CXVII


THE grass-blade is worth
of the great world
where it grows.

CCXLVII


"HOW may I sing to thee and worship,
O Sun?"
asked the little flower.
"By the simple silence of thy purity,"
answered the sun.

CCCXXI


THINGS look phantastic
in this dimness of the dusk -
the spires whose bases are lost in the dark
and tree tops like blots of ink.
I shall wait for the morning
and wake up to see thy city in the light.

CCLXXXIX


WHEN I stand before thee
at the day's end
thou shalt see my scars
and know that I had my wounds
and also my healing.

CCXCVI


SWEETNESS of thy name fills my heart
when I forget mine -
like thy morning sun when the mist is melted.

CCLXXXIV


THEY light their own lamps and sing
their own words in their temples.
But the birds sing thy name
in thine own morning light, -
for thy name is joy.

CCLXVIII




I HAVE learnt the simple meaning of thy whispers
in flowers and sunshine -
teach me to know
thy words
in pain and death.

CCLXVI


I DO not ask thee into the house.
Come into my infinite loneliness,
my Lover.

CCLXIV


I AM in the world of the roads.
The night comes.
Open thy gate, thou world of the home.

CCCI


THY sunshine smiles upon
the winter days of my heart,
never doubting
of its spring flowers.

CCCVII



CHEERLESS is the day,
the light under frowning clouds
is like a punished child with traces of tears
on its pale cheeks,
and the cry of the wind
is like the cry of a wounded world.
But I know
I am travelling to meet my Friend.

CXVIII


DREAM is a wife
who must talk.
Sleep is a husband
who silently suffers.

CXX


I FEEL, thy beauty,
dark night,
like that of the loved woman
when she has put out the lamp.

CLX


THE raindrops kissed the earth
and whispered:
"We are thy homesick children, mother,
come back to thee from the heaven."

CCII


"I CANNOT keep your waves,"
says the bank to the river.
"Let me keep your footprints
in my heart."

CLXI


THE cobweb pretends to catch dew-drops
and catches flies.

LV


MY day is done,
and I am like a boat
drawn on the beach,
listening to the dance-music of the tide
in the evening.

XVI


I SIT at my window this morning
where the world like a passer-by
stops for a moment,
nods to me and goes.

CXIII


THE hills are like shouts of children
who raise their arms,
trying to catch stars.

CXII


THE sun has
his simple robe of light.
The clouds are decked with gorgeousness.

CXIX


THE night kisses the fading day
whispering to his ear,
"I am death, your mother.
I am to give you fresh birth."

CXXIV


















"IN the moon thou sendest
thy love letters to me,"
said the night to the sun.
"I leave my answers
in tears upon the grass."

CLXXVI


THE water in a vessel is sparkling;
the water in the sea is dark.
The small truth has words that are clear;
the great truth has great silence.



CCIV


THE song feels the infinite in the air,
the picture in the earth,
the poem in the air and the earth;
For its words have meaning
that walks
and music that soars.

CXLI


WHEN I travelled to here and to there,
I was tired of thee,
O Road,
but now when thou leadest me to everywhere
I am wedded to thee in love.