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The Monk's Walk

By Paul Laurence Dunbar

Topics: classic

In this sombre garden close     What has come and passed, who knows?     What red passion, what white pain     Haunted this dim walk in vain?     Underneath the ivied wall,     Where the silent shadows fall,     Lies the pathway chill and damp     Where the world-quit dreamers tramp.     Just across, where sunlight burns,     Smiling at the mourning ferns,     Stand the roses, side by side,     Nodding in their useless pride.     Ferns and roses, who shall say     What you witness day by day?     Covert smile or dropping eye,     As the monks go pacing by.     Has the novice come to-day     Here beneath the wall to pray?     Has the young monk, lately chidden,     Sung his lyric, sweet, forbidden?     Tell me, roses, did you note     That pale father's throbbing throat?     Did you hear him murmur, "Love!"     As he kissed a faded glove?     Mourning ferns, pray tell me why     Shook you with that passing sigh?     Is it that you chanced to spy     Something in the Abbot's eye?     Here no dream, nor thought of sin,     Where no worlding enters in;     Here no longing, no desire,     Heat nor flame of earthly fire.     Branches waving green above,     Whisper naught of life nor love;     Softened winds that seem a breath,     Perfumed, bring no fear of death.     Is it living thus to live?     Has life nothing more to give?     Ah, no more of smile or sigh--     Life, the world, and love, good-bye.     Gray, and passionless, and dim,     Echoing of the solemn hymn,     Lies the walk, 'twixt fern and rose,     Here within the garden close.

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Author:Paul Laurence Dunbar

"In this sombre garden close..." by Paul Laurence Dunbar

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Paul Laurence Dunbar

About Paul Laurence Dunbar

Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872–1906) was an American poet and novelist who was one of the first African-American writers to gain national prominence. His poems in dialect—including "When Malindy Sings"—and standard English explore Black life with humor, pathos, and dignity.

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