Then to Emmaus with him I, too, walked. No mark of nails in hand or feet I traced. So quietly of star-wise dream he talked, I did not know a savior with me paced The dripping city streets; that, by my side, In the familiar clothes of modern men, There lived again the tale of one who died To make earth good -- the thorns, the scourge again. At lunch he told in simple phrase to me The story of the strike and his arrest, Charged with inciting murder. A near tree Bent while he told of prison, Death his guest, And when he spoke of rising from that tomb It threw a cross of shadow on the room. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ENVOYS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON MERELY STATEMENT by AMY LOWELL HALF-WAKING by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM LINES WRITTEN AT THE GRAVE OF ALEXANDER DUMAS by GWENDOLYN B. BENNETT THE FARMER'S BRIDE by CHARLOTTE MEW PORTRAIT OF A LADY by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS RENCONTRE by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 34. TRUE LOVE KNOWS BUT ONE by PHILIP AYRES |