SLOW, groping giant, whose unsteady limbs Waver and bend and cannot keep the path, Thy feet are foul with mire, and thy knees Torn by the nettles of the wayside fen; The dust of dogmas dead is in thy mouth, Yet down the ages thou hast followed him -- Clear-eyed Belief -- who journeys with light heart. The leaves of Hope about his head are green, Firm falls his foot upon the path he treads, To every day he suits his pilgrimage, And rest at dusk is his, -- complete and deep. For thee -- the bramble: thorns of vain debate Harrow the hundred furrows of thy brow: Sleep is not thine, -- the darkness has no balm For thy torn spirit. Deep into the night Thy feet that gain no guidance from the stars Press on, until before the silent tent, Where deep and dreamlessly he lies asleep, Thou comest with tired limbs to sink beside The ashes of his fire and find them cold. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A VISION UPON [THIS CONCEIT] OF THE FAERIE QUEENE (1) by WALTER RALEIGH THE LAST INVOCATION by WALT WHITMAN THE RWOSE IN THE DARK by WILLIAM BARNES THE SECRET OF THE WATERFALL by WILLIAM ROSE BENET CLIMBING by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: A DREAM by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON OL' DOC' HYAR by JAMES EDWIN CAMPBELL GERTRUDE OF WYOMING; OR, THE PENNSYLVANIAN COTTAGE: 1 by THOMAS CAMPBELL |