Fifty years Other Poems | Page 9

James Weldon Johnson
myself a mule,?And don't you ever doubt it.?I know that work may have its use,?But still I feel that's no excuse?For turning it into abuse;?What do you think about it?
Let others fume and sweat and boil,?And scratch and dig for golden spoil,?And live the life of work and toil,?Their lives to labor giving.?But what is gold when life is sped,?And life is short, as has been said,?And we are such a long time dead,?I'll spend my life in living.
OMAR
Old Omar, jolly sceptic, it may be?That, after all, you found the magic key?To life and all its mystery, and I?Must own you have almost persuaded me.
DEEP IN THE QUIET WOOD
Are you bowed down in heart??Do you but hear the clashing discords and the din of life? Then come away, come to the peaceful wood,?Here bathe your soul in silence. Listen! Now,?From out the palpitating solitude?Do you not catch, yet faint, elusive strains??They are above, around, within you, everywhere.?Silently listen! Clear, and still more clear, they come. They bubble up in rippling notes, and swell in singing tones. Now let your soul run the whole gamut of the wondrous scale Until, responsive to the tonic chord,?It touches the diapason of God's grand cathedral organ, Filling earth for you with heavenly peace?And holy harmonies.
VOLUPTAS
To chase a never-reached mirage?Across the hot, white sand,?And choke and die, while gazing on?Its green and watered strand.
THE WORD OF AN ENGINEER
"She's built of steel?From deck to keel,?And bolted strong and tight;?In scorn she'll sail?The fiercest gale,?And pierce the darkest night.
"The builder's art?Has proved each part?Throughout her breadth and length;?Deep in the hulk,?Of her mighty bulk,?Ten thousand Titans' strength."
The tempest howls,?The Ice Wolf prowls,?The winds they shift and veer,?But calm I sleep,?And faith I keep?In the word of an engineer.
Along the trail?Of the slender rail?The train, like a nightmare, flies?And dashes on?Through the black-mouthed yawn?Where the cavernous tunnel lies.
Over the ridge,?Across the bridge,?Swung twixt the sky and hell,?On an iron thread?Spun from the head?Of the man in a draughtsman's cell.
And so we ride?Over land and tide,?Without a thought of fear--?_Man never had?The faith in God?That he has in an engineer!_
LIFE
Out of the infinite sea of eternity?To climb, and for an instant stand?Upon an island speck of time.
From the impassible peace of the darkness?To wake, and blink at the garish light?Through one short hour of fretfulness.
SLEEP
O Sleep, thou kindest minister to man,?Silent distiller of the balm of rest,?How wonderful thy power, when naught else can,?To soothe the torn and sorrow-laden breast!?When bleeding hearts no comforter can find,?When burdened souls droop under weight of woe,?When thought is torture to the troubled mind,?When grief-relieving tears refuse to flow;?'Tis then thou comest on soft-beating wings,?And sweet oblivion's peace from them is shed;?But ah, the old pain that the waking brings!?That lives again so soon as thou art fled!
Man, why should thought of death cause thee to weep;?Since death be but an endless, dreamless sleep?
PRAYER AT SUNRISE
O mighty, powerful, dark-dispelling sun,?Now thou art risen, and thy day begun.?How shrink the shrouding mists before thy face,?As up thou spring'st to thy diurnal race!?How darkness chases darkness to the west,?As shades of light on light rise radiant from thy crest! For thee, great source of strength, emblem of might,?In hours of darkest gloom there is no night.?Thou shinest on though clouds hide thee from sight,?And through each break thou sendest down thy light.
O greater Maker of this Thy great sun,?Give me the strength this one day's race to run,?Fill me with light, fill me with sun-like strength,?Fill me with joy to rob the day its length.?Light from within, light that will outward shine,?Strength to make strong some weaker heart than mine,?Joy to make glad each soul that feels its touch;?Great Father of the sun, I ask this much.
THE GIFT TO SING
Sometimes the mist overhangs my path,?And blackening clouds about me cling;?But, oh, I have a magic way?To turn the gloom to cheerful day--?I softly sing.
And if the way grows darker still,?Shadowed by Sorrow's somber wing,?With glad defiance in my throat,?I pierce the darkness with a note,?And sing, and sing.
I brood not over the broken past,?Nor dread whatever time may bring;?No nights are dark, no days are long,?While in my heart there swells a song,?And I can sing.
MORNING, NOON AND NIGHT
When morning shows her first faint flush,?I think of the tender blush?That crept so gently to your cheek?When first my love I dared to speak;?How, in your glance, a dawning ray?Gave promise of love's perfect day.
When, in the ardent breath of noon,?The roses with passion swoon;?There steals upon me from the air?The scent that lurked within your hair;?I touch your hand, I clasp your form--?Again your lips are close and warm.
When comes the night with beauteous skies,?I think of your tear-dimmed eyes,?Their mute entreaty that I stay,?Although your lips sent me away;?And then falls memory's bitter blight,?And
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