Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
John Brown's Body by Stephen Vincent Benet
Perhaps we go with wind and cloud and sun,
Into the free companionship of air;
Perhaps with sunsets when the day is done,
All's one to me -- I do not greatly care;
So long as there are brown hills -- and a tree
Like a mad prophet in a land of dearth --
And I can lie and hear eternally
The vast monotonous breathing of the earth.

I have known hours, slow and golden-glowing,
Lovely with laughter and suffused with light,
O Lord, in such a time appoint my going,
When the hands clench, and the cold face grows white,
And the spark dies within the feeble brain,
Spilling its star-dust back to dust again.
Book: John Brown's Body by Stephen Vincent Benet
  1.7k
       Sanam ojha, mrmonst3r, Michael-Angelo, --- and JR Macfadden
Please log in to view and add comments on poems