Ah, love, 'tis a sorrowful land!
KENNETH RAND, "The Old Lovers"
- The beauty that men seek is half a dream--
- Where'er we wander, yet it lies afar;
- It touches with its wand a setting star,
- It stirs the ripple of an ebbing stream.
- And though we run beyond the dawning gleam,
- Or kneel to worship at an altar bright,
- We may not know the soul of its delight,
- Or more than marvel at its palest beam.
KENNETH RAND, "The True Magic"
- I too was young once--or I think so--see,
- How the years slip like coins from open hands!
KENNETH RAND, "The Prodigal"
- Give me to die like a beast, afar, alone
- With but the hawk and crow
- To watch beside me while I cast my soul,
- And but the sky to know
- What my racked lips have uttered, what last groan,
- Or curse or prayer, I breathed to heaven above.
KENNETH RAND, "Straw-Death"
- And should men name me dead, I beg ye, say
- "Nay, he but wearied here, and went away."
KENNETH RAND, "The Suicide"
- I think we are what Time may make us--lords
- Of wealth and land, or wagemen held at hire;
- Turning the years, we gain our toil's desire,
- Or lose, inopportune, its high rewards.
KENNETH RAND, "To the Time-God"
KENNETH RAND, "Ante Lucem"
- Oh, the morrow of pain and dole
- Is naught while the sunlight lingers.
KENNETH RAND, "Eros Ephemeros"
- Yet earth has never child she may not slay,
- Nor sea a lover that she cannot kill.
KENNETH RAND, "The Suicide"
- God is a creed outworn,
- Ill-wrought from a mirage fair,
- And life is an image pale
- That faces a sunless morn.
KENNETH RAND, "Ante Lucem"
- Let me leap naked through life's testing flame,
- And bear to lose, and yet endure to win.
KENNETH RAND, "The World-Slave"
- Ye are but actors moved at Time's behest,
- And king or slave as shifts the pantomime.
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