Classic and Contemporary Poetry
WISHES, by ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER Poet's Biography First Line: All the fluttering wishes Last Line: In a quiet heart. Alternate Author Name(s): Berwick, Mary Subject(s): Wishes | ||||||||
ALL the fluttering wishes Caged within thy heart Beat their wings against it, Longing to depart, Till they shake their prison With their wounded cry; Open wide thy heart to-day, And let the captives fly. Let them first fly upward Through the starry air, Till you almost lose them, For their home is there; Then, with outspread pinions, Circling round and round, Wing their way wherever Want and woe are found. Where the weary stitcher Toils for daily bread; Where the lonely watcher Watches by her dead; Where, with thin, weak fingers, Toiling at the loom, Stand the little children, Blighted ere they bloom; -- Where, by darkness blinded, Groping for the light, With distorted conscience, Men do wrong for right; Where, in the cold shadow, By smooth pleasure thrown, Human hearts by hundreds Harden into stone; -- Where on dusty highways, With faint heart and slow, Cursing the glad sunlight, Hungry outcasts go; Where all mirth is silenced And the hearth is chill, For one place is empty, And one voice is still. Some hearts will be lighter While your captives roam For their tender singing, Then recall them home; When the sunny hours Into night depart, Softly they will nestle In a quiet heart. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...O TO BE A DRAGON by MARIANNE MOORE FOUNTAIN IN AVIGNON by LAURE-ANNE BOSSELAAR THE HOUR BETWEEN DOG AND WOLF: 1. THE GOOD OGRE'S BEARD by LAURE-ANNE BOSSELAAR I WANT THIS CORNER EMPTY (PERSEPHONE SPEAKING)' by JULIE CARR THE THREE WISHES by BILLY COLLINS A-WISHING WELL by ROBERT FROST A DOUBTING HEART by ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER |
|