To Buddha
Vachel Lindsay
Awake again in Asia, Lord of Peace, Awake and preach, for her far swordsmen rise. And would they sheathe the sword before you, friend, Or scorn your way, while looking in your eyes? Good comrade and philosopher and prince, Thoughtful and thoroughbred and strong and kind, Dare they to move against your pride benign, Lord of the Law, high chieftain of the mind? But what can Europe say, when in your name The throats are cut, the lotus-ponds turn red? And what can Europe say, when with a laugh Old Asia heaps her hecatombs of dead?
Next 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : To Lady Jane
- Vachel Lindsay : To Mary Pickford
- Vachel Lindsay : To Reformers In Despair
- Vachel Lindsay : To The United States Senate
- Vachel Lindsay : Tolstoi Is Plowing Yet
- Vachel Lindsay : Two Easter Stanzas
- Vachel Lindsay : Two Old Crows
- Vachel Lindsay : Upon Returning To The Country Road
- Vachel Lindsay : What Grandpa Mouse Said
- Vachel Lindsay : What Semiramis Said
Previous 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : Titian
- Vachel Lindsay : This, My Song, Is Made For Kerensky
- Vachel Lindsay : This Section Is A Christmas Tree
- Vachel Lindsay : The Wizard In The Street
- Vachel Lindsay : The Wedding Of The Rose And The Lotos
- Vachel Lindsay : The Voice Of The Man Impatient With Visions And Utopias
- Vachel Lindsay : The Unpardonable Sin
- Vachel Lindsay : The Tree Of Laughing Bells, Or The Wings Of The Morning
- Vachel Lindsay : The Traveller-heart
- Vachel Lindsay : The Trap