WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Captain Craig cover

Captain Craig

Chapter 13: THE SAGE
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A collection of poems beginning with a long narrative portrait of an aging, proud man who drifts into poverty and prompts reflections on dignity, failure, and small mercies. The remaining pieces move among other solitary or strained figures in a small-town milieu, exploring memory, social judgment, domestic life, and the passage of time. Plain diction, subtle irony, and careful dramatic detail shape meditations on compassion, human frailty, and the moral weight of ordinary moments.

 

THE SAGE

Foreguarded and unfevered and serene,
Back to the perilous gates of Truth he went—
Back to fierce wisdom and the Orient,
To the Dawn that is, that shall be, and has been:
Previsioned of the madness and the mean
He stood where Asia, crowned with ravishment,
The curtain of Love’s inner shrine had rent,
And after had gone scarred by the Unseen.
There at his touch there was a treasure chest,
And in it was a gleam, but not of gold;
And on it, like a flame, these words were scrolled:
“I keep the mintage of Eternity.
Who comes to take one coin may take the rest,
And all may come—but not without the key.”