Quinquagesima Sunday

written by


« Reload image

Sweet Dove! the softest, steadiest plume,
  In all the sunbright sky,
Brightening in ever-changeful bloom
  As breezes change on high; -

Sweet Leaf! the pledge of peace and mirth,
  "Long sought, and lately won,"
Blessed increase of reviving Earth,
  When first it felt the Sun; -

Sweet Rainbow! pride of summer days,
  High set at Heaven's command,
Though into drear and dusky haze
  Thou melt on either hand; -

Dear tokens of a pardoning God,
  We hail ye, one and all,
As when our fathers walked abroad,
  Freed from their twelvemonth's thrall.

How joyful from the imprisoning ark
  On the green earth they spring!
Not blither, after showers, the lark
  Mounts up with glistening wing.

So home-bound sailors spring to shore,
  Two oceans safely past;
So happy souls, when life is o'er,
  Plunge in this empyreal vast.

What wins their first and fondest gaze
  In all the blissful field,
And keeps it through a thousand days?
  Love face to face revealed:

Love imaged in that cordial look
  Our Lord in Eden bends
On souls that sin and earth forsook
  In time to die His friends.

And what most welcome and serene
  Dawns on the Patriarch's eye,
In all the emerging hills so green,
  In all the brightening sky?

What but the gentle rainbow's gleam,
  Soothing the wearied sight,
That cannot bear the solar beam,
  With soft undazzling light?

Lord, if our fathers turned to Thee
  With such adoring gaze,
Wondering frail man Thy light should see
  Without Thy scorching blaze;

Where is our love, and where our hearts,
  We who have seen Thy Son,
Have tried Thy Spirit's winning arts,
  And yet we are not won?

The Son of God in radiance beamed
  Too bright for us to scan,
But we may face the rays that streamed
  From the mild Son of Man.

There, parted into rainbow hues,
  In sweet harmonious strife
We see celestial love diffuse
  Its light o'er Jesus' life.

God, by His bow, vouchsafes to write
  This truth in Heaven above:
As every lovely hue is Light,
  So every grace is Love.

© John Keble