Lithe and listen, gentlemen: Other knight of sword or pen Shall not, while the planets shine, Spend a holiday like mine:- Fate and I, we played at dice: Thrice I won and lost the main; Thrice I died the death, and thrice By my will I lived again. First, a woman broke my heart, As a careless woman can, Ere the aureoles depart From the woman and the man. Dead of love, I found a tomb Anywhere: beneath, above, Worms nor stars transpierced the gloom Of the sepulchre of love. Wine-cups were the charnel-lights; Festal songs, the funeral dole; Joyful ladies, gallant knights, Comrades of my buried soul. Tired to death of lying dead In a common sepulchre, On an Easter morn I sped Upward where the world's astir. Soon I gathered wealth and friends; Donned the livery of the hour; And atoning diverse ends Bridged the gulf to place and power. All the brilliances of Hell Crushed by me, with honeyed breath Fawned upon me till I fell, By pretenders done to death. Buried in an outland tract, Long I rotted in the mould, Though the virgin woodland lacked Nothing of the age of gold. Roses spiced the dews and damps Nightly falling of decay; Dawn and sunset lit the lamps Where entombed I deeply lay. My Companions of the Grave Were the flowers, the growing grass; Larks intoned a morning stave; Nightingales, a midnight mass. But at me, effete and dead, Did my spirit gibe and scoff: Then the gravecloth from my head, And my shroud-I shook them off! Drawing strength and subtle craft Out of ruin's husk and core, Through the earth I ran a shaft Upward to the light once more. Soon I made me wealth and friends; Donned the livery of the age; And atoning many ends Reigned as sovereign, priest, and mage. But my pomp and towering state, Puissance and supreme device Crumbled on the cast of Fate- Fate, that plays with loaded dice. I whose arms had harried Hell Naked faced a heavenly host: Carved with countless wounds I fell, Sadly yielding up the ghost. In a burning mountain thrown (Titans such a tomb attain) Many a grisly age had flown Ere I rose and lived again. Parched and charred I lay; my cries Shook and rent the mountain-side; Lustres, decades, centuries Fled while daily there I died. But my essence and intent Ripened in the smelting fire: Flame became my element; Agony, my soul's desire. Twenty centuries of Pain, Mightier than Love or Art, Woke the meaning in my brain And the purpose of my heart. Straightway then aloft I swam Through the mountain's sulphurous sty: Not eternal death could damn Such a hardy soul as I. From the mountain's burning crest Like a god I come again, And with an immortal zest Challenge Fate to throw the main. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RUBAIYAT, 1889 EDITION: 19 by OMAR KHAYYAM SING-SONG; A NURSERY RHYME BOOK: 50 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI PSALM 1. THE RIGHTEOUS AND THE WICKED CONTRASTED by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE THE ESCAPE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE PATH by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT |