Analysis of The Chamber of Faith



There's a room in my soul that has long been closed;
Many and many a year has passed
Since I stood at the door and looked my last
On the things within, all seemly disposed
In the curtained obscurity, nevermore
To be lit of the sun through window or door;—

Looked my last with a sense of crime,
On the smooth white bed where my dead had lain,
At the cross I had left on the counterpane,
Having kissed it twice and a long third time
Ere I laid it down where the head had been,
With a rose for the breast, and a lily between;

At her altar-table, where, side by side,
Lay her Bible, her Hymnal, her Book of Prayer;
At her silent harp, at her hallowed chair,
Where, ever at morning and eventide,
With her hand on my head, and my head on her knee,
I had knelt, that her blessing might rest on me;

At saint and angel on wall and screen,
Painted, and carven, and silken wrought,
At flower and bird, by her hand and thought
Moulded to meanings of things unseen;
At the sombre recess where, dimly descried,
Hung the shadowy form of the Crucified.

Looked my last with a sense of crime,
As one who, free of intent to slay,
Hath yet unwitting made wide the way
For death to enter before his time;
For, had I not strayed from her sheltering side,
Peradventure my mother had not died.

For this was the Chamber of Faith, my Mother,
Faith that was Mother, and Sister, and Wife,
Joy of my joy, and life of my life,
Fair as none else was fair, loved as no other,
Mother to nourish me, Sister to cheer,
Wife to be dearest of all held dear.

And all of her now was the void she had left,
And a stillness that even a sigh had profaned—
Gone, with her mysteries unexplained,
And all her tokens of purport reft,

Save the reproach I seemed to trace
In the dumb appeal of each angel face.

So I closed the door and departed—alone:
And all these years I have dwelt aloof,
In a turret chamber over the roof,
With undarkened outlook on all things known,
On horizons that ever enlarge and withdraw,
On the boundless realms of immutable law.

Bereft of Faith, but redeemed from fear,
With enfranchised vision, with reason free
From the bondage of ancient authority,
I say to myself it is good to be here,
High o'er all vain imaginings,
And face to face with the truth of things.

But at times, in the night, to the drowsing sense
The sound of a harp played long ago
Floats faintly up from a room below,
The old music of love and reverence,
And I wake, and, behold, all unaware,
I have left my bed, and am kneeling in prayer.

It is thus to-night, and with heart oppressed
By the heavy hand of the truth of things,
I am fain of the old imaginings,
And a hope arises within my breast,
That beyond the beyond and above the above
There yet may be things that I know not of.

I will go down to the Chamber of Faith;
Perchance in her symbols I yet may find
Some meaning missed, some drift undivined,
Some clue to a refuge this side of death,
Where Reason and Faith, where Man and Child,
Where Law and Love may be reconciled.

*       *      *         *   *

*       *      *         *   *
I stand in her precincts, alien, estranged,
A waking man in a place of dreams.
How ghostly the room in the lamplight seems!
Yet all is familiar, all is unchanged;
All that was fair, still fair to see,
Save the flowers, which have withered—for these were of me.

Frescoed seraph and carven saint
Gaze on me still with their wistful appeal,
Oh, Heavenly Ministries, would I could feel
Some thrill of response however faint,
Some touch, some grace of the olden days
That would quicken my heart to prayer and praise!

Lo, for a moment, I burn to accost
Your Lord of Love in the old sweet way;
I seize the harp and begin to play,
But the chords are loose and the key is lost,
And the sudden dissonance shatters the mood
Wherein the unseen is the understood—

Shatters the mood and arrests the thought,
The fluttering thought that essayed to soar
To the region where seraph and saint adore,
To the sphere where the wonders of Faith are wrought,
And her symbols decline to pigment and stone
As I lapse again to the seen and known.

Wherefore, then, should I linger here?
What is it I seek to understand?
I open her Scriptures with random hand,
And I chance on the words of the holy Seer
Which one of old in his chariot read,
“He was led as a sheep to the slaughter is led.”

And I turn to the Christ. Though my lamp grows dim,


Scheme abbacc Deedxf ghhaii fjjfag Dkkdgg lmmlnn xaxa oo pqqprr niisot xuuxhh vtovww xxaxxx yzzyii 1 2 2 1 3 3 4 kk4 xx jccjpp s5 5 s6 6 x
Poetic Form
Metre 10101111111 100100111 1111010111 101011101 001010010 11110111011 11110111 1011111111 101111101 1011100111 1111110111 101101001001 1010101111 10100100111 1010110101 11011001 101111011101 11110101111 110101101 10010101 1100110101 11101101 101011101 1010011010 11110111 111110111 110101101 111100111 11111101001 1110111 11101011110 1111001001 111101111 11111111110 1011011011 111101111 01101101111 00101100111 11010001 01010111 10011111 0010111101 11101001001 011111101 0010101001 1111111 101011001001 10101101001 011110111 101101101 10101100100 1111111111 110111 011110111 1110011011 011011101 110110101 0110110100 011001101 11111011001 1111101101 1010110111 1111011 0010100111 101001001001 1111111111 1111101011 0100101111 1101111 1110101111 110011101 11011110 1 1 1100110001 010100111 110010011 1110101101 11111111 1010111011011 101011 1111111001 11001001111 11101101 111110101 1110111101 1101011101 111100111 110100111 1011100111 00101001001 010011001 100100101 010011111 1010110101 10110101111 00100111001 1110110101 1111101 11111101 1100101101 01110110101 1111011001 111101101011 01110111111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,270
Words 835
Sentences 19
Stanzas 20
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 4, 2, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 1, 7, 6, 6, 6, 6, 1
Lines Amount 105
Letters per line (avg) 32
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 167
Words per stanza (avg) 44
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:11 min read
68

James Brunton Stephens

James Brunton Stephens was a Scottish-born Australian poet, author of Convict Once. more…

All James Brunton Stephens poems | James Brunton Stephens Books

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