The Absolute Explains

I

‘O no,’ said It: ‘her lifedoings

Time’s touch hath not destroyed:

They lie their length, with the throbbing things

Akin them, down the Void,

Live, unalloyed.

II

‘Know, Time is toothless, seen all through;

The Present, that men but see,

Is phasmal: since in a sane purview

All things are shaped to be

Eternally.

III

‘Your “Now” is just a gleam, a glide

Across your gazing sense:

With me, “Past”, “Future”, ever abide:

They come not, go not, whence

They are never hence.

IV

‘As one upon a dark highway,

Plodding by lantern-light,

Finds but the reach of its frail ray

Uncovered to his sight,

Though mid the night

V

‘The road lies all its length the same,

Forwardly as at rear,

So, outside what you “Present” name,

Future and Past stand sheer,

Cognate and clear.’

VI

– Thus It: who straightway opened then

The vista called the Past,

Wherein were seen, as fair as when

They seemed they could not last,

Small things and vast.

VII

There were those songs, a score times sung,

With all their tripping tunes,

There were the laughters once that rung,

There those unmatched full moons,

Those idle noons!

VIII

There fadeless, fixed, were dust-dead flowers

Remaining still in blow;

Elsewhere, wild love-makings in bowers;

Hard by, that irised bow

Of years ago.

IX

There were my ever memorable

Glad days of pilgrimage,

Coiled like a precious parchment fell,

Illumined page by page,

Unhurt by age.

X

‘ – Here you see spread those mortal ails

So powerless to restrain

Your young life’s eager hot assails,

With hazards then not plain

Till past their pain.

XI

‘Here you see her who, by these laws

You learn of, still shines on,

As pleasing-pure as erst she was,

Though you think she lies yon,

Graved, glow all gone.

XII

‘Here are those others you used to prize. –

But why go further we?

The Future? – Well, I would advise

You let the future be,

Unshown by me!

XIII

‘’Twould harrow you to see undraped

The scenes in ripe array

That wait your globe – all worked and shaped;

And I’ll not, as I say,

Bare them to-day.

XIV

‘In fine, Time is a mock, – yea, such! –

As he might well confess:

Yet hath he been believed in much,

Though lately, under stress

Of science, less.

XV

‘And hence, of her you asked about

At your first speaking: she

Hath, I assure you, not passed out

Of continuity,

But is in me.

XVI

‘So thus doth Being’s length transcend

Time’s ancient regal claim

To see all lengths begin and end.

“The Fourth Dimension” fame

Bruits as its name.’

New Year’s Eve, 1922