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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


THE WAYFARER by LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE

Poet Analysis

First Line: THERE IS BUT LITTLE THAT I KNOW
Last Line: THAT LOVE HAS NEVER LET US BE.

THERE is but little that I know,
A wayfarer blown to and fro;
Spheres, empires, gods go down the wind:
But these are what they leave behind --
The common toils, the village mirth;
The fagot crackling on the hearth;
The wind, the sun, the frost, the dew;
The roadside grass with flower of blue.
There is but little that I know,
A wayfarer blown to and fro;
Beauty is not kept on a shelf,
For grudging dole; God gives Himself.
Without the village fences pent,
Such purple and such pink are spent,
That we should pray to be indeed,
Humble and lovely as a weed.
Life is but a small rainy day
Betwixt two dusks; but in its gray
Enough of light for me, for you
Our something or our naught to do.
There is but little that I know,
A wayfarer blown to and fro;
Now this the sum of our deserts:
We sow our healings and our hurts.
And ever is there chance to run
A somewhat nearer to the sun;
Out of our very shames to press
Unto the skirts of righteousness.
Life ends. For us and all our kind,
Enough of light a roof to find;
And after, long and long to see,
That Love has never let us be.




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