Is Life itself but many ways of thought, Does thinking furl the poets’ Pleiades, Is in His slightest convolution wrought These mantled worlds and their men-freighted seas? He thinks—and being comes to ardent things: The splendor of the day-spent sun, love’s birth,— Or dreams a little, while creation swings The circle of His mind and Time’s full girth . . . As here within this noisy peopled room My thought leans forward . . . quick! you’re lifted clear Of brick and frame to moonlit garden bloom,— Absurdly easy, now, our walking, dear, Talking, my leaning close to touch your face . . . His All-Mind bids us keep this sacred place!
“Substitution” first appeared in Countee Cullen’s anthology Caroling Dusk (Harper & Brothers, 1927). |
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