Page:The roamer and other poems (1920).djvu/124

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114
THE ROAMER

Open and broad, the highway of the gorge.
So solitary was the solemn road,
So dark with loftiness of tree and rock,
Savage, austere, sublime, he scarcely saw
A form that passed, until it turned and looked
With unremembering eyes and face that seemed
The carven impress of a thousand years,
So was it typical and motionless.
Such brows upon the silent traveler gaze
From reaches of Egyptian colonnades,
Sphinxlike, unindividual, but man,
The immemorial creature of the earth;
Doubtful there shot a momentary gleam
Of recognition through him, as it passed;
And others, singly, up the gorge emerged
Out of the fire-scrawled rock and towering herb
In rare procession,—faces of mankind
That pass through generations, race-renewed;
Life piled on life had stamped their mortal mask;
Each gave him one long look, and disappeared;
And once a name had leapt unto his lips
And died in the vast silence, as in tombs;
But none accosted him out of that dark
Epitome of life, till all were gone;
And, weird of heart, he urged his counter-way

Unto the valley's outlet, and a land