Poems (Spofford)/Witnesses

WITNESSES.
Whenever my heart. is heavy,And life seems sad as death,A subtle and marvelous mockeryOf all who draw their breath,And I weary of throned injustice,The rumor of outrage and wrong,And I doubt if God rules above us,And I cry, O Lord, how long,How long shall sorrow and evilTheir forces around them draw!Is there no power in thy right hand,Is there no life in thy law?
Then at last the blazing brightnessOf day forsakes its height,Slips like a splendid curtainFrom the awful and infinite night;And out of the depths of distance,The gulfs of purple space, The stars steal, slow and silent,Each in the ancient place,—Each in armor shining,The hosts of heaven arrayed,And wheeling through the midnightAs they did when the world was made.
And I lean out among the shadowsCast by that far white gleam,And I tremble at the murmurOf one mote in the mighty beam,As the everlasting squadronsTheir fated influence shed,While the vast meridians sparkleWith the glory of their tread.That constellated gloryThe primal morning saw,And I know God moves to his purpose,And still there is life in his law!