LORD, grant us calm, if calm can set forth Thee; Or tempest, if a tempest set Thee forth; Wind from the east or west or south or north, Or congelation of a silent sea, With stillness of each tremulous aspen tree. Still let fruit fall, or hang upon the tree; Still let the east and west, the south and north, Curb in their winds, or plough a thundering sea; Still let the earth abide to set Thee forth, Or vanish like a smoke to set forth Thee. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A LETTER ON THE USE OF MACHINE GUNS AT WEDDINGS by KENNETH PATCHEN THE DEATH OF THE FLOWERS by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT ASTRONOMY by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN SONNET: 25 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE ODES: BOOK 2: ODE 15. ON DOMESTIC MANNERS (UNFINISHED) by MARK AKENSIDE AUSTERITY OF POETRY by MATTHEW ARNOLD QUATORZAINS: 4. TO SOUND by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES |