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- Nothing is enough!
- No, though our all be spent--
- Heart's extremest love,
- Spirit's whole intent,
- All that nerve can feel,
- All that brain invent,--
- Still beyond appeal
- Will Divine Desire
- Yet more excellent
- Precious cost require
- Of this mortal stuff,--
- Never be content
- Till ourselves be fire.
- Nothing is enough!
- Laurence Binyon

- THE rain was ending, and light
- Lifting the leaden skies.
- It shone upon ceiling and floor
- And dazzled a child's eyes.
- Pale after fever, a captive
- Apart from his schoolfellows,
- He stood at the high room's window
- With face to the pane pressed close,
- And beheld an immense glory
- Flooding with fire the drops
- Spilled on miraculous leaves
- Of the fresh green lime-tree tops.
- Washed gravel glittered red
- To a wall, and beyond it nine
- Tall limes in the old inn yard
- Rose over the tall inn sign.
- And voices arose from beneath
- Of boys from school set free,
- Racing and chasing each other
- With laughter and games and glee.
- To the boy at the high room-window,
- Gazing alone and apart,
- There came a wish without reason,
- A thought that shone through his heart.
- I'll choose this moment and keep it,
- He said to himself, for a vow,
- To remember for ever and ever
- As if it were always now.
- Laurence Binyon

- IN the shadow of a broken house,
- Down a deserted street,
- Propt walls, cold hearths, and phantom stairs,
- And the silence of dead feet--
- Locked wildly in one another's arms
- I saw two lovers meet.
- And over that hearthless house aghast
- Rose from the mind's abyss
- Lost stars and ruined, peering moons,
- Worlds overshadowing this,--
- Time's stony palace crumbled down
- Before that instant kiss.
- Laurence Binyon

- IN the high leaves of a walnut,
- On the very topmost boughs,
- A boy that climbed the branching bole
- His cradled limbs would house.
- On the airy bed that rocked him
- Long, idle hours he'd lie
- Alone with white clouds sailing
- The warm blue of the sky.
- I remember not what his dreams were;
- But the scent of a leaf's enough
- To house me higher than those high boughs
- In a youth he knew not of,
- In a light that no day brings now
- But none can spoil or smutch,
- A magic that I felt not then
- And only now I touch.
- Laurence Binyon

- OF the old house, only a few, crumbled
- Courses of brick, smothered in nettle and dock,
- Or a shaped stone lying mossy where it tumbled!
- Sprawling bramble and saucy thistle mock
- What once was fire-lit floor and private charm,
- Whence, seen in a windowed picture, were hills fading
- At night, and all was memory-coloured and warm,
- And voices talked, secure of the wind's invading.
- Of the old garden, only a stray shining
- Of daffodil flames among April's Cuckoo-flowers
- Or clustered aconite, mixt with weeds entwining!
- But, dark and lofty, a royal cedar towers
- By homelier thorns; and whether the rain drifts
- Or sun scortches, he holds the downs in ken,
- The western vales; his branchy tiers he lifts,
- Older than many a generation of men.
- Laurence Binyon

- SO old is the wood, so old,
- Old as Fear.
- Wrinkled roots; great stems; hushed leaves;
- No sound near.
- Shadows retreat into shadow,
- Deepening, crossed.
- Burning light singles a low leaf, a bough,
- Far within, lost.
- Laurence Binyon

- AWAY, sad thoughts, and teasing
- Perplexities, away!
- Let other blood go freezing,
- We will be wise and gay.
- For here is all heart-easing,
- An ecstasy at play.
- The children dancing, dancing,
- Light upon happy feet,
- Both eye and heart entrancing
- Mingle, escape, and meet;
- Come joyous-eyed and advancing
- Or floatingly retreat.
- Now slow, now swifter treading
- Their paces timed and true,
- An instant poised, then threading
- A maze of printless clue,
- Their motions smoothly wedding
- To melody anew,
- They sway in chime, and scatter
- In looping circles; they
- Are Music's airy matter,
- And their feet move, the way
- The raindrops shine and patter
- On tossing flowers in May.
- As if those flowers were singing
- For joy of the clean air,
- As if you saw them springing
- To dance the breeze, so fair
- The lissom bodies swinging,
- So light the flung-back hair.
- And through the mind enchanted
- A happy river goes
- By its own young carol haunted
- And bringing where it flows
- What all in the world has wanted
- And who in this world knows?
- Laurence Binyon

- GROSS, with protruding ears,
- Sleek hair, brisk glance, fleshy and yet alert,
- Red, full, and satisfied,
- Cased in obtuseness confident not to be hurt,
- He sits at a little table
- In the crowded, congenial glare and noise, jingling
- Coins in his pocket; sips
- His glass, with hard eye impudently singling
- A woman here and there:--
- Women and men, they are all priced in his thought,
- All commodities staked
- In the market, sooner or later sold and bought.
- "Were I he," you are thinking,
- You with the dreamer's forehead and pure eyes,
- "What should I lose?--All,
- All that is worth the striving for, all my prize;
- "All the truth of me, all
- Life that is wonder, pity and fear, requiring
- Utter joy, utter pain,
- From the heart that the infinite hurts with deep desiring.
- "Why is it I am not he?
- Chance? The grace of God? The mystery's plan?
- He, too, is human stuff,
- A kneading of the old, brotherly slime of man.
- "Am I a lover of men,
- And turn abhorring as from fat slug or snake?
- Lives obstinate in me too
- Something the power of angels could not unmake?"
- O self-questioner! None
- Unlocks your answer. Steadily look, nor flinch.
- This belongs to your kind,
- And knows its aim, and fails not itself at a pinch.
- It is here in the world and works,
- Not done with yet.--Up, then, let the test be tried!
- Dare your uttermost, be
- Completely, and of your own, like him, be justified.
- Laurence Binyon

- I KNOW that there are slumbrous woods beyond
- On islands of white marges, where the tide
- Floods upward, blue as a kingfisher's wing,
- And sails, like wishes of a reverie,
- Shine to the wind that fills them, far inland.
- I know that there are harbours in the hills
- Amid those verdurous, smooth bosom-folds,
- Found by the idle sunbeams for their sleep.
- But it contents me to see nothing more
- Than liquid blue of the invisible wind
- Flowing and glowing through the tamarisk
- That waves upon this wild deserted bank;
- And I lie warm on the short, sandy turf
- Lulled in bright noise of the returning sea.
- O plumy Tamarisk, tossing your green hair
- In the wind's radient stream, as if I had lent
- Your fibres all my senses of delight,
- Why does it so enchant me to have nothing,
- And drink long draughts of sky where nothing is,
- And tremble to the glory of an hour
- That passes out of nothing into nothing?
- Laurence Binyon

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