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At Perry, September 16, 1893.

Topics: classic

Crowds! Crowds! Crowds!             Suddenly here as if come from the clouds         That faded away as they came;             Mad acres of people aflame         With thirst for a morsel of land;             Wild hunters of fortune, whose game         Is ever escaping the hand;             Vast, countless, uncountable throngs         With restless, unrestable feet,             That hurry the ways, full of agonized wrongs,         For the conquest of happiness sweet;             Wild seas of ambition whose waves of desire         On their obstacles mighty continually beat,             Where neither the shore nor the ocean is fixed;             Like thunderous songs of a choir,         Whose murmurs in music repeat;             And confusion and chaos are terribly mingled and mixed.             Dust! Dust! Dust!             Borne in the arms of the gathering gust,             And whirled on the wings of the wind,             The eyes feel the blight of the blind,         And horror comes into the heart;             For nature is far more unkind         Than the thousands that struggle apart.             Dark, wild, inescapable dust,         In fiercest, untamable clouds,             That men into misery helplessly thrust,         And bury in agony-shrouds;             A simoom of sorrow whose pestilent breath         To the strong and the weak, to the young and the old,             Brings despair that is reckless of possible gain,         And the awfullest anguish of death;             Till the soul in its rage uncontrolled,         Droops low in the horrible sickness and sorrow of pain.             But out from the clouds,             Out from the agonized dust that enshrouds;             True kings shall arise who shall reign             In homes on the populous plain!         Great cities shall gather and grow             In glories that never shall wane,         Far over the valleys below.             With merry yet measureless might         They conquer the waste with the gladness that brings             To the desert the newest delight.         The barren shall bloom as the rose, and the land             That is sleeping, a wilderness wasted and wild,         And dreaming to welcome its master's command,         Shall leap at the touch of his hand,             His voice shall obey as a child!

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"Crowds! Crowds! Crowds!..."

Freeman Edwin Miller's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "At Perry, September 16, 1893."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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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"

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