Knowing how bad he feels, how much he grieves, how sharply aware he is of the separation between himself and God (all knowledge starts from this), he extorts from this terrible absence a consolation, extrapolating, to think how it has to be, at the other end, much worse for God, who must also grieve cut off from him. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BIRDS DO THUS by ROBERT FROST LEFT-HANDED POEM by JAMES GALVIN HOW MY HEART SINKS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO-MORROW TO FRESH WOODS AND PASTURES NEW' by AMY LOWELL THE ARABIAN SHAWL by KATHERINE MANSFIELD DOMEDAY BOOK: JOHN CAMPBELL AND CARL EATON by EDGAR LEE MASTERS |