05.07.2012

au!97 - bow down

            Oh! who is he that hath his whole life long              130
          Preserved, enlarged, this freedom in himself?
          For this alone is genuine liberty:
          Where is the favoured being who hath held
          That course unchecked, unerring, and untired,
          In one perpetual progress smooth and bright?--
          A humbler destiny have we retraced,
          And told of lapse and hesitating choice,
          And backward wanderings along thorny ways:
          Yet--compassed round by mountain solitudes,
          Within whose solemn temple I received                      140
          My earliest visitations, careless then
          Of what was given me; and which now I range,
          A meditative, oft a suffering, man--
          Do I declare--in accents which, from truth
          Deriving cheerful confidence, shall blend
          Their modulation with these vocal streams--
          That, whatsoever falls my better mind,
          Revolving with the accidents of life,
          May have sustained, that, howsoe'er misled,
          Never did I, in quest of right and wrong,                  150
          Tamper with conscience from a private aim;
          Nor was in any public hope the dupe
          Of selfish passions; nor did ever yield
          Wilfully to mean cares or low pursuits,
          But shrunk with apprehensive jealousy
          From every combination which might aid
          The tendency, too potent in itself,
          Of use and custom to bow down the soul
          Under a growing weight of vulgar sense,
          And substitute a universe of death                         160
          For that which moves with light and life informed,
          Actual, divine, and true. 
 
(Wordsworth: The Prelude XIV)