Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/149

 The tribute of recriminating groans. Nor are the shapes of obsolescent creeds Much longer to flit near enough to make Men glad for living in a world like this; For wisdom, courage, knowledge, and the faith Which has the soul and is the soul of reason— These are the world's achievers. And the child— The child that is the saviour of all ages, The prophet and the poet, the crown-bearer, Must yet with Love's unhonored fortitude, Survive to cherish and attain for us The candor and the generosity, By leave of which we smile if we bring back The first revealing flash that wakened us When wisdom like a shaft of dungeon-light Came searching down to find us. "Halfway back I made a mild allusion to the Fates, Not knowing then that ever I should have Dream-visions of them, painted on the air,— Clotho, Lachesis, Atropos. Faint-hued They seem, but with a faintness never fading, Unblurred by gloom, unshattered by the sun, Still with eternal color, colorless, They move and they remain. The while I write These very words I see them,—Atropos, Lachesis, Clotho; and the last is laughing. When Clotho laughs, Atropos rattles her shears; But Clotho keeps on laughing just the same. Some time when I have dreamed that Atropos Has laughed, I'll tell you how the colors change— The colors that are changeless, colorless."