COME! Let us lay a lance in rest, And tilt at windmills under a wild sky! For who would live so petty and unblest That dare not tilt at something ere he die; Rather than, screened by safe majority, Preserve his little life to little ends, And never raise a rebel cry! Ah! for a weapon so sublime, That, lifted, counts no cost of woe or weal, Since Fate demands it shivered every time! When in the wildness of our charge we reel Men laugh indeed -- the sweeter heavens smile, For all the world of fat prosperity Can not outweigh that broken steel! The echo of our challenging Sets swinging all the bells of ribaldry, And yet those other hidden bells that ring The faint and wondering chimes of sympathy Within the true cathedral of our souls -- So, crystal-clear, the shepherd's pipe will move His browsing flock to reverie. God save the pennon, in the morn, That signals moon to stand, and sun to fly; That flutters when the weak is overborne To stem the tide of fate and certainty. It knows not reason, and it seeks no fame, But has engraven round its stubborn wood: "Knight-errant, to Eternity!" So! Undismayed beneath the clouds Shall float the banner of forlorn defence -- A jest to the complacency of crowds, But haloed with the one diviner sense: To hold itself as nothing to itself; And in the quest of the imagined star To lose all thought of recompense! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CITIZEN OF THE WORLD by ALFRED JOYCE KILMER TO CERTAIN POETS by ALFRED JOYCE KILMER MY LOVE by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL GARDEN DAYS: 2. NEST EGGS by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON THE PLEASURES OF IMAGINATION; A POEM. ENLARGED VERSION: BOOK 2 by MARK AKENSIDE AN AUTUMN NIGHT by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS PETITION (1) by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE TO ROBERT CALVERLEY TREVELYAN & ELIZABETH TREVELYAN by GORDON BOTTOMLEY THE BLACK FOX OF SALMON RIVER by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD |