John Keble

Here you will find thePoemCathchismof poet John Keble

Cathchism

Oh! say not, dream not, heavenly notes To childish ears are vain, That the young mind at random floats, And cannot reach the strain. Dim or unheard, the words may fall, And yet the heaven-taught mind May learn the sacred air, and all The harmony unwind. Was not our Lord a little child, Taught by degrees to pray, By father dear and mother mild Instructed day by day? And loved He not of Heaven to talk With children in His sight, To meet them in His daily walk, And to His arms invite? What though around His throne of fire The everlasting chant Be wafted from the seraph choir In glory jubilant? Yet stoops He, ever pleased to mark Our rude essays of love, Faint as the pipe of wakening lark, Heard by some twilight grove: Yet is He near us, to survey These bright and ordered files, Like spring-flowers in their best array, All silence and all smiles. Save that each little voice in turn Some glorious truth proclaims, What sages would have died to learn, Now taught by cottage dames. And if some tones be false or low, What are all prayers beneath But cries of babes, that cannot know Half the deep thought they breathe? In His own words we Christ adore, But angels, as we speak, Higher above our meaning soar Than we o'er children weak: And yet His words mean more than they, And yet He owns their praise: Why should we think, He turns away From infants' simple lays?