Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes. England: Vols. IIV. 187679. | | | | Salisbury | | The Blind Man of Salisbury Cathedral | | William Lisle Bowles (17621850) |
| | | THERE is a poor blind man, who every day, | |
| In summer sunshine or in winters rain, | |
| Duly as tolls the bell, to the high fane | |
| Explores, with faltering footsteps, his dark way, | |
| To kneel before his Maker, and to hear | 5 |
| The chanted service, pealing full and clear. | |
| Ask why alone in the same spot he kneels | |
| Through the long year. O, the wide world is cold, | |
| As dark, to him! Here he no longer feels | |
| His sad bereavement. Faith and hope uphold | 10 |
| His heart; he feels not he is poor and blind, | |
| Amid the unpitying tumult of his mind. | |
| As through the aisles the choral anthems roll, | |
| His soul is in the choirs above the skies, | |
| And songs far off of angel companies, | 15 |
| When this dim earth hath perished like a scroll. | |
| O, happy if the rich, the vain, the proud, | |
| The pluméd actors in lifes motley crowd, | |
| Since pride is dust, and life itself a span, | |
| Would learn one lesson from a poor blind man! | 20 | | | |
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