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THE RESTORATION
The hills called, "Come back. Come
back
And warm us for the night grows
chill,"
But the winds blew away from the
hills, out over the plain.
The cries grew fainter until only
the moanful wail
Of the desert night remained,
A night so dark and alone that
the soul cried out,
"God, Oh God, have you forsaken
me?"
Hell. Hell, alone with the sobbing
wind, shut out,
Alone in the black emptiness.
Can a soul thus survive or must
it suffer
A slow and evil death, a death
of the very being
Of the immortal soul, or rather
than death
An endless whirling and screaming
Caught in the vortex of insanity.
Again the soul cried out to its
father
"Where are you? Where are you?
I am lost and alone.
My body is dead with fear; my senses
have forsaken me.
Oh leave me not as prey to the
desert night.
Let not this illusion of terror
devour me."
"Oh my father, stretch forth thy
hand."
And the soul wept in the anguish
of being alone.
Then the hand came forth, and a
light, and a voice,
"This is my Beloved Son, HEAR HIM."
The dawn shattered the blackness
And the soul was not alone, for
there were many
Covered by the night
And they flocked close and listened
together to the voice.
And the man came forth with the
wind in his hair
And he touched them and they felt
the warmth
And felt a stir in their bodies
and warm tears
Fell from their eyes, new tears,
sweet and warm.
The joy that was in their hearts
came forth
And the vortex was stilled, and
wind wailed no more. |