The Poetry Corner

But Most Thy Light

By John Frederick Freeman

I know how fire burns, How from the wrangling fumes Rose and amber blooms, And slowly dies. Nothing's so swift as fire, There's nothing alive so fierce. The lifted lances pierce, Sink, and upspring. Like an Indian sword it leaps Out of the smoking sheath. Even the winged feet of death Learn speed from fire; And pain its cunning learns; Languor its sweet From the decaying heat That never dies. I know how fire burns Unguessed, save for tears, When the thousand-fanged flame spears The body's guard; Or when the mind, the mind Is ever-glowing wood, And fire runs in the blood Lunatic, blind; When remorse burns and burns And burns always, always-- The fire that surest slays Or surest numbs. I know how fire burns But how I cannot tell. And Heaven burns like Hell Yet the Heart endures. 'Tis the immortal Flame In mortal life that's bitter, Or than all sweet sweeter Though life burns down. Teach me, fire, but this, Nor alone destroying burn:-- Of thy warmth let me learn, But most thy light.