of Heaven" the spiritual terror with which the believer reacts to God's pursuit of his soul. Among the major influences on the poem are St. Augustine's Confessions , which depicts the flight from God as a central trope, and the poems of Richard Crashaw, among other seventeenth-century Metaphysical poets. Thompson's startling conceitinvolving the pursuing hound as metaphor for Godsuggests the speaker's irrational flight from the very source of his salvation:
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| | I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; I fled Him, down the arches of the years; I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears I hid from Him, and under running laughter.
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In a parenthetic aside the speaker reveals his paradoxical spiritual state: "(For, though I knew His love Who followed, / Yet was I sore adread / Lest, having Him, I must have naught beside)." This "tremendous Lover" is too overwhelming for the speaker's spiritual frailty. His flight from divinity becomes a quest for a less-demanding reality, the constant shifts in meter, from the five iambic stresses to three, suggesting the speaker's spiritual turmoil. Only when he is overtaken by the Hound does he acknowledge that he is "of all man's clotted clay the dingiest clot." Then Heaven's voice is heard: "Rise, clasp My hand, and come." But the hand is not grasped by the speaker, whose gloom implies doubt of achieving salvation. The impatient, loving voice concludes the poem but not without final ironies: ''Ah, fondest, blindest, weakest, / I am He Whom thou seekest! / Thou dravest love from thee, who dravest Me." The poet, critic, and Catholic convert Coventry Patmore has written that, by such a poem as "The Hound of Heaven," Thompson placed himself "in the front rank of the [Catholic] movement, which, if it be not checked as in the history of the world it has once or twice been checked before . . . , must end in creating a 'new heaven and a new earth.'"
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The movement also touched two poets whom Thompson met at a meeting of the Rhymers' Club, Lionel Johnson and Ernest Dowsonboth converts in 1891whose verse, in part, also reflects the desire for a new heaven and earth. To suggest his ecclesiastical preoccupations, Johnson gave Latin titles to a number of his poems. "Te Martyrdum Candidatus," a rousing poem on the Church Militant, depicts "the fair chivalry," the "companions of Christ! / White Horsemen, who ride on
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