Louis Golding

Louis Golding Poems

HE behind the straight plough stands
Stalwart, firm shafts in his hands.
...

The shepherd sings:--
'_Way down in Dixie,
Way down in Dixie,
Where the hens are dog-gone glad to lay_ ...
...

On hills too harsh for firs to climb,
Where eagle dare not hatch her brood,
Upon the peak of solitude,
...

The Best Poem Of Louis Golding

Ploughman At The Plough

HE behind the straight plough stands
Stalwart, firm shafts in his hands.

Naught he cares for wars and naught
For the fierce disease of thought.

Only for the winds, the sheer
Naked impule of the year,

Only for the soil which stares
Clean into God's face he cares.

In the stark might of his deed
There is more than art or creed;

In his wrist more strength is hid
Than in the monstrous pyramid;

Stauncher than stern Everest
Be the muscles of his breast;

Not the Atlantic sweeps a flood
Potent as the ploughman's blood.

He, his horse, his ploughshare, these
Are the onnly verities.

Dawn to dusk with God he stands,
The earth poised on his broad hands.

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