AE in the Irish Theosophist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about AE in the Irish Theosophist.

AE in the Irish Theosophist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about AE in the Irish Theosophist.
inconceivable while there existed strife and suffering in nature.  Nowhere could there be found refuge; drawing near unto the divine, this pain only became wider, more intense, almost insufferable, feeling and assimilating the vastness of divine sorrow brooding over the unreclaimed deep.  This pity, this consciousness of pain, not her own, filling her own, filling her life, marked her out from everyone he knew.  She seemed to him as one consecrated.  Then this lover in his mystic passion passed in the contemplation of his well-beloved from the earthly to the invisible soul.  He saw behind and around her a form unseen by others; a form, spiritual, pathetic, of unimaginable beauty, on which the eternal powers kept watch, which they nourished with their own life, and on which they inflicted their own pain.  This form was crowned, but with a keen-pointed radiance from which there fell a shadowy dropping.  As he walked to and fro in the white dawn he made for her a song, and inscribed it.

To One Consecrated

Your paths were all unknown to us: 
We were so far away from you,
We mixed in thought your spirit thus—­
With whiteness, stars of gold, and dew.

The mighty mother nourished you: 
Her breath blew from her mystic bowers: 
Their elfin glimmer floated through
The pureness of your shadowy hours.

The mighty mother made you wise;
Gave love that clears the hidden ways: 
Her glooms were glory to your eyes;
Her darkness but the Fount of Days.

She made all gentleness in you,
And beauty radiant as the morn’s: 
She made our joy in yours, then threw
Upon your head a crown of thorns.

Your eyes are filled with tender light,
For those whose eyes are dim with tears;
They see your brow is crowned and bright,
But not its ring of wounding spears.

We can imagine no discomfiture while the heavenly light shines through us.  Harvey, though he thought with humility of his past as impotent and ignoble in respect of action, felt with his rich vivid consciousness that he was capable of entering into her subtlest emotions.  He could not think of the future without her; he could not give up the hope of drawing nigh with her to those mysteries of life which haunted them both.  His thought, companioned by her, went ranging down many a mystic year.  He began to see strange possibilities, flashes as of old power, divine magic to which all the world responded, and so on till the thought trembled in vistas ending in a haze of flame.  Meanwhile, around him was summer:  gladness and youth were in his heart, and so he went on dreaming—­ forecasting for the earth and its people a future which belongs only to the spiritual soul—­dreaming of happy years even as a child dreams.

Later on that evening, while Olive was sitting in her garden, Dr. Rayne came out and handed her a bundle of magazines.

“There are some things in these which may interest you, Olive,” he said:  “Young Harvey writes for them, I understand.  I looked over one or two.  They are too mystical for me.  You will hardly find them mystical enough.”

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AE in the Irish Theosophist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.