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Quare Fatigasti

By Adam Lindsay Gordon

Topics: classic

Two years ago I was thinking     On the changes that years bring forth;     Now I stand where I then stood drinking     The gust and the salt sea froth;     And the shuddering wave strikes, linking     With the waves subsiding and sinking,     And clots the coast herbage, shrinking,     With the hue of the white cere-cloth.     Is there aught worth losing or keeping?     The bitters or sweets men quaff?     The sowing or the doubtful reaping?     The harvest of grain or chaff?     Or squandering days or heaping,     Or waking seasons or sleeping,     The laughter that dries the weeping,     Or the weeping that drowns the laugh?     For joys wax dim and woes deaden,     We forget the sorrowful biers,     And the garlands glad that have fled in     The merciful march of years;     And the sunny skies, and the leaden,     And the faces that pale or redden,     And the smiles that lovers are wed in     Who are born and buried in tears.     And the myrtle bloom turns hoary,     And the blush of the rose decays,     And sodden with sweat and gory     Are the hard won laurels and bays;     We are neither joyous nor sorry     When time has ended our story,     And blotted out grief and glory,     And pain, and pleasure, and praise.     Weigh justly, throw good and bad in     The scales, will the balance veer     With the joys or the sorrows had in     The sum of a lifes career?     In the end, spite of dreams that sadden     The sad or the sanguine madden,     There is nothing to grieve or gladden,     There is nothing to hope or fear.     Thou hast gone astray, quoth the preacher,     In the gall of thy bitterness,     Thou hast taught me in vain, oh, teacher!     I neither blame thee nor bless;     If bitter is sure and sweet sure,     These vanish with form and feature,     Can the creature fathom the creature,     Whose Creator is fathomless?     Is this dry land sure? Is the sea sure?     Is there aught that shall long remain,     Pain, or peril, or pleasure,     Pleasure, or peril, or pain?     Shall we labour or take our leisure,     And who shall inherit treasure,     If the measure with which we measure     Is meted to us again?     I am slow in learning and swift in     Forgetting, and I have grown     So weary with long sand sifting;     Twards the mist where the breakers moan     The rudderless bark is drifting,     Through the shoals and the quicksands shifting,     In the end shall the night-rack lifting,     Discover the shores unknown?

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"Two years ago I was thinking..."

This evocative piece by Adam Lindsay Gordon, titled "Quare Fatigasti", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:Adam Lindsay Gordon

"Two years ago I was thinking..." by Adam Lindsay Gordon

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Adam Lindsay Gordon

About Adam Lindsay Gordon

Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833–1870) was an Australian poet, horseman, and politician. His bush ballads — "The Sick Stockrider," "How We Beat the Mace" — made him Australia's most popular poet. He is one of only two poets with a bust in Westminster Abbey's Poets' Corner.

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