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

Harriet Monroe - The SageHarriet Monroe - The Sage
Work rating: Low


Sequoia, growing grandly Out of the long ago, Beloved of Time, whose sons March by to measures slow, How tenderly you cherish All little lives below! Your mighty column pillars The blue dome of the sky. Your foliage plumes with greenness The clouds that pass on high. Yet here below slim lilies grow, And here at peace am I. How have you won Time over— That lord of dark renown? His hand, that withers all things, Has given your brow a crown. From your crest forty centuries Now upon me look down. Yes, all the lordly ages Your youth immortal knows, Yet softly here you fashion A carpet for the rose, And smoothly spread a mossy bed Under my deep repose. You have defied the lightnings— They rent and scarred in vain. Fierce fires have stripped you naked- You made your peace with pain, And bloomed again in beauty To baffle death`s disdain. Where do you win your secret Of life untroubled, free, And wise with all the wisdom Of time`s democracy? What do you hear this many a year?— Whisper the song to me !
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.