Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Destiny by andrew downing (chevar cummings)

A wise old mother is Nature--

She guideth her children's feet

In many a flowery pathway;

And her strong life-currents beat,

Sometimes in intricate channels--

As a mountain stream may run--

But ever her purpose triumphs,

And ever the goal is won.

Her eyes are the eyes of Argus,

And she utters her decree:

The brook shall come to the river,

And the river shall reach the sea.



We have failed to read the riddle

Of the impulse and desire,

That burn in the soul of being,

Like the sun's great heart of fire,

Impelling the bird, storm-drifted,

To come to its sheltered nest,

And the mother to bring her baby

The warmth of her shielding breast;

And the blossom to yield its honey

As the spoil of the bandit bee--

While the brook goes down to the river

And the river reaches the sea.



But whatsoever we name it--

Be it Destiny, or Fate--

It leads the prince to his kingdom,

The king to his palace gate;

The lover shall taste the kisses

That grow on the maiden's lips;

And safe, in the land-locked harbor,

Shall be moored the wand'ring ships;

And the soul shall gain its heaven--

Where the white-robed angels be--

And the brook shall blend with the river

And the river shall wed the sea.

1 comment:

  1. I really liked this poem because it was more of a specific destiny/fate than the other poems we have read which discuss fate as a whole. In this poem, the author gives us many examples of things that "mother nature" has made and mandated go a certain way. These things like a river flowing into the sea and a prince eventually becoming a king are things that are common sense but it’s always been fate they end up that way. It's more like a factual fate...

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