But this word the Master said
Long ago and far away,
Silent and forgotten lay
Buried with the silent dead,
Where the sands of Egypt spread
Sea-like, tawny billows heaping
Over ancient cities sleeping,
While the River Nile between
Rolls its summer flood of green
Rolls its autumn flood of red:
There the word the Master said,
Written on a frail papyrus, wrinkled, scorched by
fire, and torn,
Hidden by God’s hand was waiting for its resurrection
morn.
Now
at last the buried word
By
the delving spade is found,
Sleeping
in the quiet ground.
Now
the call of life is heard:
Rise
again, and like a bird,
Fly
abroad on wings of gladness
Through
the darkness and the sadness,
Of
the toiling age, and sing
Sweeter
than the voice of Spring,
Till
the hearts of men are stirred
By
the music of the word,—
Gospel for the heavy-laden, answer to
the labourer’s cry:
“Raise the stone, and thou shall
find me; cleave the wood and there
am
I.”
II
LEGEND
Brother-men who look for Jesus, long
to see Him close and clear,
Hearken to the tale of Felix, how he found the Master
near.
Born in Egypt, ’neath the shadow
of the crumbling gods of night,
He forsook the ancient darkness, turned his young
heart toward the Light.
Seeking Christ, in vain he waited for
the vision of the Lord;
Vainly pondered many volumes where the
creeds of men were stored;
Vainly shut himself in silence, keeping
vigil night and day;
Vainly haunted shrines and churches where
the Christians came to pray.
One by one he dropped the duties of the
common life of care,
Broke the human ties that bound him, laid
his spirit waste and bare,
Hoping that the Lord would enter that
deserted dwelling-place,
And reward the loss of all things with
the vision of His face.
Still the blessed vision tarried; still
the light was unrevealed;
Still the Master, dim and distant, kept
His countenance concealed.
Fainter grew the hope of finding, wearier
grew the fruitless quest;
Prayer and penitence and fasting gave
no comfort, brought no rest.
Lingering in the darkened temple, ere
the lamp of faith went out,
Felix knelt before the altar, lonely,
sad, and full of doubt.
“Hear me, O my Lord and Master,”
from the altar-step he cried,
“Let my one desire be granted, let
my hope be satisfied!
“Only once I long to see Thee, in
the fulness of Thy grace:
Break the clouds that now enfold Thee,
with the sunrise of Thy face!
“All that men desire and treasure
have I counted loss for Thee;
Every hope have I forsaken, save this
one, my Lord to see.