April 7, 2009

The Song of the Children

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.

~Gilbert Keith Chesterton

6 comments:

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

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

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

    Hailey A.Elliott

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

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

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  6. 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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