GODLIKE beneath his grave divinities, The last of all their worshippers, he stood. The shadows of a vanished multitude Enwound him, and their voices in the breeze Made murmur, while the meditative trees Reared of their strong fraternal branches rude A temple meet for prayer. What blossoms strewed The path between Life's morning hours and these? What lay beyond the darkness? He alone The sunshine and the shadow and the dew Had shared alike with leaf, and flower, and stem: Their life had been his lesson; and from them A dream of immortality he drew, As in their fate foreshadowing his own. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...I AM BORNE ONWARD by SARA TEASDALE MARIANNA ALCOFORANDO by SARA TEASDALE SPIRIT OF '76 by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE PASSIONS: AN ODE FOR MUSIC by WILLIAM COLLINS (1721-1759) ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME? by MARGARET ELIZABETH MUNSON SANGSTER GOD'S DETERMINATIONS: THE JOY OF CHURCH FELLOWSHIP RIGHTLY ATTENDED by EDWARD TAYLOR THE CRITIC by S. F. BATCHELDER |