There are wrongs done in the fair face of heaven
Which cry aloud for vengeance, and shall cry;
Loves beautiful in strength whose wit has striven
Vainly with loss and man's inconstancy;
Dead children's faces watched by souls that die;
Pure streams defiled; fair forests idly riven;
A nation suppliant in its agony
Calling on justice, and no help is given.
All these are pitiful. Yet, after tears,
Come rest and sleep and calm forgetfulness,
And God's good providence consoles the years.
Only the coward heart which did not guess,
The dreamer of brave deeds that might have been,
Shall cureless ache with wounds for ever green.
The Deeds That Might Have Been
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt
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Poem topics: beautiful, brave, children, god, green, heart, heaven, justice, loss, sleep, strength, good, face, pure, nation, guess, providence, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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