



 


|
The
Soul's Quest and Other Poems
by
Frederick George Scott
|
THE
POET'S EMPIRE
|
|
WHAT
power can break the inner harmonies,
The rich imaginings, heard
like distant sea
O’er purple meadow-lands
at eve, while we
Look starwards mute? Hopes that like mountains rise
Into mid-heaven, and to entrancèd eyes
|
5 |
Horizon-glories
of what is to be,—
All these and more lie round
us infinitely,
Beyond all language fair in cloudless skies.
This is the poet’s empire. Here may he
Reign king-like, throned
in splendour and in power
|
10 |
No
power can shake, so he indeed be king.
Free as the wind, untamèd as the sea,
When earth weighs heavily,
most in that hour
He
cleaves the heavens in scorn on eagle-wing.
1887.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|