I.
A death-like dew was falling
On the herbs and the grassy
ground;
The stars to their bournes prest forward,
Night cloaked the hills around.
He thought of a night long past,
Of the ladder that reached
to heaven,
The Face that shone above it,
The pillar, his pillows of
even.
II.
From out of the sleeve of the darkness
Was thrust an arm of strength,
Long he wrestled for mastery,
But begged for blessing at
length.
White fear fell on him at dawn,
As the Nameless spake with
him then;
“Prevailer and Prince,” called
He him,
“A power with God and
with men.”
And, alone, the lame wrestler mused:
“The Face of God is
this place!
Ah me and my life is preserved,
Yet God have I seen face to
face!”
III.
Life’s darkness is background for
God,
For unsleeping Love’s
high command,
And the shadowy heap of each life
Is revealed at the touch of
His hand.
And the arm of Love doth wrestle
All night by the fords we
cross,
To shrivel our sinews of self
And give His blessing for
loss.
Night shows the houses of heaven,
O pilgrim for life’s
journey shod!
And from out the sleeve of darkness
Is thrust the arm of God.