The Earthly Paradise, (September-November), by William Morris, [1870], at sacred-texts.com
ARE thine eyes weary? is thy heart too sick
 To struggle any more with doubt and thought,
 Whose formless veil draws darkening now and thick
 Across thee, een as smoke-tinged mist-wreaths brought
 Down a fair dale to make it blind and nought?
 Art thou so weary that no world there seems
 Beyond these four walls, hung with pain and dreams?
   Look out upon the real world, where the moon,
 Half-way twixt root and crown of these high trees,
 Turns the dead midnight into dreamy noon,,
 Silent and full of wonders, for the breeze
 Died at the sunset, and no images,
 No hopes of day, are left in sky or earth
 Is it not fair, and of most wondrous worth?
   Yea, I have looked and seen November there;
 The changeless seal of change it seemed to be,
 Fair death of things that, living once, were fair;
 Bright sign of loneliness too great for me,
 Strange image of the dread eternity,
 In whose void patience how can these have part,
 These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart?
ON a clear eve, when the November sky
 Grew red with promise of the hoar-frost nigh,
 These ancient men turned from the outside cold,
 With something like content that they, grown old,
 Needed but little now to help the ease
 Of those last days before the final peace.
 The empty month for them left no regret
 For sweet things gained and lost, and longed for yet,
 Twixt spring-tide and this dying of the year.
 Few things of small account the whole did bear,
 Nor like a long lifetime of misery
 Those few days seemed, as oft to such may be
 As, seeing the patience of the world, whereby
 Midst all its strife it falls not utterly
 Into a wild, confused mass of pain,
 Yet note it not, and have no will to gain,
 Since they are young, a little time of rest,
 Midst their vain raging for the hopeless best.
   Such thought, perchance, was in his heart, who broke
 The silence of the fireside now, and spoke;
 "This eve my tale tells of a fair maid born
 Within a peaceful land, that peace to scorn,
 In turn to scorn the deeds of mighty kings,
 The council of the wise, and far-famed things,
 And envied lives; so, born for discontent, p. 276
 She through the eager world of base folk went,
 Still gaining nought but heavier weariness.
 God grant that somewhere now content may bless
 Her yearning heart; that she may look and smile
 On the strange earth that wearied her awhile,
 And now forgets her! Yet so do not we,
 Though some of us have lived full happily!"