Page:The poems of Richard Watson Gilder, Gilder, 1908.djvu/73

Rh These ills another, cruel, monstrous, worse

Than all before thy pure and passionate love

Shall bring the old, immitigable curse."

And thou, who tell st me this, dost bid me sing?"

I bid thee sing, even tho' I have not told

All the deep flood of anguish shall be rolled

Across thy breast. Nor, Poet, shalt thou bring

From out those depths thy grief! Tell to the wind

Thy private woes, but not to human ear,

Save in the shape of comfort for thy kind.

But never hush thy song, dare not to cease

While life is thine. Haply, 'mid those who hear,

Thy music to one soul shall murmur peace,

Tho' for thyself it hath no power to cheer.

Then shall thy still unbroken spirit grow

Strong in its silent suffering and more wise;

And,—as the drenched and thunder-shaken skies

Pass into golden sunset,—thou shalt know

An end of calm, when evening breezes blow;

And, looking on thy life with vision fine,

Shalt see the shadow of a hand divine."

MORS TRIUMPHALIS

I

the hall of the king the loud mocking of many at one;

While lo! with his hand on his harp the old bard is undone!

One false note, then he stammers, he sobs like a child, he is failing,

And the song that so bravely began ends in discord and wailing.