![]() The Path Too FairA Poem by Paris HladThe Path Too Fair
The
tenor bell is ringing In
the bistered hand of day, And
I am standing on the steps Above
the little cay, that slips Beneath
the fishing pier And
drops
into the deep, To
which my mind Has
wandered In
its loves,
So
long asleep
It
rings from out a tower Near a park some blocks away,
And
in its staid recital, I
am
pleased to hear it play
I
sense in it an unshed tear That
it was meant to wake, And
in a swell of sentiment, My
heart begins to break
It
seems as if a thing I dreamed That
moved me long ago Whose
purpose then I
could not guess
And
value did not know
It
bids me down a path too fair, A
way too dear to dare, for I am old And
cannot risk the beauty that is there
Yet
I will share a thought with you, That
I fear to advance " It is that though We
have but love, love lives our full expanse We
are the Master’s vibrant paint, The
face, both fresh and dear "
The
essence of a miracle That
gives us meaning here
We are the goodly masterpiece, The logos in the art - the noble hand That lifts a lamp within the tender heart
We are the waking of a mind, the
scribblings in a tome " The looking back upon the bay, as we are
going home
Nostalgia is more than a tear we gather
and recast; It is the pith of all we love, both now
and in the past It is the joy and every pain, that we in
wonder hear Upon the sounding of a bell, when God to us
is near
I
pass the tower on my way, and silently it stands,
And
I am mulling how its clock Is
round with moving hands"
I
hear a bell that rings within; I hear a bell that chimes Upon
the reading of a poem that echoes, as it rhymes.[1] [1] Paris
believed that the purpose of art is to enhance life (primarily his
life), and therefore, God was the only audience that mattered to him. He did
not care too much about the opinion of others because their judgment is
meaningless in the context of eternity.
Note:
Paris had been contemplating some lines from G.M. Hopkins’ poem, “As
Kingfishers Catch Fire” prior to his writing of “A Path Too Fair.” Those lines
were: “Each hung bell’s bow swung / Finds tongue to fling out broad its name.”
© 2023 Paris Hlad |
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Added on June 16, 2023 Last Updated on June 16, 2023 Author![]() Paris HladSouthport, NC, United States Minor Outlying IslandsAboutI am a 70-year-old retired New York state high school English teacher, living in Southport, NC. more..Writing
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