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Poems of Power

Chapter 80: PLEA TO SCIENCE
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About This Book

A sequence of lyric poems and brief meditations that foreground the idea of an inner divine power as the source of success and happiness, exploring faith, hope, grief, love, and the moral life. The pieces move between intimate prayers and domestic scenes, public elegies and civic reflections, and philosophical dialogues about change and progress. Recurring motifs include the efficacy of thought, self-reliance, compassion, and the tension between experience and youthful expectation. Tone shifts from comforting consolation to sober realism, combining exhortation and consolation while urging courage, ethical living, and trust in the human spirit amid personal and social trials.

PLEA TO SCIENCE

O Science, reaching backward through the distance,
   Most earnest child of God,
Exposing all the secrets of existence,
   With thy divining rod,
I bid thee speed up to the heights supernal,
   Clear thinker, ne’er sufficed;
Go seek and bind the laws and truths eternal,
   But leave me Christ.

Upon the vanity of pious sages
   Let in the light of day;
Break down the superstitions of all ages—
   Thrust bigotry away;
Stride on, and bid all stubborn foes defiance,
   Let Truth and Reason reign:
But I beseech thee, O Immortal Science,
   Let Christ remain.

What canst thou give to help me bear my crosses,
   In place of Him, my Lord?
And what to recompense for all my losses,
   And bring me sweet reward?
Thou couldst not with thy clear, cold eyes of reason,
   Thou couldst not comfort me
Like One who passed through that tear-blotted season
   In sad Gethsemane!

Through all the weary, wearing hour of sorrow,
   What word that thou hast said
Would make me strong to wait for some to-morrow
   When I should find my dead?
When I am weak, and desolate, and lonely—
   And prone to follow wrong?
Not thou, O Science—Christ, my Saviour, only
   Can make me strong.

Thou art so cold, so lofty, and so distant,
   Though great my need might be,
No prayer, however constant and persistent,
   Could bring thee down to me.
Christ stands so near, to help me through each hour,
   To guide me day by day
O Science, sweeping all before thy power—
   Leave Christ, I pray!