BLIND.

BLIND.

AS one who in a cavern undergroundCan hear the jars and murmurings which tellThat far away a busy people dwell,Not hearing, only knowing by the sound,So dwells he in a world by darkness bound;He hears and feels, but no dawn can dispellThe night for him on whom no light e’er fellWith power to drive away the night profound.But not for aye he walks the realm of night,For one day there will break upon his eyesA flood of rarer, dark o’ercoming lightThan ever flushed the arch of earthly skies,And for him dawn a morning wondrous brightWithin the garden lands of Paradise.

AS one who in a cavern undergroundCan hear the jars and murmurings which tellThat far away a busy people dwell,Not hearing, only knowing by the sound,So dwells he in a world by darkness bound;He hears and feels, but no dawn can dispellThe night for him on whom no light e’er fellWith power to drive away the night profound.But not for aye he walks the realm of night,For one day there will break upon his eyesA flood of rarer, dark o’ercoming lightThan ever flushed the arch of earthly skies,And for him dawn a morning wondrous brightWithin the garden lands of Paradise.

AS one who in a cavern undergroundCan hear the jars and murmurings which tellThat far away a busy people dwell,Not hearing, only knowing by the sound,So dwells he in a world by darkness bound;He hears and feels, but no dawn can dispellThe night for him on whom no light e’er fellWith power to drive away the night profound.

AS one who in a cavern underground

Can hear the jars and murmurings which tell

That far away a busy people dwell,

Not hearing, only knowing by the sound,

So dwells he in a world by darkness bound;

He hears and feels, but no dawn can dispell

The night for him on whom no light e’er fell

With power to drive away the night profound.

But not for aye he walks the realm of night,For one day there will break upon his eyesA flood of rarer, dark o’ercoming lightThan ever flushed the arch of earthly skies,And for him dawn a morning wondrous brightWithin the garden lands of Paradise.

But not for aye he walks the realm of night,

For one day there will break upon his eyes

A flood of rarer, dark o’ercoming light

Than ever flushed the arch of earthly skies,

And for him dawn a morning wondrous bright

Within the garden lands of Paradise.


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