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The Elements

MAN is permitted much
  To scan and learn
  In Nature’€™s frame;
Till he well-nigh can tame
Brute mischiefs, and can touch
Invisible things, and turn
All warring ills to purposes of good.
Thus, as a god below,
  He can control,
And harmonize, what seems amiss to flow
As sever’€™d from the whole
And dimly understood.
 
But o’€™er the elements
  One Hand alone,
  One Hand has sway.
What influence day by day
In straiter belt prevents
The impious Ocean, thrown
Alternate o’€™er the ever-sounding shore?
Or who has eye to trace
  How the Plague came?
Forerun the doublings of the Tempest’€™s race?
Or the Air’€™s weight and flame
On a set scale explore?
 
Thus God has will’€™d
That man, when fully skill’€™d,
Still gropes in twilight dim;
Encompass’€™d all his hours
  By fearfullest powers
Inflexible to him.
That so he may discern
  His feebleness,
And e’€™en for earth’€™s success
To Him in wisdom turn,
Who holds for us the keys of either home,
Earth and the world to come.
Other works by John Henry Newman...



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