Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Psalms and Hymns for the Church (1883). X. O All-surpassing Splendour!William Josiah Irons (18121883)
O A
Of earthly race hath seen that vision fair;
The present God, the rainbow round the throne,
And the elect, descending through the air,
His Tabernacle,—He their glorious light;
For in His presence there can be no night.
In the past-workings of omnipotence,
Wills without sin,—Earth’s precious stones displayed
Tell faintly some Divine magnificence
Of that regenerate sphere, the pure abode
For sons and daughters of the Immortal God.
Those twelve foundations, with apostles’ names,
That golden pavement, burnished clear and bright,
Those mystic cherub wings with outspread flames,
The Tree of Life, by God’s own river laved,
Sustaining all the “nations of the saved.”
The contact now of that high element!
We must be changed, and pass this lower air,
To learn Thy wonders, God Omnipotent.
Lord of our world to come. Thy piercing light
Transfigures all things to our longing sight.
Watching Thee from Thy pure Incarnate Birth;
Vision on vision of Thy form appears,
Thou Who art fairer than the sons of earth;
And if we faint,—it is but for Thy sake,
To “Jesus only” would our souls awake.