“THE PRAYER OF NATURE.
“Father of Light! great
God of Heaven!
Hear’st
thou the accents of despair?
Can guilt like man’s
be e’er forgiven?
Can vice atone
for crimes by prayer?
Father of Light, on thee I
call!
Thou see’st
my soul is dark within;
Thou who canst mark the sparrow’s
fall,
Avert from me
the death of sin.
No shrine I seek, to sects
unknown,
Oh point to me
the path of truth!
Thy dread omnipotence I own,
Spare, yet amend,
the faults of youth.
Let bigots rear a gloomy fane,
Let superstition
hail the pile,
Let priests, to spread their
sable reign,
With tales of
mystic rites beguile.
Shall man confine his Maker’s
sway
To Gothic domes
of mouldering stone?
Thy temple is the face of
day;
Earth, ocean,
heaven, thy boundless throne.
Shall man condemn his race
to hell
Unless they bend
in pompous form;
Tell us that all, for one
who fell,
Must perish in
the mingling storm?
Shall each pretend to reach
the skies,
Yet doom his brother
to expire,
Whose soul a different hope
supplies,
Or doctrines less
severe inspire?
Shall these, by creeds they
can’t expound,
Prepare a fancied
bliss or woe?
Shall reptiles, grovelling
on the ground,
Their great Creator’s
purpose know?
Shall those who live for self
alone,
Whose years float
on in daily crime—
Shall they by Faith for guilt
atone,
And live beyond
the bounds of Time?
Father! no prophet’s
laws I seek,—
Thy laws
in Nature’s works appear;—
I own myself corrupt and weak,
Yet will I pray,
for thou wilt hear!
Thou, who canst guide the
wandering star
Through trackless
realms of AEther’s space;
Who calm’st the elemental
war,
Whose hand from
pole to pole I trace:
Thou, who in wisdom placed
me here,
Who, when thou
wilt, can take me hence,
Ah! whilst I tread this earthly
sphere,
Extend to me thy
wide defence.
To Thee, my God, to Thee I
call!
Whatever weal
or woe betide,
By thy command I rise or fall,
In thy protection
I confide.
If, when this dust to dust
restored,
My soul shall
float on airy wing,
How shall thy glorious name
adored,
Inspire her feeble
voice to sing!
But, if this fleeting spirit
share
With clay the
grave’s eternal bed,
While life yet throbs, I raise
my prayer,
Though doom’d
no more to quit the dead.
To Thee I breathe my humble
strain,
Grateful for all
thy mercies past,
And hope, my God, to thee
again
This erring life
may fly at last.
“29th Dec. 1806.
BYRON.”