Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 3).djvu/46

 The household idol of our race. As Catholics make of the Redeemer A baby at the breast, so ye Make God a dotard and a dreamer, Verging on second infancy. And as the Pope on Peter's throne Calls little but his keys his own, So to the Church you would confine The world-wide realm of the Divine; 'Twixt Life and Doctrine set a sea, Nowise concern yourselves to be; Bliss for your souls ye would receive, Not utterly and wholly live. Ye need, such feebleness to brook, A God who'll through his fingers look, Who, like yourselves, is hoary grown, And keeps a cap for his bald crown. Mine is another kind of God! Mine is a storm, where thine's a lull, Implacable where thine's a clod, All-loving there, where thine is dull; And He is young like Hercules, No hoary sipper of life's lees! His voice rang through the dazzled night When He, within the burning wood, By Moses upon Horeb's height As by a pigmy's pigmy stood. In Gibeon's vale He stay'd the sun, And wonders without end has done, And wonders without end would do, Were not the age grown sick,—like you!

[Smiling faintly.]

And now the age shall be made whole?