POLITICS
You say a thousand things,
Persuasively,
And with strange passion hotly I agree,
And praise your zest,
And then
A blackbird sings
On April lilac, or fieldfaring men,
Ghostlike, with loaded wain,
Come down the twilit lane
To rest,
And what is all your argument to me?
Oh yes — I know, I know,
It must be so —
You must devise
Your myriad policies,
For we are little wise,
And must be led and marshalled, lest we keep
Too fast a sleep
Far from the central world’s realities.
Yes, we must heed —
For surely you reveal
Life’s very heart; surely with flaming zeal
You search our folly and our secret need;
And surely it is wrong
To count my blackbird’s song,
My cones of lilac, and my wagon team,
More than a world of dream.
But still
A voice calls from the hill —
I must away —
I cannot hear your argument to-day.
-John Drinkwater, 1917

I really love this one 🙂
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1917. The year of the Russian Revolution.
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“But still
A voice calls from the hill —
I must away —
I cannot hear your argument to-day.”
The ending is perfect.
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How perfectly splendid, and how refreshing in the midst of the day’s blather.
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This is a delight. Thank you for sharing it!
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A perfect poem for our time.
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Ah, yes. I also read a lilac poem today, in a magazine, and am thinking of blogging it.
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