IN the weary night they come to me, The tears that I left unshed, When I trudged the thorny wilderness With the sun-flame overhead. I lie awake in the friendly night, My soul too numb to pray, Enjoying the cool of its velvet black In the dread of the coming day. For the day must come and the sting of it, As I bend to the endless road, The light must come and the pain of it The bite of the lashing goad. But this I know as I reel along To the nations' hue and cry, A burning truth in the hand of God; I know that I must not die. They say my soul is twisted and warped, My ways are cringing and mean, That I worship the bulk of the calf of gold, That my hands are not white and clean; They saybut a thousand reasons hold To stalk the quarry then When the lust for blood is hunger-felt By the beast that dwells in men. When Kindness is taught at the end of a rope, And Love to the music of groans; When Charity masks in a cloak of flame, And Mercy in falling stones What wonder the balm for the spirit fails When the wounds are kept so fresh Through countless years of active hate In the rack of the tortured flesh? I have ceased to long for the clasp of Love, To dream of the smile of a friend, I grip my trusty wander-staff In a journey without an end. My faith is strong as the primal rocks, And deep as my tearless woes; I am Job of the nationsheir of wrongs, But whyJehovah knows. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STUDY FOR A GEOGRAPHICAL TRAIL; 4. NEW JERSEY by CLARENCE MAJOR BONNYBELL: THE GRAY SPHEX by EDGAR LEE MASTERS LIKE A BULRUSH by MARIANNE MOORE GLASS HOUSES by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON CITY VIGNETTE: DUSK by SARA TEASDALE THE USES OF POETRY by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS I LOVE ALL BEAUTEOUS THINGS by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES ON A PORTRAIT OF WORDSWORTH BY B.R. HAYDON by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |