POEMS
from
THE WINGS OF ICARUS
By Hugh Griffith
I. THE PRISONER
II FOR A
CHRISTIAN GIRL
Blow, Winds, Blow, upon the China
Sea,
The fairest rose of earth declines,
Send the waves to kiss the shore,
The darkness deepens into
night,
Gently, for beneath the breaker's roar,
All beauty that the world assigns,
Returning currents bring the kiss to me
Will
fade away and pass from sight,
Who waits beside the Western Door,
And even saints must come to shrines.
Still singing songs of love that praise
The magic powers of the wave ---
Old songs now, that end in nevermore.
But in your eyes I see delight
That
looks upon a purer day
Tho no pulse quickens on the Ocean's glass,
When angels of the
Lord
recite
And other winds that change and pass
The love that will not pass away,
Print new shapes upon the Eastern sand,
And
every heart will see with mine
A fragile figure bowing at the knee
How beautiful your spirit shines!
Resists all sterile forms the mind can see,
And raising in the West a weightless hand,
Looks with longing toward the China Sea.
But hush! Men have no shadows in the
West,
THE BORDER COVENANT a novel
about the French and Indian War
Feel no sun-bright joy nor Star-light rest,
And we must seek no more than this:
Castled in the air of mythic skies
To share a poppied kiss,
And sleep with love that never needs to rise
Beyond the beauty of a dream's disguise.