Glory

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49

Glory

This same evening that I write I witnessed,
Resting on a garden bench and looking westward,
Sublime splendours.

Beyond the blood-red rose-engarrisoned footpath,
And the dun green flatlands where a few human lights glimmered,
Wild indigo and magenta rainstorms invested
The dark recesses of the mountain ranges.

Clouds overhead burst into cornelian flames,
Transmuting by their strange glow all the garden pigments.
Then was revealed, in a dim turquoise interstice,
A very young, remote, and slender, but outshining
But all predominant moon.

In such an hour the soul finds an appeasement
Not justified by reasons of commonsense.
In that hour she asks of the inscrutable
No more petulant questions.

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About this page...

Title: From a Garden in the Antipodes

Author: Evelyn Hayes

Publication details: Sidgwick and Jackson Limited, 1929, London

Part of: New Zealand Texts Collection

This text is the subject of: National Library of New Zealand

Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 New Zealand Licence