C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Earth-Bound
By Alfred Noyes (18801958)
G
Earth being so fair, the dead might wish to return!
Is it so strange if, even in heaven, they yearn
For the May-time and the dreams it used to give?
From strange new spheres where Death has called them now
May they not, with a crown on every brow,
Still cry to the loved earth’s lost familiar face,
Seeking a little refuge from the light
Of the blinding terrible star-sown Infinite,
Seeking some sheltering roof, some four-walled home,
Communion with the universe and God,
How glad to creep back to some lane we trod
Hemmed in with a hawthorn hedge on either side.
Of the little towns and twisted streets again,
Where all the hurrying works and ways of men
Would seem a children’s game for our delight.
Plunging across the gulfs of Space and Time
Would we revisit this our earthly clime
We two, if we could ever come again;
Our mortal home, and see its little roof
Keeping the deep eternal night aloof
And yielding us a refuge from the sky.
Under the cloudy lilac at the gate,
Up the walled garden, then with hearts elate
Forget the stars and close our cottage door.
To make themselves a little hiding-place,
We should rejoice in narrowness of space,
And God should give us nothing more to lose.