Poems : patriotic, religious, miscellaneous / by Abram J. Ryan [electronic text]
About this Item
Title
Poems : patriotic, religious, miscellaneous / by Abram J. Ryan [electronic text]
Author
Ryan, Abram Joseph, 1836-1886
Publication
Baltimore, Md.: John B. Piet & Co.
1884
Rights/Permissions
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"Poems : patriotic, religious, miscellaneous / by Abram J. Ryan [electronic text]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAD9548.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 12, 2025.
Pages
POETS.
Poets are strange — not always understoodBy many is their gift,Which is for evil or for mighty good —To lower or to lift.
Upon their spirits there hath come a breath;Who reads their verseWill rise to higher life, or taste of deathIn blessing or in curse.
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The Poet is great Nature's own high priest,Ordained from very birthTo keep for hearts an everlasting feast —To bless or curse the earth.
They cannot help but sing; they know not whyTheir thoughts rush into song,And float above the world, beneath the sky,For right or for the wrong.
They are like angels — but some angels fell,While some did keep their place;Their poems are the gates of heav'n or hell,And God's or Satan's face
Looks thro' their ev'ry word into your face,In blessing or in blight,And leaves upon your soul a grace or traceOf sunlight or of night.
They move along life's uttermost extremes,Unlike all other men;And in their spirits' depths sleep strangest dreams,Like shadows in a glen.
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They all are dreamers; in the day and nightEver across their soulsThe wondrous mystery of the dark or brightIn mystic rhythm rolls.
They live within themselves — they may not tellWhat lieth deepest there;Within their breast a heaven or a hell,Joy or tormenting care.
They are the loneliest men that walk men's ways,No matter what they seem;The stars and sunlight of their nights and daysMove over them in dream.
They breathe it forth — their very spirits' breath —To bless the world or blight;To bring to men a higher life or death;To give them light or night.
The words of some command the world's acclaim,And never pass away,While others' words receive no palm from fame,And live but for a day.
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But, live or die, their words leave their impressFore'er or for an hour,And mark men's souls — some more and some the less —With good's or evil's power.
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