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The
Vagrant of Time
by
Charles G.D. Roberts
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ON
THE ROAD
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EVER
just over the top of the next brown rise
I expect some wonderful thing to flatter my eyes.
"What's yonder?" I ask of the first
wayfarer I meet.
"Nothing!" he answers, and looks at
my travel-worn feet.
"Only
more hills and more hills, like the many you've
passed,
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With
rough country between, and a poor enough inn at
the last."
But already I am a-move, for I see he is blind,
And I hate that old grumble I've listened to time
out of mind.
I've
tramped it too long not to know there is truth
in it still,
That lure of the turn of the road, of the crest
of the hill.
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So
I breast me the rise with full hope, well assured
I shall see
Some new prospect of joy, some brave venture a-tiptoe
for me.
For
I have come far, and confronted the calm and the
strife.
I have fared wide, and bit deep in the apple of
life.
It is sweet at the rind, but oh, sweeter still
at the core;
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whatever be gained, yet the reach of the morrow
is more.
At
the crest of the hill I shall hail the new summits
to climb.
The demand of my vision shall beggar the largess
of time.
For I know that the higher I press, the wider
I view,
The more's to be ventured and visioned, in worlds
that are new. |
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So when my feet, failing, shall stumble in ultimate
dark,
And faint eyes no more the high lift of the pathway
shall mark,
There under the dew I'll lie down with my dreams,
for I know
What bright hill-tops the morning will show me,
all red in the glow. |
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