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The Reward Of Song

Topics: classic

Why do we make our music?         Oh, blind dark strings reply:     Because we dwell in a strange land         And remember a lost sky.     We ask no leaf of the laurel,         We know what fame is worth;     But our songs break out of our winter         As the flowers break out on the earth.     And we dream of the unknown comrade,         In the days when we lie dead,     Who shall open our book in the sunlight,         And read, as ourselves have read,     On a lonely hill, by a firwood,         With whispering seas below,     And murmur a song we made him         Ages and ages ago.     If making his may-time sweeter         With dews of our own dead may,     One pulse of our own dead heart-strings         Awake in his heart that day,     We would pray for no richer guerdon,         No praise from the careless throng;     For song is the cry of a lover         In quest of an answering song.     As a child might run to his elders         With news of an opening flower     We should walk with our young companion         And talk to his heart for an hour,     As once by my own green firwood,         And once by a Western sea,     Thank God, my own good comrades         Have walked and talked with me.     Too mighty to make men sorrow,         Too weak to heal their pain     (Though they that remember the hawthorn         May find their heaven again),     We are moved by a deeper hunger;         We are bound by a stronger cord;     For love is the heart of our music,         And love is its one reward.

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"Why do we make our music?..."

Alfred Noyes's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "The Reward Of Song"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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