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THE WORLD did say to me, ‘My bread thou shalt not eat, I have no place for thee In house nor field nor street. ‘I have on land nor sea For thee nor home nor bread, I scarce can give to thee A grave when thou art dead.’ ‘O crazy World,’ said I, ‘What is it thou canst give, Which wanting, I must die, Or having, I shall live? ‘When thou thy all hast spent, And all thy harvests cease, I still have nutriment That groweth by decrease. ‘Thy streets will pass away, Thy towers of steel be rust, Thy heights to plains decay, Thyself be wandering dust; ‘But I go ever on From prime to endless prime, I sit on Being’s throne, A lord o’er space and time. ‘Then, crazy World,’ said I, ‘What is it thou canst give, Which wanting, I must die, Or having, I shall live?’
William Gay
Read poems about / on: crazy, house, world, home, sea, time
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