Since early this morning the world has seemed surging
With unworded rhythm, and rhyme without
thought.
It may be the Muses take this way of urging
The patience and pains by which poems
are wrought.
It may be some singer who passed into glory,
With songs all unfinished, is lingering
near
And trying to tell me the rest of the story,
Which I am too dull of perception to
hear.
I hear not, I see not; but feel the sweet swinging
And swaying of metre, in sunlight and
shade,
The still arch of Space with such music is ringing
As never an audible orchestra made.
The moments glide by me, and each one is dancing;
Aquiver with life is each leaf on the
tree,
And out on the ocean is movement entrancing,
As billow with billow goes racing with
glee.
With never a thought that is worthy the saying,
And never a theme to be put into song,
Since early this morning my mind has been straying,
A vagabond thing, with a vagabond throng,
With gay, idle moments, and waves of the ocean,
With winds and with sunbeams, and tree-tops
and birds,
It has lilted along in the joy of mere motion,
To songs without music and verse without
words.
Poems of Optimism. By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
London: Gay & Hancock, 1915.
Back to Poem Index |