MY soul, dread not the pestilence that hags The valley; flinch not you, my body young, At these great shouting smokes and snarling jags Of fiery iron; as yet may not be flung The dice that claims you. Manly move among These ruins, and what you must do, do well; Look, here are gardens, there mossed boughs are hung With apples whose bright cheeks none might excel, And there's a house as yet unshattered by a shell. "I'll do my best," the soul makes sad reply, "And I will mark the yet unmurdered tree, The relics of dear homes that court the eye, And yet I see them not as I would see. Hovering between, a ghostly enemy Sickens the light, and poisoned, withered, wan, The least defiled turns desperate to me." The body, poor unpitied Caliban, Parches and sweats and grunts to win the name of Man. Days or eternities like swelling waves Surge on, and still we drudge in this dark maze, The bombs and coils and cans by strings of slaves Are borne to serve the coming day of days; Pale sleep in slimy cellars scarce allays With its brief blank the burden. Look, we lose; The sky is gone, the lightless drenching haze Of rainstorm chills the bone; earth, air are foes, The black fiend leaps brick-red as life's last picture goes. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CAELICA: 100 by FULKE GREVILLE THE MOTHER WATCH by EDGAR ALBERT GUEST THE PLACE OF THE DAMNED by JONATHAN SWIFT AMERICA by JAMES MONROE WHITFIELD THE TEARS OF A PAINTER by VINCENT BOURNE |