The Strange Music
by G.K. Chesterton
- Other loves may sink and settle, other loves may loose and slack,
- But I wander like a minstrel with a harp upon his back,
- Though the harp be on my bosom, though I finger and I fret,
- Still, my hope is all before me: for I cannot play it yet.
- In your strings is hid a music that no hand hath e'er let fall,
- In your soul is sealed a pleasure that you have not known at all;
- Pleasure subtle as your spirit, strange and slender as your frame,
- Fiercer than the pain that folds you, softer than your sorrow's name.
- Not as mine, my soul's anointed, not as mine the rude and light
- Easy mirth of many faces, swaggering pride of song and fight;
- Something stranger, something sweeter, something waiting you afar,
- Secret as your stricken senses, magic as your sorrows are.
- But on this, God's harp supernal, stretched to be but stricken once,
- Hoary Time is a beginner, Life a bungler, Death a dunce.
- But I will not fear to match them - no, by God, I will not fear,
- I will learn you, I will play you, and the stars stand still to hear.
Howard A. Landman /
howard@polyamory.org
Last updated 1998 August 20