"Comecome, get up, we must be off; The Master waitsdo not delay." I turn upon my bed of pain The gray dawn of another day, And there in monkish robe and cowl, A long scythe in his bony hands Which rattle as he smoothes the blade, A stranger on the threshold stands. I reach for garments sadly worn, Upon the chair beside my bed; "Nono, not that!" the stranger cries, "The naked truth must do instead. Thy clothes are but a sorry mask E'en flesh and bones are in the way; Butcome, make haste, we must be off; The Master waitsdo not delay." "But why this haste," perplexed, I cry; "May I not send some plea ahead That will outstrip me to the Goal?" "There's but one plea"the stranger said: "A group of seven simple words That thou, and thou alone must say; But come, we tarrylet's be off; The Master waitsdo not delay." "One moment, stranger, pray be kind Enough to pause for one brief space; Where are those words that I alone Must speak to gain the Master's grace?" "They're hidden in the human heart They're coins with which to pay the toll." "At last! I understand thee, friend, May God have mercy on my soul." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OVER THE RIVER by NANCY WOODBURY PRIEST REUBEN BRIGHT by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE WASTE PLACES by JAMES STEPHENS EURIPIDES by ALEXANDER AETOLUS EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 12. LIFE FOR LOVE by PHILIP AYRES CARN A-TURNEN YOLLER by WILLIAM BARNES |