THE WINGS OF THE DOVE
And I said, Oh that I had wings like a
dove!
Then would I fly away, and be at rest....
I would haste me to a shelter
From the stormy wind and tempest.
Ps. l, 8.
These words are the transcript of
a mood. The writer is not unfolding to us any
of the deep persistent longings of his spirit; he is
telling us of a thought that shadowed his soul for
an hour. Let us look into this mood of his.
It is not his in any unique or even peculiar sense.
In moods, as in manners, history is wont to repeat
itself. The writer of this poem has voiced one
of the great common experiences of humanity. But
let us be quite clear as to what that experience really
is. Let us not be misled by the music and the
seeming unworldliness of these words about winged flight
from a world of trouble and strife. The Psalmist
was not looking heavenward, but earthward, when this
plea for wings broke from his heart. He was moved
to speak as he did, not by the surpassing charm of
a heavenly vision, but by the dark unrest of the earthly
outlook. The emphatic note here is that of departure,
not of destination. It is necessary to remind
ourselves that this is so, for these words have become
the classic of the home-sick soul. They have
been used to voice the farthest and most truly divine
desires of the human heart. And by virtue of
such use they have gathered a meaning which was not
theirs at the beginning. At that meaning we will
presently look, but let us first of all look at this
longing as it stands in the psalm and as it represents
an experience that is threaded through the history
of humanity.
Oh that I had wings ... then would
I fly away. Here the idea of fleeing away suggests
itself as a possible solution of life; and whenever
it comes to a man like this it is a source of weakness.
It is not a desire to find the joys of heaven; it
is a desire to escape the pains of earth. There
is no vista, no wistful distance, no long, alluring
prospect. The soul is hemmed in by its enemies,
crushed down by its burdens, beset on all sides by
the frets of the earthly lot; and there comes a vague
desire to be out of it all. It is not aspiration,
it is evasion. It is not response to the ideal,
it is recoil from the actual. It is not the spell
of that which shall be that is upon the soul, but
the irksomeness or the dreadfulness of that which
is. This is a mood that awaits us all. No
man faces life as it should be faced, but some can
hardly be said to face it at all. Their face
is ever turned towards a seductive vision of quietness.
The solution of life for them is not in a fight, but
in a retreat. Of course we know there is no going
back, and no easy deliverance from the burden and the
battle, but in the thick of any fight there is a great
difference between the man who wants victory and the
man who merely wants a cessation of hostilities.
This plea for wings does not necessarily
betoken ‘a desire to depart.’ It
rather indicates a desire to remain under more favourable
and comfortable conditions. Such a mood is not
the highest and the healthiest experience of the soul.
It is rather something against which we must fight
relentlessly. Very often the longing for wings
results only in lagging footsteps. Picturing
to ourselves the luxury of laying life down will not
help us to face the duty of taking life up. The
secret of enervation is found not in the poverty of
our resources, but in the cowardliness and selfishness
of our attitude towards life. The battle is half
won when we have looked the enemy in the face.
The burden is the better borne as we stoop under the
full weight of it.
Oh that I had wings like a dove!
That is a short-sighted and a selfish desire.
Supposing you had wings, what would you do? Fly
away from the moil of the world and find rest and
shelter for yourself? Is that the best and noblest
thing to desire to do? After all, we know other
and loftier moods than this. We know that staying
is better than going when there is so much to stay
for. We know that working is better than resting
when there is so much to do. We have something
better to think about than a quiet lodgement in the
wilderness, we who live in a world where the strength
of our hands and the warmth of our hearts count for
something. To give your tired brother a lift
is a vastly more profitable occupation than sitting
at the roadside and wishing you could fly. Man,
you ought to be glad that you can walk in
a world where there are so many cripples that want
help.
Oh that I had wings!... then would
I fly away. That desire has never taken any one
to heaven, but it has made them less useful upon earth.
The breath of this desire is able to blight the flowers
of social service. No one would be foolish enough
to indict suburbanism as a mode of life. The
day must surely come when few or none will dwell in
the smoke-grimed heart of the city. But in as
far as a man seeks the fairest suburb open to him in
order that he may see little of, and think little of,
’the darkness of the terrible streets,’
then the very life that restores health to his body
shall sow seeds of disease in his soul.
There is only one way to rest, and
that lies right through the heart of the world’s
work and pain. Rest is not for those who flee
away from life’s difficulties, but for those
who face them. ’Take my yoke ... and ye
shall find rest.’ It were not well for
our own sakes that we had wings. It were not
well for us to be able to avoid the burden-bearing
and the tale of tired days, for God has hidden the
secret of our rest in the heart of our toiling.
They who come unto the City of God come there not by
the easy flight of a dove, but by the long, slow pilgrimage
of unselfishness.
Yet there is a beauty and a fitness
in this longing. It is expressive of more than
the weariness of a world-worn spirit, or the thinly
disguised selfishness of one who fears to pay the
price of life.
When the long working-day of life
is wearing away its last hours and verging towards
the great stillness, the voices of time fall but faintly
on the ear, the adorations and ideals and fashions
and enthusiasms of the world come to mean little to
a man who in his day has followed them as eagerly
as any, and the heart within him asks only for rest.
God, if there be none beside Thee
Dwelling in the light,
Take me out of the world and hide me
Somewhere behind the night.
When, like Simeon the seer with the
Christ-Child in his arms, a man feels that for him
life has said its last word and shown its last wonder
and uttered its last benediction, the desire for rest
is a pure and spiritually normal thing; it is just
the soul’s gaze turned upward where
beyond
these toils
God waiteth us
above,
To give to hand and heart the spoils
Of labour and
of love.
And maybe this mood of which we are
thinking may have a not unworthy place in a strenuous
life. As a tired woman pauses amid her tasks and
looks out of her cottage window to take into her heart
the quiet beauty of the woods where she knows the
ground is fair with lilies, so do we find ourselves
looking out of life’s small casement and thinking
upon the fresh, free, ‘outdoor’ life the
soul will some day live. And such a mood as this
is surely a sign of the soul’s growth, a testimony
of its responsiveness to the divine touch, a sudden
sense of its splendid destiny borne in upon it among
the grey and narrow circumstances of its service.
Oh that I had a dove’s swift, silver
wings,
I said, so I might straightway leave behind
This strife of tongues, this tramp of
feet, and find
A world that knows no struggles and no
stings,
Where all about the soul soft Silence
flings
Her filmy garment, and the vexèd mind
Grows quiet as there floats upon the wind
The soothing slumber-song of dreamless
things.
And lo! there answered me a voice and
said,
Man, thou hast hands and heart, take back
thy prayer;
Covet life’s weariness, go forth
and share
The common suffering and the toil for
bread.
Look not on Rest, although her face be
fair,
And her white hands shall smooth thy narrow
bed.