BE this our trust, that ages (filled with light More glorious far than those faint beams which shine In this our feeble twilight) yet to come Shall see distinctly what we now but hope, -- The world immutable in which alone Wisdom is found, the light and life of things, The breath divine, creating power divine, The @3One@1 of which the human intellect Is but a type, as feeble as that image Of the bright sun seen on the bursting wave -- Bright, but without distinctness; yet in passing Showing its glorious and eternal source. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SOLILOQUY OF A TURKEY by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR THE ARGUMENT OF HIS BOOK by ROBERT HERRICK WAITING FOR THE GRAPES by WILLIAM MAGINN HERO AND LEANDER by CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE IDYLL 11. THE CYCLOPS by THEOCRITUS TO AMERICA, ON HER FIRST SONS FALLEN IN THE GREAT WAR by E. M. WALKER THE DAY AFTER THE WAR by JAMES MADISON BELL |