THERE is a threefold correspondent light, That shines to @3faith@1, to @3reason@1, and to @3sight.@1 The first, @3eternal@1,bringing into view Celestial objects, if the @3faith@1 be true; The next, @3internal@1,which the reas'ning mind Consults in truths of an @3ideal@1 kind; The third, @3external@1,and perceiv'd thereby All @3outward@1 objects that affect the eye. Each light is good within its destin'd sphere; Nor with each other do they interfere. @3Faith@1 does not reason, @3reason@1 does not see, Nor @3sight@1 extend beyond a fixt degree: Yet faith in light of a superior kind Cannot be call'd "irrational or blind;" Because a higher certainty, display'd, Includes the force of all inferior aid. As Body, Soul, and Spirit make a man, Each has the help of its appointed plan; Sight, hearing, smell, and taste, and feeling sense, What the @3corporeal@1 nature wants, dispense: Thinking, comparing, judging, and the whole Of reas'ning faculties, assist the @3soul:@1 Faith, and whatever else may be express'd By "grace celestial," make the @3spirit@1 blest. To heal defect, or to avoid excess, The greater light should still correct the less; And form, within the right obedient will, A @3seeing, reas'ning@1, and @3believing@1 skill: While Body moves as outward Sense directs; And Soul perceives what Reason's light reflects; And Spirit, fill'd with lustre from above, Obeys by Faith, and operates by Love. A sober person, tho' his eyes are good, Slights not the truths by Reason understood; Nor just conclusions, under the pretence Of contradiction to his seeing Sense; Knowing the limits too that reason hath, He does not seek to quench the light of Faith; But rationally grants, that it may teach What human stretch of reason cannot reach. As Sight to Reason, in the things that lie Beyond the ken of the corporeal eye, Unhurt, uninjur'd, yields itself of course, So well-taught Reason owns a higher force; By Faith enlighten'd, it enjoys a rest In clearer light to find its own suppress'd; Suff'ring no more, for want of its display, Than moon and stars in full meridian Day. To make the reas'ning faculty of man Do more or less to help him than it can, Is equally absurd; but worse to slight, Or want the benefit of @3faith@1, than @3sight:@1 If he who sees no outward light be blind, How @3dismal dark@1 must be the @3faithless@1 mind! The one is only @3natural@1 defect, The other @3wilful, obstinate@1 neglect; Pretence of Reason;for it is pretence Foolish and fatal, in the saddest sense; For @3Reason@1 cannot alter what is true, Or any more prevent than @3eyes@1 can do; Both, by the limits which they feel, proclaim The real want of a Celestial Flame: How is it possible to see, in fine, The things of GOD without a @3Light Divine?@1 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE TOMB AT AKR CAAR by EZRA POUND THE COCK AND THE BULL by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY ONCE BEFORE by MARY ELIZABETH MAPES DODGE HYMN FOR EPIPHANY by REGINALD HEBER OLD IRONSIDES by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES A DESCRIPTION OF THE MORNING by JONATHAN SWIFT |