World's Worth

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'TIS of the Father Hilary.
 He strove, but could not pray; so took
 The steep-coiled stair, where his feet shook
  A sad blind echo. Ever up
 He toiled. 'Twas a sick sway of air
 That autumn noon within the stair,
  As dizzy as a turning cup.
 His brain benumbed him, void and thin;
 He shut his eyes and felt it spin;
 The obscure deafness hemmed him in.
  He said: “O world, what world for me?”
  He leaned unto the balcony
 Where the chime keeps the night and day;
 It hurt his brain, he could not pray.
  He had his face upon the stone:
 Deep 'twixt the narrow shafts, his eye
 Passed all the roofs to the stark sky,
  Swept with no wing, with wind alone.
 Close to his feet the sky did shake
 With wind in pools that the rains make;
 The ripple set his eyes to ache.
  He said: “O world, what world for me?”

  He stood within the mystery
 Girding God's blessed Eucharist:
 The organ and the chaunt had ceas'd.
  The last words paused against his ear
 Said from the altar: drawn round him
 The gathering rest was dumb and dim.
  And now the sacring-bell rang clear
 And ceased; and all was awe,—the breath
 Of God in man that warranteth
 The inmost utmost things of faith.
  He said: “O God, my world in Thee!”

© Dante Gabriel Rossetti