The Wild Knight and Other Poems. Гилберт Кит Честертон

The Wild Knight and Other Poems - Гилберт Кит Честертон


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her.

       Only this much: if one, deserving well,

       Touching your thin young hands and making suit,

       Feel not himself a crawling thing, a brute,

       Buried and bricked in a forgotten hell;

       Prophet and poet be he over sod,

       Prince among angels in the highest place,

       God help me, I will smite him on the face,

       Before the glory of the face of God.

      A Novelty

       Table of Contents

      Why should I care for the Ages

       Because they are old and grey?

       To me, like sudden laughter,

       The stars are fresh and gay;

       The world is a daring fancy,

       And finished yesterday.

       Why should I bow to the Ages

       Because they were drear and dry?

       Slow trees and ripening meadows

       For me go roaring by,

       A living charge, a struggle

       To escalade the sky.

       The eternal suns and systems,

       Solid and silent all,

       To me are stars of an instant,

       Only the fires that fall

       From God's good rocket, rising

       On this night of carnival.

      Ultimate

       Table of Contents

      The vision of a haloed host

       That weep around an empty throne;

       And, aureoles dark and angels dead,

       Man with his own life stands alone.

       'I am,' he says his bankrupt creed:

       'I am,' and is again a clod:

       The sparrow starts, the grasses stir,

       For he has said the name of God.

      The Donkey

       Table of Contents

      When fishes flew and forests walked

       And figs grew upon thorn,

       Some moment when the moon was blood

       Then surely I was born;

       With monstrous head and sickening cry

       And ears like errant wings,

       The devil's walking parody

       On all four-footed things.

       The tattered outlaw of the earth,

       Of ancient crooked will;

       Starve, scourge, deride me: I am dumb,

       I keep my secret still.

       Fools! For I also had my hour;

       One far fierce hour and sweet:

       There was a shout about my ears,

       And palms before my feet.

      The Beatific Vision

       Table of Contents

      Through what fierce incarnations, furled

       In fire and darkness, did I go,

       Ere I was worthy in the world

       To see a dandelion grow?

       Well, if in any woes or wars

       I bought my naked right to be,

       Grew worthy of the grass, nor gave

       The wren, my brother, shame for me.

       But what shall God not ask of him

       In the last time when all is told,

       Who saw her stand beside the hearth,

       The firelight garbing her in gold?

      The Hope of the Streets

       Table of Contents

      The still sweet meadows shimmered: and I stood

       And cursed them, bloom of hedge and bird of tree,

       And bright and high beyond the hunch-backed wood

       The thunder and the splendour of the sea.

       Give back the Babylon where I was born,

       The lips that gape give back, the hands that grope,

       And noise and blood and suffocating scorn

       An eddy of fierce faces - and a hope

       That 'mid those myriad heads one head find place,

       With brown hair curled like breakers of the sea,

       And two eyes set so strangely in the face

       That all things else are nothing suddenly.

      Ecclesiastes

       Table of Contents

      There is one sin: to call a green leaf grey,

       Whereat the sun in heaven shuddereth.

       There is one blasphemy: for death to pray,

       For God alone knoweth the praise of death.

       There is one creed: 'neath no world-terror's wing

       Apples forget to grow on apple-trees.

       There is one thing is needful - everything -

       The rest is vanity of vanities.

      Song of the Children

       Table of Contents

      The World is ours till sunset,

       Holly and fire and snow;

       And the name of our dead brother

       Who loved us long ago.

       The grown folk mighty and cunning,

       They write his name in gold;

       But we can tell a little

       Of the million tales he told.

       He taught them laws and watchwords,

       To preach and struggle and pray;

       But he taught us deep in the hayfield

       The games that the angels play.

       Had he stayed here for ever,

       Their world would be wise as ours--

       And the king be cutting capers,

       And the priest be picking flowers.

      


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