LET me go down to dust and dreams Gently, O Lord, with never a fear Of death beyond the day that is done; In such a manner as beseems A kinsman of the wild, a son Of stoic earth whose race is run. Let me go down as any deer, Who, broken by a desperate flight, Sinks down to slumber for the night Dumbly serene in certitude That it will rise again at dawn, Buoyant, refreshed of limb, renewed, And confident that it will thrill Tomorrow to its nuzzling fawn, To the bugle-notes of elk upon the hill. Let me go down to dreams and dust Gently, O Lord, with quiet trust And the fortitude that marks a child Of earth, a kinsman of the wild. Let me go down as any doe That nods upon its ferny bed, And, lulled to slumber by the flow Of talking water, the muffled brawl Of far cascading waterfall, At last lets down its weary head Deep in the brookmints in the glen; And under the starry-candled sky, With never the shadow of a sigh, Gives its worn body back to earth again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ARAB by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY BINSEY POPLARS (FELLED 1879) by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS A BIT OF MULL by FREDERICK HENRY HERBERT ADLER UNSUNG by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 78. AL-BARR by EDWIN ARNOLD SONG by CHARLES GRANGER BLANDEN |