FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   >>  
e seen how soon They lie thus chambered and cold to the moon? How scorn, how hate, how strive, wee too, Who must do so soon as those others do? For it's All Souls' night, and break of the day, And behold, with the light the dead are away. . . ALL SAINTS _ALL so grave and shining see they come_ _From the blissful ranks of the forgiven,_ _Though so distant wheels the nearest crystal dome,_ _And the spheres are seven._ Are you in such haste to come to earth, Shining ones, the Wonder on your brow, To the low poor places of your birth, And the day that must be darkness now? Does the heart still crave the spot it yearned on In the grey and mortal years, The pure flame the smoky hearth it burned on, The clear eye its tears? Was there, in the narrow range of living, After all the wider scope? In the old old rapture of forgiving, In the long long flight of hope? Come you, from free sweep across the spaces, To the irksome bounds of mortal law, From the all-embracing Vision, to some face's Look that never saw? Never we, imprisoned here, had sought you, Lured you with the ancient bait of pain, Down the silver current of the light-years brought you To the beaten round again-- Is it you, perchance, who ache to strain us Dumbly to the dim transfigured breast, Or with tragic gesture would detain us From the age-long search for rest? Is the labour then more glorious than the laurel, The learning than the conquered thought? Is the meed of men the righteous quarrel, Not the justice wrought? Long ago we guessed it, faithful ghosts, Proudly chose the present for our scene, And sent out indomitable hosts Day by day to widen our demesne. Sit you by our hearth-stone, lone immortals, Share again the bitter wine of life! Well we know, beyond the peaceful portals There is nothing better than our strife, Nought more thrilling than the cry that calls us, Spent and stumbling, to the conflict vain, After each disaster that befalls us Nerves us for a sterner strain. And, when flood or foeman shakes the sleeper In his moment's lapse from pain, Bids us fold our tents, and flee our kin, and deeper Drive into the wilderness again. THE OLD POLE STAR BEFORE the clepsydra had bound the days Man tethered Change to his fixed star, and said: "The elder races, that long since are de
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   >>  



Top keywords:

hearth

 

strain

 
mortal
 

present

 

Proudly

 

ghosts

 

faithful

 
wrought
 

justice

 

guessed


tethered

 

demesne

 

Change

 
indomitable
 
righteous
 

detain

 

search

 
gesture
 

tragic

 

transfigured


breast
 

labour

 
thought
 

conquered

 

learning

 

laurel

 

glorious

 

quarrel

 

shakes

 
sleeper

clepsydra

 

moment

 

foeman

 
Nerves
 

sterner

 
wilderness
 
deeper
 

befalls

 

peaceful

 
portals

bitter

 
BEFORE
 
conflict
 

stumbling

 

disaster

 

strife

 

Nought

 
thrilling
 
immortals
 

beaten