Many the lands he saw, the seas he ploughed,
Seeking to find, wherever man had been,
The ways of beauty and the face of love;
But evil things he found,—evermore saw
How human wisdom like a suppliant bowed,
How human love, sad-eyed, did lift her prayer;
He could not slay the pity at his heart
To gladden in himself; he could not still
The noble strife of thought to gain his peace.
So struck the world's life in his single breast,
And set his nature with itself at war,
That half he was knew not the other half,
But, each to other, heart and mind, moved false,
Though to itself each true, as conscience bade;
Such discord ruled; oft to himself he seemed
Some unbelieving knower of things true,
Some loveless lover of things beautiful,
Some godless worshipper of things divine;
And beauty without joy, truth without faith,
All holy sanctities made soulless things,
Contrary currents, spun a whirl wherein
Sank action, passion, meditation down
Lost in himself; then, as the poets tell
Of that first strangeness of the world to sense
In early boyhood when the swooning earth
Page:The roamer and other poems (1920).djvu/32
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22
THE ROAMER