I shall recall this day when I am old. And though my brain be dull with weight of years, And my heart's blood run thin by life's long tears, I shall have this my spirit to uphold; I shall have this to cloak me from the cold. As Death the intermediary nears, I shall remember Mansfield and my fears Will vanish then into the mind's stronghold. Today I stood on Mansfield's upturned face -- An atom of a god whose vision spied Into infinity through finite space; And narrow is the world, but very wide The mystic reaches of that other place Where we are one with earth and wind and tide. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TONE PICTURE (MALIPIERO: IMPRESSONI DAL VERO) by JEAN STARR UNTERMEYER TOM'S GARLAND: UPON THE UNEMPLOYED by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS LAMENT by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY TACT by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE V-A-S-E by JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE LINES ON THE DEATH OF PHILIP MEADOWS by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THREE SONGS OF LOVE (CHINESE FASHION): 1. THE MANDARIN SPEAKS by WILLIAM A. BEATTY |