To Clementina Black
More blest than was of old Diogenes, I have not held my lantern up in vain. Not mine, at least, this evil--to complain: ”There is none honest among all of these.” Our hopes go down that sailed before the breeze; Our creeds upon the rock are rent in twain; Something it is, if at the last remain One floating spar cast up by hungry seas. The secret of our being, who can tell? To praise the gods and Fate is not my part; Evil I see, and pain ; within my heart There is no voice that whispers: ”All is well.” Yet fair are days in summer; and more fair The growths of human goodness here and there.
Amy Levy’s other poems:
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