My Creed

by Alice Cary

I Hold that Christian grace abounds   Where charity is seen; that when We climb to heaven, ’t is on the rounds   Of love to men. I hold all else, named piety,   A selfish scheme, a vain pretence; Where centre is not—can there be   Circumference? This I moreover hold, and dare   Affirm where’er my rhyme may go,— Whatever things be sweet or fair,   Love makes them so. Whether it be the lullabies   That charm to rest the nursling bird, Or the sweet confidence of sighs   And blushes, made without a word. Whether the dazzling and the flush   Of softly sumptuous garden bowers, Or by some cabin door, a bush   Of ragged flowers. ’T is not the wide phylactery,   Nor stubborn fast, nor stated prayers, That make us saints: we judge the tree   By what it bears. And when a man can live apart   From works, on theologic trust, I know the blood about his heart   Is dry as dust.

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