Take strands of speech, faded and broken; Tear them to pieces, word from word, Then take the ravelled shreds and dye them With meanings that were never heard. Place them across the loom. Let wind-shapes And sunlight come in at the door, Or let the radiance of raining Move in silver on the floor. And sit you quiet in the shadow Before the subtly idle strands. Silence, a cloak, will weigh your shoulder; Silence, a sorrow, fill your hands. Yet there shall come the stirring . . . Weaver, Weave well and not with words alone; Weave through the pattern every fragment Of glittered breath that you have known. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...REBECCA'S HYMN, FR. IVANHOE by WALTER SCOTT PROEM by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH CAUTION by FRANCES BROWN (20TH CENTURY) PARACELSUS: 2. PARACELSUS ATTAINS by ROBERT BROWNING EPIGRAM ON MISS DAVIES; LINES WRITTEN ON A WINDOW AT MOFFAT INN by ROBERT BURNS ON RECORD by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |