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They Are Blind

George MacDonald

They are blind, and they are dead:
  We will wake them as we go;
There are words have not been said,
  There are sounds they do not know:
    We will pipe and we will sing—
    With the Music and the Spring
    Set their hearts a wondering!

They are tired of what is old,
  We will give it voices new;
For the half hath not been told
  Of the Beautiful and True.
    Drowsy eyelids shut and sleeping!
    Heavy eyes oppressed with weeping!
    Flashes through the lashes leaping!

Ye that have a pleasant voice,
  Hither come without delay;
Ye will never have a choice
  Like to that ye have to-day:
    Round the wide world we will go,
    Singing through the frost and snow
    Till the daisies are in blow.

Ye that cannot pipe or sing,
  Ye must also come with speed;
Ye must come, and with you bring
  Weighty word and weightier deed—
    Helping hands and loving eyes!
    These will make them truly wise—
    Then will be our Paradise.


March 27, 1852.
Online text © 1998-2009 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From The Poetical Works of George MacDonald | 1893
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