O you benignly vexing creature!
In whom I have come to know
      The image of God 
            as more
                  Than correct doctrinal formula,
                        Safe abstraction,
                        Or comforting mirror
                              In which to see myself darkly,
It is you who have scattered my pride in its conceit
      And my rich expressions you have sent away empty.
It is you who
      Reclining languidly in a chair,
      Working in the nursery or garden,
      Inviting to our hallowed bed,
            Schooled me in what I might never otherwise have suspected;
                  That my shiny, golden apples,
                  My stolen Promethean fire,
                        My words,
Which I peremptorily send scurrying to my bidding,
      Servants I thought well-mastered,
            Were inadequate to the thing,
            Not even articulate enough
                  To praise you, 
                        O frustrating one,
                              So familiar to my eyes and hands and mouth
                  Let alone
                        To praise the One
                              So foreign to me…
                                    To us…
                              Who created you.
What use for me now that you have robbed me so?
      Yet speak I must
            For however impoverished and insufficient they are,
                  The words demanded of me
                        Are mine.
So bless you…
                                    Both
      For lessons taught, 
            (Though imperfectly learned);
                  That true love,
                  True praise,
                        Is a gift without price
                              Given by one to poor to buy
                                    To one 
                                               too rich 
                                                            to need.

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