I 'POOR wanderer,' said the leaden sky, 'I fain would lighten thee, But there are laws in force on high Which say it must not be.' II - 'I would not freeze thee, shorn one,' cried The North, 'knew I but how To warm my breath, to slack my stride; But I am ruled as thou.' III - 'To-morrow I attack thee, wight,' Said Sickness. 'Yet I swear I bear thy little ark no spite, But am bid enter there.' IV - 'Come hither, Son,' I heard Death say; 'I did not will a grave Should end thy pilgrimage to-day, But I, too, am a slave!' V We smiled upon each other then, And life to me had less Of that fell look it wore ere when They owned their passiveness. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BALLAD OF CHRISTMAS by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE CHILD AND MOTHER by EUGENE FIELD THE TWO ANGELS by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER TO THE SHAH (1) by AWHAD AD-DIN 'ALI IBN VAHID MUHAMMAD KHAVARANI TILL THE MIST PASSES by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON AN EASTER HYMN by THOMAS BLACKBURN |