Guest poem submitted by Mike Christie:
(Poem #1857) The Jolly Company The stars, a jolly company,
I envied, straying late and lonely;
And cried upon their revelry:
"O white companionship! You only
In love, in faith unbroken dwell,
Friends radiant and inseparable!"
Light-heart and glad they seemed to me
And merry comrades (even so
God out of heaven may laugh to see
the happy crowds; and never know
that in his lone obscure distress
each walketh in a wilderness).
But I, remembering, pitied well
And loved them, who, with lonely light,
In empty infinite spaces dwell,
Disconsolate. For, all the night,
I heard the thin gnat-voices cry,
Star to faint star, across the sky.
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I have never been a particular fan of Rupert Brooke, but I think he has the occasional gift for a perfect turn of phrase. In this case I knew the phrase before I knew the poem: the last two and a half lines of this poem, to be exact. John Wyndham (the author of "The Day of the Triffids") quotes them in one of his more obscure books, "The Outward Urge". I read that book many years ago and loved the lines, but I only recently found the original poem. The poem itself is competent, and I am glad to have found it. But to me it turns from silver to gold at the end; those two lines are wonderfully evocative, and bring the poem's theme out with surgical and emotional precision. Mike. PS. I found this version on the web, so if [any Minstrels reader has] a text to check that would be good, since I have no faith in the accuracy of web versions.
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