Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Siegfried Sassoon - LimitationsSiegfried Sassoon - Limitations
Work rating: Low


If you could crowd them into forty lines!   Yes; you can do it, once you get a start;   All that you want is waiting in your head,   For long-ago you’ve learnt it off by heart.    .    .    .    .   Begin: your mind’s the room where you have slept, (Don’t pause for rhymes), till twilight woke you early.   The window stands wide-open, as it stood   When tree-tops loomed enchanted for a child   Hearing the dawn’s first thrushes through the wood   Warbling (you know the words) serene and wild.   You’ve said it all before: you dreamed of Death,   A dim Apollo in the bird-voiced breeze   That drifts across the morning veiled with showers,   While golden weather shines among dark trees.     You’ve got your limitations; let them sing, And all your life will waken with a cry:   Why should you halt when rapture’s on the wing   And you’ve no limit but the cloud-flocked sky?…     But some chap shouts, ‘Here, stop it; that’s been done!’—   As God might holloa to the rising sun, And then relent, because the glorying rays   Remind Him of green-glinting Eden days,   And Adam’s trustful eyes as he looks up   From carving eagles on his beechwood cup.     Young Adam knew his job; he could condense Life to an eagle from the unknown immense….   Go on, whoever you are; your lines can be   A whisper in the music from the weirs   Of song that plunge and tumble toward the sea   That is the uncharted mercy of our tears.    .    .    .    . I told you it was easy!… Words are fools   Who follow blindly, once they get a lead.   But thoughts are kingfishers that haunt the pools   Of quiet; seldom-seen: and all you need   Is just that flash of joy above your dream. So, when those forty platitudes are done,   You’ll hear a bird-note calling from the stream   That wandered through your childhood; and the sun   Will strike the old flaming wonder from the waters….   And there’ll be forty lines not yet begun.
Source

The script ran 0.002 seconds.