Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Rapture by John Frederick Freeman
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Rapture

    By John Frederick Freeman



    If thou hast grief
    And passion vex the spirit that is in thee--

    There was a stony beach
    Where the heat flickered and the little waves
    Whispered each to each.
    Dove-coloured was that stony beach,
    And white birds hungering hovered over
    The shining waves;
    And men had kindled there
    A great fierce heap of golden flame--
    Spoiled grasses with dead buttercups and pale clover.
    The agonising flame
    Yearned in its vitals towards the quiet air
    And died in a little smoke.
    And on the coloured beach the black warm ash
    Remained.

    Then on that warm ash
    Another heap of grasses was outpoured,
    And instant came
    Another knot of struggling yellow smoke
    That burst into new agonies of flame,
    Dying into a drift of smoke;
    And on the coloured beach the black cold ash
    Remained.

    Or is thy grief too deep,
    Passion too dear, the spirit in thee asleep?--

    Twelve deep and sombre, still,
    Expectant, hushed,
    The miles-long crowd stood--and then listening.
    The nervous drums,
    The unendurable, low reeds:
    Silence--and then the nearing drums
    Again, again the thrilling reeds,
    And then
    (The deep crowd hushed)
    Following an almightier King
    That rode unseen,
    Drew near the tributary magnificence....
    Hushed, hushed,
    The deep crowd stood, devouring, listening;
    But a child on his father's shoulder cried,
    "Hurrah, hurrah!"--

    Only have thou no fear
    Pride, but no fear.



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