.
IT
is
full
Winter
now:
the
trees
are
bare,
Save
where
the
cattle
huddle
from
the
cold
Beneath
the
pine,
for
it
doth
never
wear
The
Autumn's
gaudy
livery
whose
gold
Her
jealous
brother
pilfers,
but
is
true
To
the
green
doublet;
bitter
is
the
wind,
as
though
it
blew
From
Saturn's
cave;
a
few
thin
wisps
of
hay
Lie
on
the
sharp
black
hedges,
where
the
wain
Dragged
the
sweet
pillage
of
a
summer's
day
From
the
low
meadows
up
the
narrow
lane;
Upon
the
half-thawed
snow
the
bleating
sheep
Press
close
against
the
hurdles,
and
the
shivering
house-dogs
creep
From
the
shut
stable
to
the
frozen
stream
And
back
again
disconsolate,
and
miss
The
bawling
shepherds
and
the
noisy
team;
And
overhead
in
circling
listlessness
The
cawing
rooks
whirl
round
the
frosted
stack,
Or
crowd
the
dripping
boughs;
and
in
the
fen
the
ice-pools
crack
Where
the
gaunt
bittern
stalks
among
the
reeds
And
flaps
his
wings,
and
stretches
back
his
neck,
And
hoots
to
see
the
moon;
across
the
meads
Limps
the
poor
frightened
hare,
a
little
speck;
And
a
stray
seamew
with
its
fretful
cry
Flits
like
a
sudden
drift
of
snow
against
the
dull
grey
sky.
Full
winter:
and
the
lusty
goodman
brings
His
load
of
faggots
from
the
chilly
byre,
And
stamps
his
feet
upon
the
hearth,
and
flings
The
sappy
billets
on
the
waning
fire,
And
laughs
to
see
the
sudden
lightening
scare
His
children
at
their
play;
and
yet,—the
Spring
is
in
the
air,
Already
the
slim
crocus
stirs
the
snow,
And
soon
yon
blanchèd
fields
will
bloom
again
With
nodding
cowslips
for
some
lad
to
mow,
For
with
the
first
warm
kisses
of
the
rain
The
winter's
icy
sorrow
breaks
to
tears,
And
the
brown
thrushes
mate,
and
with
bright
eyes
the
rabbit
peers
From
the
dark
warren
where
the
fir-cones
lie,
And
treads
one
snowdrop
under
foot,
and
runs
Over
the
mossy
knoll,
and
blackbirds
fly
Across
our
path
at
evening,
and
the
suns
Stay
longer
with
us;
ah!
how
good
to
see
Grass-girdled
Spring
in
all
her
joy
of
laughing
greenery
Dance
through
the
hedges
till
the
early
rose,
(That
sweet
repentance
of
the
thorny
briar!)
Burst
from
its
sheathèd
emerald
and
disclose
The
little
quivering
disk
of
golden
fire
Which
the
bees
know
so
well,
for
with
it
come
Pale
boys-love,
sops-in-wine,
and
daffadillies
all
in
bloom.
Then
up
and
down
the
field
the
sower
goes,
While
close
behind
the
laughing
younker
scares
With
shrilly
whoop
the
black
and
thievish
crows,
And
then
the
chestnut-tree
its
glory
wears,
And
on
the
grass
the
creamy
blossom
falls
In
odorous
excess,
and
faint
half-whispered
madrigals
Steal
from
the
bluebells'
nodding
carillons
Each
breezy
morn,
and
then
white
jessamine,
That
star
of
its
own
heaven,
snapdragons
With
lolling
crimson
tongues,
and
eglantine
In
dusty
velvets
clad
usurp
the
bed
And
woodland
empery,
and
when
the
lingering
rose
hath
shed
Red
leaf
by
leaf
its
folded
panoply,
And
pansies
closed
their
purple-lidded
eyes,
Chrysanthemums
from
gilded
argosy
Unload
their
gaudy
scentless
merchandise,
And
violets
getting
overbold
withdraw
From
their
shy
nooks,
and
scarlet
berries
dot
the
leafless
haw.
O
happy
field!
and
O
thrice
happy
tree!
Soon
will
your
queen
in
daisy-flowered
smock
And
crown
of
flowre-de-luce
trip
down
the
lea,
Soon
will
the
lazy
shepherds
drive
their
flock
Back
to
the
pasture
by
the
pool,
and
soon
Through
the
green
leaves
will
float
the
hum
of
murmuring
bees
at
noon.
Soon
will
the
glade
be
bright
with
bellamour,
The
flower
which
wantons
love,
and
those
sweet
nuns
Vale-lilies
in
their
snowy
vestiture
Will
tell
their
beaded
pearls,
and
carnations
With
mitred
dusky
leaves
will
scent
the
wind,
And
straggling
traveller's
joy
each
hedge
with
yellow
stars
will
bind.
Dear
Bride
of
Nature
and
most
bounteous
Spring!
That
can'st
give
increase
to
the
sweet-breath'd
kine,
And
to
the
kid
its
little
horns,
and
bring
The
soft
and
silky
blossoms
to
the
vine,
Where
is
that
old
nepenthe
which
of
yore
Man
got
from
poppy
root
and
glossy-berried
mandragore!
There
was
a
time
when
any
common
bird
Could
make
me
sing
in
unison,
a
time
When
all
the
strings
of
boyish
life
were
stirred
To
quick
response
or
more
melodious
rhyme
By
every
forest
idyll;—do
I
change?
Or
rather
doth
some
evil
thing
through
thy
fair
pleasaunce
range?
Nay,
nay,
thou
art
the
same:
'tis
I
who
seek
To
vex
with
sighs
thy
simple
solitude,
And
because
fruitless
tears
bedew
my
cheek
Would
have
thee
weep
with
me
in
brotherhood;
Fool!
shall
each
wronged
and
restless
spirit
dare
To
taint
such
wine
with
the
salt
poison
of
his
own
despair!
Thou
art
the
same:
'tis
I
whose
wretched
soul
Takes
discontent
to
be
its
paramour,
And
gives
its
kingdom
to
the
rude
control
Of
what
should
be
its
servitor,—for
sure
Wisdom
is
somewhere,
though
the
stormy
sea
Contain
it
not,
and
the
huge
deep
answer
"'Tis
not
in
me."
To
burn
with
one
clear
flame,
to
stand
erect
In
natural
honour,
not
to
bend
the
knee
In
profitless
prostrations
whose
effect
Is
by
itself
condemned,
what
alchemy
Can
teach
me
this?
what
herb
Medea
brewed
Will
bring
the
unexultant
peace
of
essence
not
subdued?
The
minor
chord
which
ends
the
harmony,
And
for
its
answering
brother
waits
in
vain,
Sobbing
for
incompleted
melody
Dies
a
Swan's
death;
but
I
the
heir
of
pain
A
silent
Memnon
with
blank
lidless
eyes
Wait
for
the
light
and
music
of
those
suns
which
never
rise.
The
quenched-out
torch,
the
lonely
cypress-gloom,
The
little
dust
stored
in
the
narrow
urn,
The
gentle
XAIPE
of
the
Attic
tomb,—
Were
not
these
better
far
than
to
return
To
my
old
fitful
restless
malady,
Or
spend
my
days
within
the
voiceless
cave
of
misery?
Nay!
for
perchance
that
poppy-crownèd
God
Is
like
the
watcher
by
a
sick
man's
bed
Who
talks
of
sleep
but
gives
it
not;
his
rod
Hath
lost
its
virtue,
and,
when
all
is
said,
Death
is
too
rude,
too
obvious
a
key
To
solve
one
single
secret
in
a
life's
philosophy.
And
Love!
that
noble
madness,
whose
august
And
inextinguishable
might
can
slay
The
soul
with
honied
drugs,—alas!
I
must
From
such
sweet
ruin
play
the
runaway,
Although
too
constant
memory
never
can
Forget
the
archèd
splendour
of
those
brows
Olympian
Which
for
a
little
season
made
my
youth
So
soft
a
swoon
of
exquisite
indolence
That
all
the
chiding
of
more
prudent
Truth
Seemed
the
thin
voice
of
jealousy,—O
Hence
Thou
huntress
deadlier
than
Artemis!
Go
seek
some
other
quarry!
for
of
thy
too
perilous
bliss
My
lips
have
drunk
enough,—no
more,
no
more,—
Though
Love
himself
should
turn
his
gilded
prow
Back
to
the
troubled
waters
of
this
shore
Where
I
am
wrecked
and
stranded,
even
now
The
chariot
wheels
of
passion
sweep
too
near,
Hence!
Hence!
I
pass
unto
a
life
more
barren,
more
austere.
More
barren—ay,
those
arms
will
never
lean
Down
through
the
trellised
vines
and
draw
my
soul
In
sweet
reluctance
through
the
tangled
green;
Some
other
head
must
wear
that
aureole,
For
I
am
Hers
who
loves
not
any
man
Whose
white
and
stainless
bosom
bears
the
sign
Gorgonian.
Let
Venus
go
and
chuck
her
dainty
page,
And
kiss
his
mouth,
and
toss
his
curly
hair,
With
net
and
spear
and
hunting
equipage
Let
young
Adonis
to
his
tryst
repair,
But
me
her
fond
and
subtle-fashioned
spell
Delights
no
more,
though
I
could
win
her
dearest
citadel.
Ay,
though
I
were
that
laughing
shepherd
boy
Who
from
Mount
Ida
saw
the
little
cloud
Pass
over
Tenedos
and
lofty
Troy
And
knew
the
coming
of
the
Queen,
and
bowed
In
wonder
at
her
feet,
not
for
the
sake
Of
a
new
Helen
would
I
bid
her
hand
the
apple
take.
Then
rise
supreme
Athena
argent-limbed!
And,
if
my
lips
be
musicless,
inspire
At
least
my
life:
was
not
thy
glory
hymned
By
One
who
gave
to
thee
his
sword
and
lyre
Like
Æschylus
at
well-fought
Marathon,
And
died
to
show
that
Milton's
England
still
could
bear
a
son!
And
yet
I
cannot
tread
the
Portico
And
live
without
desire,
fear,
and
pain,
Or
nurture
that
wise
calm
which
long
ago
The
grave
Athenian
master
taught
to
men,
Self-poised,
self-centred,
and
self-comforted,
To
watch
the
world's
vain
phantasies
go
by
with
unbowed
head.
Alas!
that
serene
brow,
those
eloquent
lips,
Those
eyes
that
mirrored
all
eternity,
Rest
in
their
own
Colonos,
an
eclipse
Hath
come
on
Wisdom,
and
Mnemosyne
Is
childless;
in
the
night
which
she
had
made
For
lofty
secure
flight
Athena's
owl
itself
hath
strayed.
Nor
much
with
Science
do
I
care
to
climb,
Although
by
strange
and
subtle
witchery
She
draw
the
moon
from
heaven:
the
Muse
of
Time
Unrolls
her
gorgeous-coloured
tapestry
To
no
less
eager
eyes;
often
indeed
In
the
great
epic
of
Polymnia's
scroll
I
love
to
read
How
Asia
sent
her
myriad
hosts
to
war
Against
a
little
town,
and
panoplied
In
gilded
mail
with
jewelled
scimetar,
White-shielded,
purple-crested,
rode
the
Mede
Between
the
waving
poplars
and
the
sea
Which
men
call
Artemisium,
till
he
saw
Thermopylæ
Its
steep
ravine
spanned
by
a
narrow
wall,
And
on
the
nearer
side
a
little
brood
Of
careless
lions
holding
festival!
And
stood
amazèd
at
such
hardihood,
And
pitched
his
tent
upon
the
reedy
shore,
And
stayed
two
days
to
wonder,
and
then
crept
at
midnight
o'er
Some
unfrequented
height,
and
coming
down
The
autumn
forests
treacherously
slew
What
Sparta
held
most
dear
and
was
the
crown
Of
far
Eurotas,
and
passed
on,
nor
knew
How
God
had
staked
an
evil
net
for
him
In
the
small
bay
of
Salamis,—and
yet,
the
page
grows
dim,
Its
cadenced
Greek
delights
me
not,
I
feel
With
such
a
goodly
time
too
out
of
tune
To
love
it
much:
for
like
the
Dial's
wheel
That
from
its
blinded
darkness
strikes
the
noon
Yet
never
sees
the
sun,
so
do
my
eyes
Restlessly
follow
that
which
from
my
cheated
vision
flies.
O
for
one
grand
unselfish
simple
life
To
teach
us
what
is
Wisdom!
speak
ye
hills
Of
lone
Helvellyn,
for
this
note
of
strife
Shunned
your
untroubled
crags
and
crystal
rills,
Where
is
that
Spirit
which
living
blamelessly
Yet
dared
to
kiss
the
smitten
mouth
of
his
own
century!
Speak
ye
Rydalian
laurels!
where
is
He
Whose
gentle
head
ye
sheltered,
that
pure
soul
Whose
gracious
days
of
uncrowned
majesty
Through
lowliest
conduct
touched
the
lofty
goal
Where
Love
and
Duty
mingle!
Him
at
least
The
most
high
Laws
were
glad
of,
he
had
sat
at
Wisdom's
feast,
But
we
are
Learning's
changelings,
know
by
rote
The
clarion
watchword
of
each
Grecian
school
And
follow
none,
the
flawless
sword
which
smote
The
pagan
Hydra
is
an
effete
tool
Which
we
ourselves
have
blunted,
what
man
now
Shall
scale
the
august
ancient
heights
and
to
old
Reverence
bow?
One
such
indeed
I
saw,
but,
Ichabod!
Gone
is
that
last
dear
son
of
Italy,
Who
being
man
died
for
the
sake
of
God,
And
whose
unrisen
bones
sleep
peacefully.
O
guard
him,
guard
him
well,
my
Giotto's
tower,
Thou
marble
lily
of
the
lily
town!
let
not
the
lour
Of
the
rude
tempest
vex
his
slumber,
or
The
Arno
with
its
tawny
troubled
gold
O'erleap
its
marge,
no
mightier
conqueror
Clomb
the
high
Capitol
in
the
days
of
old
When
Rome
was
indeed
Rome,
for
Liberty
Walked
like
a
Bride
beside
him,
at
which
sight
pale
Mystery
Fled
shrieking
to
her
farthest
sombrest
cell
With
an
old
man
who
grabbled
rusty
keys,
Fled
shuddering
for
that
immemorial
knell
With
which
oblivion
buries
dynasties
Swept
like
a
wounded
eagle
on
the
blast,
As
to
the
holy
heart
of
Rome
the
great
triumvir
passed.
He
knew
the
holiest
heart
and
heights
of
Rome,
He
drave
the
base
wolf
from
the
lion's
lair,
And
now
lies
dead
by
that
empyreal
dome
Which
overtops
Valdarno
hung
in
air
By
Brunelleschi—O
Melpomene
Breathe
through
thy
melancholy
pipe
thy
sweetest
threnody!
Breathe
through
the
tragic
stops
such
melodies
That
Joy's
self
may
grow
jealous,
and
the
Nine
Forget
a-while
their
discreet
emperies,
Mourning
for
him
who
on
Rome's
lordliest
shrine
Lit
for
men's
lives
the
light
of
Marathon,
And
bare
to
sun-forgotten
fields
the
fire
of
the
sun!
O
guard
him,
guard
him
well,
my
Giotto's
tower,
Let
some
young
Florentine
each
eventide
Bring
coronals
of
that
enchanted
flower
Which
the
dim
woods
of
Vallombrosa
hide,
And
deck
the
marble
tomb
wherein
he
lies
Whose
soul
is
as
some
mighty
orb
unseen
of
mortal
eyes.
Some
mighty
orb
whose
cycled
wanderings,
Being
tempest-driven
to
the
farthest
rim
Where
Chaos
meets
Creation
and
the
wings
Of
the
eternal
chanting
Cherubim
Are
pavilioned
on
Nothing,
passed
away
Into
a
moonless
void,—and
yet,
though
he
is
dust
and
clay,
He
is
not
dead,
the
immemorial
Fates
Forbid
it,
and
the
closing
shears
refrain,
Lift
up
your
heads
ye
everlasting
gates!
Ye
argent
clarions
sound
a
loftier
strain!
For
the
vile
thing
he
hated
lurks
within
Its
sombre
house,
alone
with
God
and
memories
of
sin.
Still
what
avails
it
that
she
sought
her
cave
That
murderous
mother
of
red
harlotries?
At
Munich
on
the
marble
architrave
The
Grecian
boys
die
smiling,
but
the
seas
Which
wash
Ægina
fret
in
loneliness
Not
mirroring
their
beauty,
so
our
lives
grow
colourless
For
lack
of
our
ideals,
if
one
star
Flame
torch-like
in
the
heavens
the
unjust
Swift
daylight
kills
it,
and
no
trump
of
war
Can
wake
to
passionate
voice
the
silent
dust
Which
was
Mazzini
once!
rich
Niobe
For
all
her
stony
sorrows
hath
her
sons,
but
Italy!
What
Easter
Day
shall
make
her
children
rise,
Who
were
not
Gods
yet
suffered?
what
sure
feet
Shall
find
their
graveclothes
folded?
what
clear
eyes
Shall
see
them
bodily?
O
it
were
meet
To
roll
the
stone
from
off
the
sepulchre
And
kiss
the
bleeding
roses
of
their
wounds,
in
love
of
Her
Our
Italy!
our
mother
visible!
Most
blessed
among
nations
and
most
sad,
For
whose
dear
sake
the
young
Calabrian
fell
That
day
at
Aspromonte
and
was
glad
That
in
an
age
when
God
was
bought
and
sold
One
man
could
die
for
Liberty!
but
we,
burnt
out
and
cold,
See
Honour
smitten
on
the
cheek
and
gyves
Bind
the
sweet
feet
of
Mercy:
Poverty
Creeps
through
our
sunless
lanes
and
with
sharp
knives
Cuts
the
warm
throats
of
children
stealthily,
And
no
word
said:—O
we
are
wretched
men
Unworthy
of
our
great
inheritance!
where
is
the
pen
Of
austere
Milton?
where
the
mighty
sword
Which
slew
its
master
righteously?
the
years
Have
lost
their
ancient
leader,
and
no
word
Breaks
from
the
voiceless
tripod
on
our
ears:
While
as
a
ruined
mother
in
some
spasm
Bears
a
base
child
and
loathes
it,
so
our
best
enthusiasm
Genders
unlawful
children,
Anarchy
Freedom's
own
Judas,
the
vile
prodigal
Licence
who
steals
the
gold
of
Liberty
And
yet
has
nothing,
Ignorance
the
real
One
Fratricide
since
Cain,
Envy
the
asp
That
stings
itself
to
anguish,
Avarice
whose
palsied
grasp
Is
in
its
extent
stiffened,
monied
Greed
For
whose
dull
appetite
men
waste
away
Amid
the
whirr
of
wheels
and
are
the
seed
Of
things
which
slay
their
sower,
these
each
day
Sees
rife
in
England,
and
the
gentle
feet
Of
Beauty
tread
no
more
the
stones
of
each
unlovely
street.
What
even
Cromwell
spared
is
desecrated
By
weed
and
worm,
left
to
the
stormy
play
Of
wind
and
beating
snow,
or
renovated
By
more
destructful
hands:
Time's
worst
decay
Will
wreathe
its
ruins
with
some
loveliness,
But
these
new
Vandals
can
but
make
a
rainproof
barrenness.
Where
is
that
Art
which
bade
the
Angels
sing
Through
Lincoln's
lofty
choir,
till
the
air
Seems
from
such
marble
harmonies
to
ring
With
sweeter
song
than
common
lips
can
dare
To
draw
from
actual
reed?
ah!
where
is
now
The
cunning
hand
which
made
the
flowering
hawthorn
branches
bow
For
Southwell's
arch,
and
carved
the
House
of
One
Who
loved
the
lilies
of
the
field
with
all
Our
dearest
English
flowers?
the
same
sun
Rises
for
us:
the
seasons
natural
Weave
the
same
tapestry
of
green
and
grey:
The
unchanged
hills
are
with
us:
but
that
Spirit
hath
passed
away.
And
yet
perchance
it
may
be
better
so,
For
Tyranny
is
an
incestuous
Queen,
Murder
her
brother
is
her
bedfellow,
And
the
Plague
chambers
with
her:
in
obscene
And
bloody
paths
her
treacherous
feet
are
set;
Better
the
empty
desert
and
a
soul
inviolate!
For
gentle
brotherhood,
the
harmony
Of
living
in
the
healthful
air,
the
swift
Clean
beauty
of
strong
limbs
when
men
are
free
And
women
chaste,
these
are
the
things
which
lift
Our
souls
up
more
than
even
Agnolo's
Gaunt
blinded
Sibyl
poring
o'er
the
scroll
of
human
woes,
Or
Titian's
little
maiden
on
the
stair
White
as
her
own
sweet
lily
and
as
tall,
Or
Mona
Lisa
smiling
through
her
hair,—
Ah!
somehow
life
is
bigger
after
all
Than
any
painted
angel
could
we
see
The
God
that
is
within
us!
The
old
Greek
serenity
Which
curbs
the
passion
of
that
level
line
Of
marble
youths,
who
with
untroubled
eyes
And
chastened
limbs
ride
round
Athena's
shrine
And
mirror
her
divine
economies,
And
balanced
symmetry
of
what
in
man
Would
else
wage
ceaseless
warfare,—this
at
least
within
the
span
Between
our
mother's
kisses
and
the
grave
Might
so
inform
our
lives,
that
we
could
win
Such
mighty
empires
that
from
her
cave
Temptation
would
grow
hoarse,
and
pallid
Sin
Would
walk
ashamed
of
his
adulteries,
And
Passion
creep
from
out
the
House
of
Lust
with
startled
eyes.
To
make
the
Body
and
the
Spirit
one
With
all
right
things,
till
no
thing
live
in
vain
From
morn
to
noon,
but
in
sweet
unison
With
every
pulse
of
flesh
and
throb
of
brain
The
Soul
in
flawless
essence
high
enthroned,
Against
all
outer
vain
attack
invincibly
bastioned,
Mark
with
serene
impartiality
The
strife
of
things,
and
yet
be
comforted,
Knowing
that
by
the
chain
causality
All
separate
existences
are
wed
Into
one
supreme
whole,
whose
utterance
Is
joy,
or
holier
praise!
ah!
surely
this
were
governance
Of
Life
in
most
august
omnipresence,
Through
which
the
rational
intellect
would
find
In
passion
its
expression,
and
mere
sense,
Ignoble
else,
lend
fire
to
the
mind,
And
being
joined
with
in
harmony
More
mystical
than
that
which
binds
the
stars
planetary,
Strike
from
their
several
tones
one
octave
chord
Whose
cadence
being
measureless
would
fly
Through
all
the
circling
spheres,
then
to
its
Lord
Return
refreshed
with
its
new
empery
And
more
exultant
power,—this
indeed
Could
we
but
reach
it
were
to
find
the
last,
the
perfect
creed.
Ah!
it
was
easy
when
the
world
was
young
To
keep
one's
life
free
and
inviolate,
From
our
sad
lips
another
song
is
rung,
By
our
own
hands
our
heads
are
desecrate,
Wanderers
in
drear
exile,
and
dispossessed
Of
what
should
be
our
own,
we
can
but
feed
on
wild
unrest.
Somehow
the
grace,
the
bloom
of
things
has
flown,
And
of
all
men
we
are
most
wretched
who
Must
live
each
other's
lives
and
not
our
own
For
very
pity's
sake
and
then
undo
All
that
we
live
for—it
was
otherwise
When
soul
and
body
seemed
to
blend
in
mystic
symphonies.
But
we
have
left
those
gentle
haunts
to
pass
With
weary
feet
to
the
new
Calvary,
Where
we
behold,
as
one
who
in
a
glass
Sees
his
own
face,
self-slain
Humanity,
And
in
the
dumb
reproach
of
that
sad
gaze
Learn
what
an
awful
phantom
the
red
hand
of
man
can
raise.
O
smitten
mouth!
O
forehead
crowned
with
thorn!
O
chalice
of
all
common
miseries!
Thou
for
our
sakes
that
loved
thee
not
hast
borne
An
agony
of
endless
centuries,
And
we
were
vain
and
ignorant
nor
knew
That
when
we
stabbed
thy
heart
it
was
our
own
real
hearts
we
slew.
Being
ourselves
the
sowers
and
the
seeds,
The
night
that
covers
and
the
lights
that
fade,
The
spear
that
pierces
and
the
side
that
bleeds,
The
lips
betraying
and
the
life
betrayed;
The
deep
hath
calm:
the
moon
hath
rest:
but
we
Lords
of
the
natural
world
are
yet
our
own
dread
enemy.
Is
this
the
end
of
all
that
primal
force
Which,
in
its
changes
being
still
the
same,
From
eyeless
Chaos
cleft
its
upward
course,
Through
ravenous
seas
and
whirling
rocks
and
flame,
Till
the
suns
met
in
heaven
and
began
Their
cycles,
and
the
morning
stars
sang,
and
the
Word
was
Man!
Nay,
nay,
we
are
but
crucified
and
though
The
bloody
sweat
falls
from
our
brows
like
rain,
Loosen
the
nails—we
shall
come
down
I
know,
Staunch
the
red
wounds—we
shall
be
whole
again,
No
need
have
we
of
hyssop-laden
rod,
That
which
is
purely
human,
that
is
Godlike,
that
is
God.