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Poem by Gilbert Keith Chesterton


Glencoe


THE star-crowned cliffs seem hinged upon the sky,
The clouds are floating rags across them curled,
They open to us like the gates of God
Cloven in the last great wall of all the world.

I looked, and saw the valley of my soul
Where naked crests fight to achieve the skies,
Where no grain grows nor wine, no fruitful thing,
Only big words and starry blasphemies.

But you have clothed with mercy like a moss
The barren violence of its primal wars,
Sterile although they be and void of rule,
You know my shapeless crags have loved the stars.

How shall I thank you, O courageous heart,
That of this wasteful world you had no fear;
But bade it blossom in clear faith and sent
Your fair flower-feeding rivers: even as here

The peat burns brimming from their cups of stone
Glow brown and blood-red down the vast decline
As if Christ stood on yonder clouded peak
And turned its thousand waters into wine. 



Gilbert Keith Chesterton


Gilbert Keith Chesterton's other poems:
  1. The March of the Black Mountain
  2. Blessed Are the Peacemakers
  3. The Crusader Returns from Captivity
  4. To M. E. W.
  5. A Chord of Colour


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • William Leighton Glencoe ("MOUNTAIN-TOP o’er mountain rising")

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