thick stars round him roll | |
Flashing like flecks of coal, | |
Quartz-fret, or sparks of salt, | |
In grimy vasty vault. | |
So God was god of old: | |
A mother came to mould | |
Those limbs like ours which are | |
What must make our daystar | |
Much dearer to mankind; | |
Whose glory bare would blind | |
Or less would win man’s mind. | |
Through her we may see him | |
Made sweeter, not made dim, | |
And her hand leaves his light | |
Sifted to suit our sight. | |
Be thou then, O thou dear | |
Mother, my atmosphere; | |
My happier world, wherein | |
To wend and meet no sin; | |
Above me, round me lie | |
Fronting my froward eye | |
With sweet and scarless sky; | |
Stir in my ears, speak there | |
Of God’s love, O live air, | |
Of patience, penance, prayer: | |
World-mothering air, air wild, | |
Wound with thee, in thee isled, | |
Fold home, fast fold thy child. |