The Drunkards In The Street
Vachel Lindsay
The Drunkards in the street are calling one another, Heeding not the night-wind, great of heart and gay,— Publicans and wantons— Calling, laughing, calling, While the Spirit bloweth Space and Time away. Why should I feel the sobbing, the secrecy, the glory, This comforter, this fitful wind divine? I the cautious Pharisee, the scribe, the whited sepulchre— I have no right to God, he is not mine. * * * * * Within their gutters, drunkards dream of Hell. I say my prayers by my white bed to-night, With the arms of God about me, with the angels singing, singing Until the grayness of my soul grows white.
Next 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : The Eagle That Is Forgotten
- Vachel Lindsay : The Empty Boats
- Vachel Lindsay : The Encyclopaedia
- Vachel Lindsay : The Fairy Bridal Hymn
- Vachel Lindsay : The Firemen's Ball
- Vachel Lindsay : The Flower Of Mending
- Vachel Lindsay : The Gamblers
- Vachel Lindsay : The Ghosts Of The Buffaloes
- Vachel Lindsay : The Haughty Snail-king
- Vachel Lindsay : The Hearth Eternal
Previous 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : The Drunkard's Funeral
- Vachel Lindsay : The Doll Upon The Topmost Bough
- Vachel Lindsay : The Dangerous Little Boy Fairies
- Vachel Lindsay : The Dandelion
- Vachel Lindsay : The Cornfields
- Vachel Lindsay : The Congo
- Vachel Lindsay : The City That Will Not Repent
- Vachel Lindsay : The Chinese Nightingale
- Vachel Lindsay : The Broncho That Would Not Be Broken
- Vachel Lindsay : The Black Hawk War Of The Artists