Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, THE IMPERIAL PRAYERS, by VICTOR GUSTAVE PLARR



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THE IMPERIAL PRAYERS, by                     Poet's Biography
First Line: Silenced the streets with sand of holy hue
Last Line: Goes that spoiled, wretched, and mysterious youth.
Subject(s): Asia; Death; Imperialism; Inheritance And Succession; Far East; East Asia; Orient; Dead, The


Suggested by a passage in Mr. Valentine Chirol's the 'Far Eastern Question'

Silenced the streets with sand of holy hue,
Shrouded the curious houses with faint sheen
Of silk and broid'ry, which for months between
These awful feasts none but the moth dare view;
The Son of Heaven, the Unutterable Kwang Hsu,
Borne in his lofty-looming palanquin,
By slaves who, if they stumble, die unseen,
Flits like a ghost through midnight -- what to do?

The West stands clamouring outside his door:
We plan division of his lands and fame,
Yet hold Heredity for proven Truth.
To pray to his great Fathers gone before,
-- Might not Marc Brutus once have done the same? --
Goes that spoiled, wretched, and mysterious youth.





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