The Hermit

Above the blindness of content,

The ignorance of ease,

Inhabiting within his soul

A shrine of memories,

Between the silences of sleep

Attentively he hears

The endless crawling sob and strain,

The spending of the years.

He sees the lapsing stream go by

His unperturbed face,

Out of a dark, into a dark,

Across a lighted space.

He calls it Life, this lighted space

Upon the moving flood.

He sees the water white with tears,

He sees it red with blood.

And many specks upon the tide

He sees and marks by name,—

Motes of a day, and fools of Fate,

And challengers of fame;

With here a people, there a babe,

A blossom, or a crown,—

They whirl a little, gleam, and pass,

Or in the eddies drown.

He waits. He waits one day to see

The lapsing of the stream,

The eddying forms, the darknesses,

Dissolve into a dream.