WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
John Marr and Other Poems cover

John Marr and Other Poems

Chapter 85: EPILOGUE
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The collection presents a range of lyric poems and longer pieces that move between maritime imagery, elegiac reflection, and stark battle verse. Many poems evoke oceanic scenes and shipboard fellowship while others confront the violence, aftermath, and moral uncertainty of armed conflict. Interwoven are philosophical meditations and classical or literary allusions that shift tone from colloquial anecdote to austere contemplation. Selections include short lyrics, narrative fragments, extracts from larger verse cycles, and a prose supplement that clarifies the war material. A persistent, individual voice binds the pieces, balancing rough seafaring idiom with earnest poetic inquiry.

EPILOGUE

If Luther’s day expand to Darwin’s year,
Shall that exclude the hope—foreclose the fear?

Unmoved by all the claims our times avow,
The ancient Sphinx still keeps the porch of shade;
And comes Despair, whom not her calm may cow,
And coldly on that adamantine brow
Scrawls undeterred his bitter pasquinade.
But Faith (who from the scrawl indignant turns)
With blood warm oozing from her wounded trust,
Inscribes even on her shards of broken urns
The sign o’ the cross—the spirit above the dust!

    Yea, ape and angel, strife and old debate—
The harps of heaven and dreary gongs of hell;
Science the feud can only aggravate—
No umpire she betwixt the chimes and knell:
The running battle of the star and clod
Shall run forever—if there be no God.

    Degrees we know, unknown in days before;
The light is greater, hence the shadow more;
And tantalized and apprehensive Man
Appealing—Wherefore ripen us to pain?
Seems there the spokesman of dumb Nature’s train.

    But through such strange illusions have they passed
Who in life’s pilgrimage have baffled striven—
Even death may prove unreal at the last,
And stoics be astounded into heaven.

    Then keep thy heart, though yet but ill-resigned—
Clarel, thy heart, the issues there but mind;
That like the crocus budding through the snow—
That like a swimmer rising from the deep—
That like a burning secret which doth go
Even from the bosom that would hoard and keep;
Emerge thou mayst from the last whelming sea,
And prove that death but routs life into victory.