Page:Poems Piatt.djvu/19

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A VOYAGE TO THE FORTUNATE ISLES.
5
"Others He lifts to high estate—
Others, no peers of yours or mine.
He folds them in a silken fate,
Casts pearls before them—oh, the swine!
Drugs them with wine, veils them with lace;
  And gives us this mean place."

"Well. May there not be butterflies
That lift with weary wings the air;
That loathe the foreign sun, which lies
On all their colours like despair;
That glitter, home-sick for the form
  And lost sleep of the worm?"

"Hush—see the ship. It comes at last,"
She whispered, through forlornest smiles:
"How brave it is! It sails so fast.
It takes us to the Fortunate Isles.
Come." Then the heart's great silence drew
  Like Death around the Two.

Death-like it was—through pain and doubt,
To leave their world at once and go,
Pale, mute, and even unconscious, out
Through dimness toward some distant Glow,