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THE
MANY-MANSIONED HOUSE
AND OTHER POEMS
By
EDWARD WILLIAM THOMSON
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RESURRECTION
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WHEN iron taskwork levelled low
My youthful dreams of pride,
’T was “Oh to reach the end and go
Beyond all seas,” I sighed;
“For freedom’s songbirds pierce me
sore,
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I
wince when lovers greet,
All blessed lives mock mine the more
In this long World’s strange street.”
Time
wrought that envy to an end,
I could endure the day, |
10 |
The
looming sea I took for friend,
Its patient, solemn sway
Taught me acceptance of control,
Contempt for woe and joy,
And Life a dream wherein what soul |
15 |
Scorns
Fate, escapes annoy.
With
this stern wisdom once acquaint
My spirit coldly braved,
It gave no thanks, it made no plaint,
Suffered, and nowise craved; |
20 |
Thy
life, O heart, seemed calmly dead,
Thy dirge the friendly Main,
Thy tomb and empty blueness spread
To dome a senseless plain.
At
last, with one transfiguring sign |
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(Love
wrought this wonder rare),
Lord God, what anthems intertwine
To thrill Thy shining air!
Our choral gladness wings above
The far resurging sea, |
30 |
Whose
diapason chants the Love
That wakes my soul to Thee. [Page 112] |
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