The Wild Knight and Other Poems by G. K. (Gilbert Keith) Chesterton
page 63 of 92 (68%)
page 63 of 92 (68%)
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I struck: the serpentine slow blood
In four arms soaked the moss-- Before me, by the living Christ, The blood ran in a cross. Therefore I toil in forests here And pile the wood in stacks, And take no fee from the shivering folk Till I have cleansed the axe. But for a curse God cleared my sight, And where each tree doth grow I see a life with awful eyes, And I must lay it low. ART COLOURS On must we go: we search dead leaves, We chase the sunset's saddest flames, The nameless hues that o'er and o'er In lawless wedding lost their names. God of the daybreak! Better be Black savages; and grin to gird Our limbs in gaudy rags of red, The laughing-stock of brute and bird; |
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