Poem by Archibald Lampman (1861-1899)
The Better Day
Harsh thoughts, blind angers, and fierce hands,
That keep this restless world at strife,
Mean passions that, like choking sands,
Perplex the stream of life,
Pride and hot envy and cold greed,
The cankers of the loftier will,
What if ye triumph, and yet bleed?
Ah, can ye not be still?
Oh, shall there be no space, no time,
No century of weal in store,
No freehold in a nobler clime,
Where men shall strive no more?
Where every motion of the heart
Shall serve the spirit's master-call,
Where self shall be the unseen part,
And human kindness all?
Or shall we but by fits and gleams
Sink satisfied, and cease to rave,
Find love but in the rest of dreams,
And peace but in the grave?
More information on Archibald Lampman
Poetry by Editorial Team
Read 239 times
Written on 2022-10-24 at 00:00
Tags Canadian 
Save as a bookmark (requires login)
Write a comment (requires login)
Send as email (requires login)
Print text