Page:Poems Piatt.djvu/103

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
ENCHANTED.
89
God's will unto me is not music or wine.
With helpless reproaching, with desolate tears,
God's will I resist, for God's will is divine;
And I—shall be dust to the end of my years.

God's will is—not mine. Yet one night I shall lie
Very still at his feet, where the stars may not shine.
"Lo! I am well pleased," I shall hear from the sky;
Because—it is God's will I do, and not mine.




ENCHANTED.
She sat in a piteous hut,
In a wood where poisons grew.
Withered was every leaf,
And her face was withered too.
Like a sword the sharp wind cut
Her worn heart through and through.

Away, and so far away,
She looked for a light and a sign:
"Oh, he has not forgotten me!
What should I care for to-day,
When all to-morrow is mine?
I am content to stay."