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 Dream of Gerontius

 Appendix

166

 166. St. Philip in his God  PHILIP, on thee the glowing ray  Of heaven came down upon thy prayer, To melt thy heart, and burn away  All that of earthly dross was there.  Thy soul became as purest glass,  Through which the Brightness Incarnate In undimm'd majesty might pass,  Transparent and illuminate.  And so, on Philip when we gaze,  We see the image of his Lord; The Saint dissolves amid the blaze  Which circles round the Living Word.  The Meek, the Wise, none else is here,  Dispensing light to men below; His awful accents fill the ear,  Now keen as fire, now soft as snow.  As snow, those inward pleadings fall,  As soft, as bright, as pure, as cool, With gentle weight and gradual,  And sink into the feverish soul.  The Sinless One, He comes to seek,  The dreary heart, the spirit lone, Tender of natures proud or weak,  Not less than if they were His own.  He takes and scans the sinner o'er,  Handling His scholars one by one, Weighing what they can bear, before  He gives the penance to be done.  Jesu, to Philip's sons reveal  That gentlest wisdom from above, To spread compassion o'er their zeal,  And mingle patience with their love.  The Oratory .  1850.