Collected Poems 1901-1918 in Two Volumes - Volume I. by Walter De la Mare
page 19 of 161 (11%)
page 19 of 161 (11%)
|
And all the strident horror of
Horse and rider, in red defeat, Is only music fine enough To lull him into slumber sweet In fields where ewe and lambkin bleat. O, if with such simplicity Himself take arms and suffer war; With beams his targe shall gilded be, Though in the thickening gloom be far The steadfast light of any star! Though hoarse War's eagle on him perch, Quickened with guilty lightnings--there It shall in vain for terror search, Where a child's eyes beneath bloody hair Gaze purely through the dingy air. And when the wheeling rout is spent, Though in the heaps of slain he lie; Or lonely in his last content; Quenchless shall burn in secrecy The flame Death knows his victors by. THE PHANTOM |
|