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Wherefore?

By Emma Lazarus

Topics: classic

Deep languor overcometh mind and frame:     A listless, drowsy, utter weariness,     A trance wherein no thought finds speech or name,     The overstrained spirit doth possess.     She sinks with drooping wing - poor unfledged bird,     That fain had flown! - in fluttering breathlessness.     To what end those high hopes that wildly stirred     The beating heart with aspirations vain?     Why proffer prayers unanswered and unheard     To blank, deaf heavens that will not heed her pain?     Where lead these lofty, soaring tendencies,     That leap and fly and poise, to fall again,     Yet seem to link her with the utmost skies?     What mean these clinging loves that bind to earth,     And claim her with beseeching, wistful eyes?     This little resting-place 'twixt death and birth,     Why is it fretted with the ceaseless flow     Of flood and ebb, with overgrowth and dearth,     And vext with dreams, and clouded with strange woe?     Ah! she is tired of thought, she yearns for peace,     Seeing all things one equal end must know.     Wherefore this tangle of perplexities,     The trouble or the joy? the weary maze     Of narrow fears and hopes that may not cease?     A chill falls on her from the skyey ways,     Black with the night-tide, where is none to hear     The ancient cry, the Wherefore of our days.

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Author:Emma Lazarus

"Deep languor overcometh mind and frame:..." by Emma Lazarus

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Emma Lazarus

About Emma Lazarus

Emma Lazarus (1849–1887) was an American poet best known for "The New Colossus," whose lines "Give me your tired, your poor" are inscribed on the Statue of Liberty. She was an early advocate for Jewish refugees and anti-Semitism awareness.

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