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O MOON of Love, Whose radiant face
Illumes a might we know not here,
Whose wine’s distilled in sigh and tear,
Whose cups are souls, whose flagon’s grace.
For Thee the world directs its gaze
Upon the firmament on high,
The while another subtler sky
Is filled and gladdened with Thy rays.
The arches where the enlightened kneel
Are Thy twin brows. Thou art the priest
Of temple as of mosque. The least
And greatest seek from Thee their weal.
Of self unheeding, out of range
Of other minds the lover’s heart
Lives from the circling world apart;
His words are wild, his gestures strange.
Earnest in search, the goal in sight,
Unflagging, spurred by new desire,
Forward he presses ever higher;
His eyes are filled with hopeful light.
His path towards the unknown land
He holds, and only craves of Thee
To lean in time of agony
A step or two upon Thy hand.
If Thou and he be twain, the soul
That loves must natheless onward fare
Through bane and bliss from stair to stair
Until it reach in Thee its goal.
NOTE.—The words “if Thou and he be twain” in the last verse are an allusion to the doctrine that each individual is a portion of the universal soul, which is God.