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To The Poet-Priest Ryan.In Acknowledgment Of A Copy Of His Poems.

Topics: classic

Himself I read beneath the words he writes ...     I may come back and sing again. - RYAN.     I.     This Bard's to me a whole-souled man     In honesty and might,     For when he sees Wrong in the van     He leaps like any Knight     To horse, and charging on the wrong     Smites it with the great sword of Song.     II.     Beneath the cassock of the Priest     There throbs another heart -     Another - but 'tis not the least -     Which in his Lays takes part,     So that 'mid clash of Swords and Spears     There is no lack of Pity's tears.     III.     This other heart is brave and soft,     As such hearts always are,     And plumes itself, a bird aloft,     When Morning's gates unbar -     Till high it soars above the sod     Bathed in the very light of God.     IV.     Woman and Soldier, Priest and Man,     I find within these Lays,     And the closer still th' Verse I scan     The more I see to praise:     Some of these Lyrics shower down     The glories of the Cross and Crown.     V.     To thee, oh Bard! my head I bow,     As I'd not to a King,     And my last word, writ here and now,     Is not a little thing;     Recall the promise of thy strain -     Thou art to "come and sing again!"

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"Himself I read beneath the words he writes ......"

Exploring the themes of classic, James Barron Hope delivers a powerful performance in "To The Poet-Priest Ryan.In Acknowledgment Of A Copy Of His Poems."... ### 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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