Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Comfortable Light by John Frederick Freeman
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Comfortable Light

    By John Frederick Freeman



    Most comfortable Light,
    Light of the small lamp burning up the night,
    With dawn enleagued against the beaten dark;
    Pure golden perfect spark;

    Or sudden wind-bright flame,
    That but the strong-handed wind can urge or tame;
    Chill loveliest light the kneeling clouds between,
    Silverly serene;

    Comfort of happy light,
    That mouse-like leaps amid brown leaves, cheating sight;
    Clear naked stars, burning with swift intense
    Earthward intelligence;--

    Sensitive, single
    Points in the dark inane that purely tingle
    With eager fire, pouring night's circles through
    Their living blue;

    Dark light still waters hold;
    Broad silver moonpath trodden into gold:
    Candle-flame glittering through the traveller's night--
    Most comfortable light....

    And lovelier, the eye
    Where light from darkness shines unfathomably,
    Light secret, clear, shallow, profound, known, strange,
    Constant alone in change:--

    Not that wild light that turns
    Hunted from dying eyes when the last fire burns;
    O, not that bitter light of wounded things,
    When bony anguish springs

    Sudden, intolerable;
    Nor light of mad eyes gleaming up from hell....
    Come not again, wild light! Shine not again,
    Hill-flare of pain!

    But thou, most holy light....
    Not the noon blaze that stings, too fiercely bright,
    Not that unwinking stare of shameless day;
    But thou, the gray,

    Nun-like and silent, still,
    Fine-breathed on many an eastern bare green hill;
    Keen light of gray eyes, cool rain, and stern spears;
    Sad light, but not to tears:--

    --O, comfort thou of eyes
    Watching expectant from chill northern skies,
    Excellent joy for lids heavy with night--
    Strange with delight!



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