In the Hand of the Wind

In the Hand of the Wind

"Lord, I am passing in the hand of the wind."

Original Text
Theodore Goodridge Roberts, The Leather Bottle (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1934): 68. Internet Archive.
2    And now, of all my glory what will stand?--
3The echo of a love song, like thin smoke
4    Blown down the valleys of a kindly land.
5O green walled gardens, I have loved you so!
6    Take no heed of the passing when I go.
7The wind that spilled your roses yesterday
8    Blows sharp upon me, heralding the snow:
9The wind that blew the yellow buds to bloom,
10    And filled with dancing gold our vine-girt room
11When I have sung of summer and delight,
12    Sings now of silence and the roses’ doom:
13The wind that kissed us yesterday, to-day
14    Blows sharp upon me with a breath of clay,
15Blows cold across the vineyards in the sun
16    And stills the flutter of the leaves at play.
17Lord, I am passing in the wind’s lean hand!
18    And now of all my glory, what will stand?
19A whisper in the vines along the wall,
20    As of a lost song in a haunted land.

Notes

1] Epigraph unidentified. Back to Line
Publication Start Year
1902
Publication Notes
Kit Bag
RPO poem Editors
Ian Lancashire / Sharine Leung
RPO Edition
2011
Rhyme
Form