April 7, 2009

THE SONG OF THE CHILDREN

This is a poem written by Chesterton. I think it is simply beautiful.

The World is ours till sunset,
Holly and fire and snow;
And the name of our dead brother
Who loved us long ago.

The grown folk mighty and cunning,
They write his name in gold;
But we can tell a little
Of the million tales he told.

He taught them laws and watchwords,
To preach and struggle and pray;
But he taught us deep in the hayfield
The games that the angels play.

Had he stayed here for ever,
Their world would be wise as ours--
And the king be cutting capers,
And the priest be picking flowers.

But the dark day came: they gathered:
On their faces we could see
They had taken and slain our brother,
And hanged him on a tree.

6 comments:

Anya said...

Have you read Chesterton's books? Father Brown? Heretics? All good stuff.

ourspareoom said...

Hey Raora...
Indeed, it is simply beautiful. Thank you for reminding of this around Easter time.
~Meg

Anonymous said...

Hi Raora,
You are sure right about the poem being beautiful.
you pick such lovely poetry.

Hailey A.Elliott

ourspareoom said...

Raora? What happened to StrongJoy's blog? I can't find it anywhere!
~Meg

Anya said...

Raora... I think that you should post again... sometime this month... :-)

ourspareoom said...

Raora- after recieving your comment I tried again to look at Strongjoy's blog, being careful to get the correct address, but it still won't show up. I'm on a different computer as well.
~Meg

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