Page:The poems of Richard Watson Gilder, Gilder, 1908.djvu/159

Rh Our poet's head hath grown! Ere 't is too late

Come, let us crown him in our Hall of State;

Ring loud the bells, give to the winds his praise,

And urge his fame to other lands and days!"

So was it done, and deep his joy therein.

But passing home at night, from out the din

Of the loud Hall, the poet, unaware,

Moved through a lonely and dim-lighted square—

There was the smell of lilacs in the air

And then the sudden singing of a bird,

Startled by his slow tread. What memory stirred

Within his brain he told not. Yet this night,—

Lone lingering when the eastern heavens were bright,—

He wove a song of such immortal art

That there lives not in all the world one heart—

One human heart unmoved by it. Long! long!

The laurel-crown has failed, but not that song

Born of the night and sorrow. Where he lies

At rest beneath the ever-shifting skies,

Age after age, from far-off lands they come,

With tears and flowers, to seek the poet's tomb.

THE POET'S PROTEST

with your rule and measure,

Your tests and analyses!

You may take your empty pleasure,

May kill the pine, if you please;

You may count the rings and the seasons,

May hold the sap to the sun,

You may guess at the ways and the reasons

Till your little day is done.

But for me the golden crest

That shakes in the wind and launches