When mountain-ash in clusters reddens, Its leafage wet and stained with rust, When through my palm the nail that deadens By bony hands is shrewdly thrust, When leaden-rippling rivers freeze me, As on the wet gray height I toss, While my austere-faced country sees me Where I am swinging on the cross, Then through my bloody agonizing My staring eyes, with tears grown stiff, Shall see on the broad river rising Christ moving toward me in a skiff. And in his eyes the same hopes biding, And the same rags from him will trail, His garment piteously hiding The palm pierced with the final nail. Christ! Saddened are the native reaches. The cross tugs at my failing might. Thy skiff-will it achieve these beaches, And land here at my cruciate height? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...UNDER THE VIOLETS by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES FLOWERS by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW RENASCENCE by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY THE STRANGER'S ALMS by HENRY ABBEY A COURTESAN'S BIRTHDAY by ROBERT AVRETT LAST DAYS OF BYRON by CHARLOTTE FISKE BATES ON THE DEATH OF SIR ANTHONY VANDIKE, THE FAMOUS PAINTER by ABRAHAM COWLEY |