YOU who had worked in perfect ways To turn the wheel of nights and days, Who coaxed to life each running rill And froze the snow-crown on the hill, The cold, the starry flocks who drove And made the circling seasons move; How came your jesting purpose, when You fashioned monkeys into men? You who invented peacock's dress -- You, Lord of cruel happiness! -- Who improvised all flight and song And loved and killed the whole day long, And filled with colour to the brim The cup of your completed whim! What set you frolicking when we Were given power to feel and see? Why not have kept the stellar plan Quite soulless and absolved from man? What heavy need to make this thing -- A monkey with an angel's wing; A murderous poor saint who reaps His fields of death, and, seeing -- weeps! No! -- if the saffron day could sigh And sway unconscious -- Why am I? Unknown! You slept one afternoon, And dreamed, and turned, and woke too soon! The sorrel glowed, and the bees hummed, And Mother Nature's fingers strummed, And flock of dandelion was blown, And yew-trees cast their shadows down; Such beauty seemed to you forlorn -- And lo! -- this playboy, Man, was born! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IN THE GARDEN (1) by EMILY DICKINSON SOULS LAKE by ROBERT STUART FITZGERALD MEMORY by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR YUSSOUF by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL THE LOST WAR-SLOOP by EDNA DEAN PROCTOR UP-HILL by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI TWELVE ARTICLES by JONATHAN SWIFT TEN YEARS AFTER by JOSEPH AUSLANDER THE APOLOGY OF THE BISHOPS IN ANSWER TO BONNER'S GHOST by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |