Now first we stand and understand, And sunder false from true, And handle boldly with the hand, And see and shape and do. Dash back that ocean with a pier, Strow yonder mountain flat, A railway there, a tunnel here, Mix me this Zone with that! Bring me my horse -- my horse? my wings That I may soar the sky, For Thought into the outward springs, I find her with the eye. O will she, moonlike, sway the main, And bring or chase the storm, Who was a shadow in the brain, And is a living form? Far as the Future vaults her skies, From this my vantage ground To those still-working energies I spy nor term nor bound. As we surpass our fathers' skill, Our sons will shame our own; A thousand things are hidden still And not a hundred known. And had some prophet spoken true Of all we shall achieve, The wonders were so wildly new That no man would believe. Meanwhile, my brothers, work, and wield The forces of to-day, And plow the Present like a field, And garner all you may! You, what the cultured surface grows, Dispense with careful hands: Deep under deep for ever goes, Heaven over heaven expands. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STAR-TALK by ROBERT RANKE GRAVES THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 15 by OMAR KHAYYAM SUMMER. THE SECOND PASTORAL, OR ALEXIS by ALEXANDER POPE THE CHILD IN THE GARDEN by HENRY VAN DYKE THE SCHOOL GIRL by WILLIAM HENRY VENABLE |