NEW LIGHT

What light was in me once unguarded was

And any wind could blow it any way,

A flame in tatters, with all moods for laws,

Wildest at midnight, pallidest by day.

A fire too tossed for comfort to the cold,

A gleam too blurred for guidance to the dark,

Shifting caprice of red and blue and gold

Flickering wanly from the troubled spark;

And other times a curl of azure smoke,

Like the last puff of incense that is seen

To vanish from the brazier, rose to cloak

The light until I feared it never had been.

But now the crystal-clear white globe of peace

Has closed my spirit in, that it may burn

Steadily to the stars, and henceforth cease

The wandering way of any wind to turn.