Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
Ambrose
By James Russell Lowell (18191891)N
Than Ambrose, since the world began:
With diet spare and raiment thin
He shielded himself from the father of sin;
With bed of iron and scourgings oft,
His heart to God’s hand as wax made soft.
He sought to know ’tween right and wrong,
Much wrestling with the blessed Word
To make it yield the sense of the Lord,
That he might build a storm-proof creed
To fold the flock in at their need.
Fenced round about with, “The Lord thus saith”;
To himself he fitted the doorway’s size,
Meted the light to the need of his eyes,
And knew, by a sure and inward sign,
That the work of his fingers was divine.
The eternal death who believe not as I”;
And some were boiled, some burned in fire,
Some sawn in twain, that his heart’s desire,
For the good of men’s souls, might be satisfied
By the drawing of all to the righteous side.
In his lonely walk, he saw a youth
Resting himself in the shade of a tree;
It had never been granted him to see
So shining a face, and the good man thought
’T were pity he should not believe as he ought.
And the state of his soul with questions tried;
But the heart of the stranger was hardened indeed,
Nor received the stamp of the one true creed;
And the spirit of Ambrose waxed sore to find
Such face the porch of so narrow a mind.
The shape that answers his own desire,
So each,” said the youth, “in the Law shall find
The figure and features of his mind;
And to each in his mercy hath God allowed
His several pillar of fire and cloud.”
And holy wrath for the young man’s weal:
“Believest thou then, most wretched youth,”
Cried he, “a dividual essence in Truth?
I fear me thy heart is too cramped with sin
To take the Lord and his glory in.”
A fountain of waters sweet and good;
The youth to the streamlet’s brink drew near
Saying, “Ambrose, thou maker of creeds, look here!”
Six vases of crystal then he took,
And set them along the edge of the brook.
There shall one hold less, another more,
And the water unchanged, in every case,
Shall put on the figure of the vase;
O thou, who wouldst unity make through strife,
Canst thou fit this sign to the Water of Life?”
The youth and the stream and the vases were gone;
But he knew, by a sense of humbled grace,
He had talked with an angel face to face,
And felt his heart change inwardly,
As he fell on his knees beneath the tree.