120. The Married and the Single
A Fragment from St. Gregory Nazianzen.
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{202}
AS, when the hand some mimic form would paint, |
It marks its purpose first in shadows faint, |
And next, its store of varied hues applies, |
Till outlines fade, and the full limbs arise; |
So in the earlier school of sacred lore |
The Virgin-life no claim of honour bore, |
While in Religion's youth the Law held sway, |
And traced in symbols dim that better way. |
But, when the Christ came by a Virgin-birth,— |
His radiant passage from high heaven to earth,— |
And, spurning father for His mortal state, |
Did Eve and all her daughters consecrate, |
Solved fleshly laws, and in the letter's place |
Gave us the Spirit and the Word of Grace, |
Then shone the glorious Celibate at length, |
Robed in the dazzling lightnings of its strength, {203} |
Surpassing spells of earth and marriage vow, |
As soul the body, heaven this world below, |
The eternal peace of saints life's troubled span, |
And the high throne of God, the haunts of man. |
So now there circles round the King of Light |
A heaven on earth, a blameless court and bright, |
Aiming as emblems of their God to shine, |
Christ in their heart, and on their brow His Sign,— |
Soft funeral lights in the world's twilight dim, |
Loving their God, and ever loved by Him. |
Ye countless multitudes, content to bow |
To the soft thraldom of the marriage vow! |
I mark your haughty step, your froward gaze, |
Gems deck your hair, and silk your limbs arrays; |
Come, tell the gain which wedlock has conferr'd |
On man; and then the single shall be heard. |
The married many thus might plead, I ween; |
Right glib their tongue, full confident their mien:— |
"Hear all who live! to whom the nuptial rite |
Has brought the privilege of life and light. |
We, who are wedded, but the law obey |
Stamp'd at creation on our blood and clay, {204} |
What time the Demiurge our line began, |
Oped Adam's side, and out of man drew man. |
Thenceforth let children of a mortal sod |
Honour the law of earth, the primal law of God. |
"List, you shall hear the gifts of price
that lie |
Gathered and bound within the marriage-tie. |
What taught the arts of life, the truths which sleep |
In earth, or highest heaven, or vasty deep? |
What fill'd the mart, and urged the vessel brave |
To link in one fair countries o'er the wave? |
What raised the town? what gave the type and germ |
Of social union, and of sceptre firm? |
What the first husbandman, the glebe to plough, |
And rear the garden, but the marriage vow? |
"Nay, list again! Who seek its kindly
chain, |
A second self, a double presence gain; |
Hands, eyes, and ears, to act or suffer here, |
Till e'en the weak inspire both love and fear,— |
A comrade's sigh, to soothe when cares annoy, |
A comrade's smile, to elevate his joy. {205} |
"Nor say it weds us to a carnal life,
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When want is urgent, fears and vows are rife. |
Light heart is his, who has no yoke at home, |
Scant prayer for blessings, as the seasons
come; |
But wife, and offspring, goods which go or
stay, |
Teach us our need, and make us trust and
pray. |
Take love away, and life would be defaced, |
A ghastly vision on a howling waste, |
Stern, heartless, reft of the sweet spells
which swage |
The throes of passion, and which gladden age. |
No child's sweet pranks, once more to make us
young; |
No ties of place about our heart-strings
flung; |
No public haunts to cheer; no festive tide |
When harmless mirth and smiling wit preside; |
A life which scorns the gifts by heaven
assign'd, |
Nor knows the sympathy of human kind. |
"Prophets and teachers, priests and
victor kings,
|
Deck'd with each grace which heaven-taught
nature brings, |
These were no giant offspring of the earth, |
But to the marriage-promise owed their birth:—
{206} |
Moses and Samuel, David, David's Son, |
The blessed Tishbite, the more blessed John, |
The sacred Twelve in apostolic choir, |
Strong-hearted Paul, instinct with seraph fire, |
And others, now or erst, who to high heaven aspire. |
Bethink ye; should the single state be best, |
Yet who the single, but my offspring blest? |
My sons, be still, nor with your parents strive: |
They coupled in their day, and so ye live." |
Thus marriage pleads. Now let her rival speak— |
Dim is her downcast eye, and pale her cheek; |
Untrimm'd her gear; no sandals on her feet; |
A sparest form for austere tenant meet. |
She drops her veil her modest face around, |
And her lips open, but we hear no sound. |
I will address her:—"Hail, O child of Heaven, |
Glorious within! to whom a post is given |
Hard by the Throne where angels bow and fear, |
E'en while thou hast a name and mission here, |
O deign thy voice, unveil thy brow and see |
Thy ready guard and minister in me. |
Oft hast thou come heaven-wafted to my breast, |
Bright Spirit! so come again, and give me rest." {207} |
... "Ah, who has hither drawn my backward
feet, |
Changing for worldly strife my lone retreat? |
Where, in the silent chant of holy deeds, |
I praise my God, and tend the sick soul's needs; |
By toils of day, and vigils of the night, |
By gushing tears, and blessed lustral rite. |
I have no sway amid the crowd, no art |
In speech, no place in council or in mart. |
Nor human law, nor judges throned on high, |
Smile on my face, and to my words reply. |
Let others seek earth's honours; be it mine |
One law to cherish, and to track one line, |
Straight on towards heaven to press with single
bent, |
To know and love my God, and then to die con-
tent." |
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Oxford.
1834. |