Giant Hours With Poet Preachers
selections appearing i
taken from poems by A
bner's Sons,
UTY, FAME, JOY, LO
ife; and both dying for the great cause of humanity in the world's greatest war. Brooke the Englishman; Seeger the American; so are they linked. Both were but lads in their twenties;
h they have given their lives will make a vast difference in the definition of what a Christian is. I can detect no orthodox Christian message
se, and fire. What he might have written in the steady white heat of noontime and in life's glorious afternoon of experience, and in its subtle charm of "sunset and the evening star," one can only guess. But while he lived he li
ONG O
. He sang it as he breathed it and lived it, and just as naturally. His singing of it was as rhythmic as breathing, and as sweet as the first song of
liss that beck
lurements, Cit
e, where I hav
treasures of i
d thy towers br
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soul like a thirsty desert drinks rain; to spring to flowers and life and color again. He drank of life and youth as a flower drinks of dew,
deep the bliss
sweet potential
's dream of ha
y Alan
NG OF
him. He will walk to the ends of the earth. Indeed, he prefers the long way home. Anybody who has known both Youth and Beauty knows this, and it need not be argued about much, thank God. And so i
auty, whose s
rose of dawn
sh the exalte
of sensibl
orld, essentia
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n hearts), Seeger writes of Beauty. But we who know him cannot be made to think that this "Wanderer" is a fellow we do not know; "nor Launcelot, nor another."
love of Beaut
pure a casket
ch a lesser t
ge enough for
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that calls more insistently than Fame. Youth and Beauty and Fame-how closely akin they are! If Beauty and Fame keep him company, Youth is next the
lowed Fame with
real ambitio
foam of Nature
f palpable
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l spheres set down in human words, let us catch again the poetic echo of that third lin
till the crow
of the kings are
till the hil
ngs of the s
gs, this echo is the echo
s the question which he himself ask
the en
re to coin t
memory: to hav
moon, when it s
boughs where mat
le tree
t dear need tha
rdened nor the
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singings of this singing poet, and he himself has g
draine
bowl and cried
mistress whom
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Fame to Joy and hear him sing o
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head. He loved to swim and he loved to dive. Perhaps into his living and his writing he carried this athletic
om
n existence
ficient and my
ng opportun
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s man, who so loved to live, who gloated on existence, who saw life as a trembling opportunity for
mportuning fro
market where Jo
rse yet swells w
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s told us this. We expect it of older poets, but here a young poet sees it all clearly; that Youth must buy Joy while his purse is full with Youth. And ye who rob Youth of playtime, of Joy, ye capitalists, ye money makers and life destroye
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that are within him bubbling over, sings of Youth, and Beauty, and Fame, and Joy, yet he knows that these are not al
he knows-love of comrade, love of God. In this same "An Ode to Na
re set, but '
lled them, ye
wanted wings
yet to think
oyal to the l
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omantic love; it is
ings in "The Need to Love" as great a so
love that all
art and banis
gardens where
ers that one t
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and dedicates it to Love and lights a fire of wor
love is the de
the volume wit
es without prayer
set and the
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palace is cold and barren; the
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rhaps the war made these two imaginative poets think of Death sooner than Youth usually gives him heed. But most men will think of Death when they are face to face with the shadow day and nig
e fear, then,
t perish,
inevit
redestin
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ame poem, "Makatooh
t bowed nor bla
, but ser
ld wish mo
you mos
s though y
through the
ately ban
eroes b
all all de
come as sl
claim you
ou from th
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giving their lives heroically in God's great cause of liberty in his world-t
tes also most strongly his attitude toward Death, is that poem
rendezvous
isputed b
mes back with
blossoms f
endezvous
ings back blue
*
'twere bette
silk and s
robs out in b
pulse, and bre
awakenings
rendezvou
in some fl
rips north ag
pledged wo
fail that
y Alan
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ay to climb to God. We would not expect this young poet to be thinking much in this direction, but he does just the same. I have even found
the same: some
pervasive
visible Natu
nd near and a
inger but with
d, fled down th
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ound of Heaven." And again in the presence of War's death the poet fel
ast assault ou
ain and peril
hearts aflame a
brave etern
us in which we
whose presence
er who would
ultless and ou
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eeps that truly great poem, "The Hosts," to a swinging climax in its last tremendous stanza; whi
f soldiers as "Big with the beauty of cos
s bare and fl
he summits o
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th
a stately
at peopled the
stars in t
t gorgeous an
had sense t
rama must be
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ISH
OXE
ED N
MAS
RT S
RT B
tion: JOH