Page:Poems PiattVol2.djvu/106

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE NIGHT-MOTH'S COMMENT. [ALIGHTED UPON A YELLOW AUTOGRAPH LETTER OF CHESTERFIELD.]
Here is a gracious letter that one writ
Who thought this rugged world of lands and seas,
Among whose suns and rains we shadows flit—
In sorrow and in mystery, if you please—
A place to be polite and take one's ease.

My lord, above your old, dead courtesy,
Out of the light of stars, in lovelier light,
All summer-green and glad, this moth to me
Seems Nature's comment, clear and brief and bright,
On man's poor dusty vanity, to-night.

94