One night, when I was sleeping all alone, Close to a forest, far from any town, Up with a cry I started -- what was that Which shook me here, as though I were a rat! I met a black man in the morning light, Who said -- and fear had made him ashen white -- 'Where were you when this earth of ours Shook terribly in the early hours?' And shall the Himalayas and the Alps Wriggle like worms, when the Earth gulps Half the Pacific in one breath! Think if the death Of countless people -- When the bells in each surviving steeple Toll for the dead in every shaken land, Without a touch from any mortal hand; Until this Earth lies down again to rest, And sleeps without a conscience in her breast. Is not the fear of this sufficient then That War must cease and Friendship come to men? |