Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Olive Custance > Text of Song Against Care
|
|
________________________________________________
Title: A Song Against Care
Author: Olive Custance [ More Titles by Custance]
O Care! Thou art a cloak too heavy to be borne, Glittering with tears, and gay with painted lies (For seldom--seldom art thou stained and torn, Showing a tattered lining, and the bare Bruised body of thy wearer); thou art fair To look at, O thou garment of our pride! A net of colours, thou dost catch the wise; He lays aside his wisdom for thy sake . . . And Beauty hides her loveliness in thee . . . And after . . . when men know the agony Of thy great weight of splendour, and would shake Thee swiftly from their shoulders, cast aside The burden of thy jewelled bands that break Their very hearts . . . often it is too late. They fear the world will mock them and deride When they are stripped of all their golden state. But some are brave . . . but some among us dare Cry out against thy torment and be free! And I would rather a gay beggar be, And go in rags for all eternity, Than that thy clanking pomp should cover me, O Care! . . .
[The end] Olive Custance's poem: Song Against Care ________________________________________________
GO TO TOP OF SCREEN
|