Terence Macswiney
George William Russell
See, though the oil be low more purely still and higher The flame burns in the body’s lamp! The watchers still Gaze with unseeing eyes while the Promethean Will, The Uncreated Light, the Everlasting Fire Sustains itself against the torturer’s desire Even as the fabled Titan chained upon the hill. Burn on, shine on, thou immortality, until We, too, have lit our lamps at the funeral pyre; Till we, too, can be noble, unshakable, undismayed: Till we, too, can burn with the holy flame, and know There is that within us can triumph over pain, And go to death, alone, slowly, and unafraid. The candles of God are already burning row on row: Farewell, lightbringer, fly to thy heaven again!
Next 10 Poems
- George William Russell : The Great Breath
- Carl Sandburg : A Coin
- Carl Sandburg : A Fence
- Carl Sandburg : A Sphinx
- Carl Sandburg : A Teamster's Farewell
- Carl Sandburg : All Day Long
- Carl Sandburg : Among The Red Guns
- Carl Sandburg : And They Obey
- Carl Sandburg : Anna Imroth
- Carl Sandburg : At A Window
Previous 10 Poems
- George William Russell : Immortality
- George William Russell : By The Margin Of The Great Deep
- George William Russell : A Farewell
- George William Russell : 99. A New Being
- George William Russell : 98. The Seer
- George William Russell : 97. In As Much …
- George William Russell : 96. Inheritance
- George William Russell : 95. The Master Singer
- George William Russell : 94. The Golden Age
- George William Russell : 93. The Mountaineer