Page:General William Booth enters into Heaven, and other poems.djvu/120

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104
General William Booth

The owl-queen then will love us
And send her birds no more.
 
The Beggar Speaks
"What Mister Moon Said to Me."
 
Come, eat the bread of idleness,
Come, sit beside the spring:
Some of the flowers will keep awake,
Some of the birds will sing.

Come, eat the bread no man has sought
For half a hundred years:
Men hurry so they have no griefs,
Nor even idle tears:

They hurry so they have no loves:
They cannot curse nor laugh—
Their hearts die in their youth with neither
Grave nor epitaph.

My bread would make them careless,
And never quite on time—
Their eyelids would be heavy,
Their fancies full of rhyme: