Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
Poems of Sentiment: IV. Thought: Poetry: BooksThe Poet of To-day
Sarah Jane Lippincott (Grace Greenwood) (18231904)M
To thee, O poet of to-day!—thy dower
Comes, from a higher than Olympian heaven,
In holier beauty and in larger power.
Would all her griefs and ancient wrongs rehearse;
Would make thy song the voice of her appealing,
And sob her mighty sorrows through thy verse.
Hail thou the coming of each promise-star
Which climbs the midnight of her long despairing,
And watch for morning o’er the hills afar.
Or freedom pines, there let thy voice be heard;
Sound like a prophet-warning down the ages
The human utterance of God’s living word.
The tramp of armies, and the roar of fight,
Not war’s hot smoke to taint the sweet morn o’er us
Nor blaze of pillage, reddening up the night.
Girdling with music the Redeemer’s star,
And breathe God’s peace, to earth “glad tidings” bringing
From the near heavens, of old so dim and far!