WHEN rowan leaves are dank and rusting And rowan berries red as blood, When in my palm the hangman's thrusting The final nail with bony thud, When, over the foul flooding river, Upon the wet grey height, I toss Before my land's grim looks, and shiver As I swing here upon the cross, Then, through the blood and weeping, stretches My dying sight to space remote; I see upon the river's reaches Christ sailing to me in a boat. The same hopes in His eyes are dwelling, From Him the self-same tatters trail, And piteous from His garments swelling His hand, as mine, pierced by the nail. O Christ, how my own places grieve me! Upon the cross I faint and die. Oh will Thy boat yet come to save me Where I am crucified on high? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DREAMS by CECIL FRANCES ALEXANDER THE CONQUEROR'S GRAVE by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT DOT LONG-HANDLED DIPPER by CHARLES FOLLEN ADAMS EUMARES by ASCLEPIADES OF SAMOS LINES INSCRIBED ON A PLATTER by ROBERT BURNS ON THE MEANING OF THE WORD 'WRATH' AS APPLIED TO GOD IN SCRIPTURE by JOHN BYROM VISION by OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN |