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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
GRATITUDE, by ELIZA COOK Poet's Biography First Line: The hound will fawn on any one Last Line: Will ask more praise than thou can'st yield. Subject(s): Gratitude | |||
The hound will fawn on any one That greets him with a kind caress; The flower will turn towards the sun, That nurtures it in loveliness. The drooping bird, with frozen wing, That feeds in winter at your sill, Will trim his glossy plumes in spring, And perch about your window still. The gazing steed will mark the voice That rules him with a gentle word; And we may see the brute rejoice, As though he loved the tones he heard. I've taught the speckled frog to leap At twilight for the crumbs I've spread; I've lured the fawn till it would keep Beside me, crouching, bound and led. We find the fiercest things that live, The savage born, the wildly rude, When soothed by Mercy's hand, will give Some faint response of gratitude. But man! -- oh! blush, ye lordly race! -- Shrink back, and question thy proud heart! Lo ye not lack that thankful grace Which ever forms the soul's best part? Will ye not take the blessings given, The priceless boon of ruddy health, The sleep unbroken, peace unriven, The cup of joy, the mine of wealth -- Will ye not take them all, and yet Walk from the cradle to the grave, Enjoying, boasting, and forget To think upon the God that gave? Thou'lt even kneel to blood-stained kings, Nor fear to have thy serfdom known; Thy knee will bend for bauble things, Yet fail to seek its Maker's throne. The bosom that would most repine At slightest comfort snatched away -- The lip that murmurs to resign, Is last to thank, is last to pray. Call home thy thoughts, vain child of dust! However sad thy lot may be, There is a something good, that must Demand acknowledgment from thee. What would'st thou have from Him above? Gaze but on Nature's ample field, And that one type of mystic love Will ask more praise than thou can'st yield. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TWO COUNTRIES by NAOMI SHIHAB NYE THE PLACE I WANT TO GET BACK TO by MARY OLIVER AFTER A NOISY NIGHT by LAURE-ANNE BOSSELAAR FOUNTAIN IN AVIGNON by LAURE-ANNE BOSSELAAR THANK YOU FOR SAYING THANK YOU by CHARLES BERNSTEIN INVENTORY by LAURE-ANNE BOSSELAAR THE TWELVE-FORTY-FIVE (FOR EDWARD J. WHEELER) by ALFRED JOYCE KILMER |
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