Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume I. by Jean Ingelow
page 54 of 413 (13%)
page 54 of 413 (13%)
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About the age of chivalry.
"Sweet is the leisure of the bird; She craves no time for work deferred; Her wings are not to aching stirred Providing for her helpless ones. Fair is the leisure of the wheat; All night the damps about it fleet; All day it basketh in the heat, And grows, and whispers orisons. "Grand is the leisure of the earth; She gives her happy myriads birth, And after harvest fears not dearth, But goes to sleep in snow-wreaths dim. Dread is the leisure up above The while He sits whose name is Love, And waits, as Noah did, for the dove, To wit if she would fly to him. "He waits for us, while, houseless things, We beat about with bruisèd wings On the dark floods and water-springs, The ruined world, the desolate sea; With open windows from the prime All night, all day, He waits sublime, Until the fulness of the time Decreed from His eternity. "Where is OUR leisure?--give us rest. |
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