Page:Poems PiattVol2.djvu/186

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174
TO MARIAN ASLEEP.
And shall you hear the ghastly tales
From the slow, solemn lips of Time—
Of Wrong that wins, of Right that fails;
Of trampled Want and gorgeous Crime;
Of Splendour's glare in lighted rooms
And Famine's moan in outer glooms

Of armies in their red eclipse
That mingle on the smoking plain';
Of storms that dash our mighty ships
With silks and spices through the main;
Of what it costs to climb or fall—
Of Death's great Shadow ending all?

But, baby Marian, do I string
The dark with darker rhymes for you,
Forgetting that you came in Spring,
The child of sun and bloom and dew,
And that I kissed, still fresh to-day,
The rosiest bud of last year's May?

Forgive me, pretty one: I know,
Whatever sufferings onward lie,
Christ wore his crown of thorns below
To gain his crown of light on high;
And when the lamp's frail flame is gone,
Look up: the stars will still shine on.