Penny's poetry pages Wiki
A Saxon Epitaph  (1912) 
by Marjorie Pickthall
from The Drift of Pinions, 1913



A Saxon Epitaph[]

Rochester Castle, Kent, England, 2006. Photo by Yak. Licensed under Creative Commons, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Rochester Castle, Kent, England, 2006. Photo by Yak. Licensed under Creative Commons, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.


The earth builds on the earth
Castles and towers;
The earth saith of the earth:
All shall be ours.

       Yea, though they plan and reap
       The rye and the corn,
       Lo, they were bond to Sleep
       Ere they were born.

       Yea, though the blind earth sows
       For the fruit and the sheaf,
       They shall harvest the leaf of the rose
       And the dust of the leaf.

       Pride of the sword and power
       Are theirs at their need
       Who shall rule but the root of the flower
       The fall of the seed.

       They who follow the flesh
       In splendour and tears,
       They shall rest and clothe them afresh
       In the fulness of years.

       From the dream of the dust they came
       As the dawn set free.
       They shall pass as the flower of the flame
       Or the foam of the sea.

                  The earth builds on the earth
                  Castles and towers.
                  The earth saith of the earth:
                  All shall be ours.



See also[]

This poem is in the public domain