The maimed in heart remember not their scars Yet hearing a hurt brother play the flute, May pause and feel again the slow, acute, First anguish of the inward-swinging bars. Then sightless eyes remember dawn and stars The lips know suddenly that they are mute The feet recall they once were resolute And swift upon bright paths that climbing mars. Oh, mind which once was slow to understand And dull to head and careless and morose, Flame now with swift compassion, spark to spark. Lest pity break the heart, stretch forth the hand Through cold and mist and blackness, and draw close A brother who is stumbling through the dark. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SICKNESS by CHARLES BUKOWSKI JACOBITE'S TOAST (TO AN OFFICER IN THE ARMY) by JOHN BYROM FIRST BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 17. SIC TRANSIT by THOMAS CAMPION ODE FOR THE AMERICAN DEAD IN ASIA by THOMAS MCGRATH CITY ROOFS by CHARLES HANSON TOWNE TO ONE WHO ASKS by MARY REYNOLDS ALDIS THE SALZBURG CHIMES by HENRY ALFORD LAURENCE BLOOMFIELD IN IRELAND: 8. THE EVICTION by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM |