Robert Laurence Binyon

Wanderers

O there are wanderers over wave and strand
Invisible and secret, everywhere
Moving thro’ light and night from land to land,
Swifter than bird or cloud upon the air.
 
Wild Longings, from divided bosoms rent,
Rush home, and Sighs crushed from the pain of years.
Far o’er their quarry hover Hates intent;
Wing to and fro world—wandering great Fears.
 
Pities like dew, Thoughts on their lonely road
Glide, and dark forms of spiritual Desire;
Yea, all that from its house of flesh the goad
Of terrible Love drives out in mist and fire.
 
Ah, souls of men and women, where is home,
That in a want, a prayer, a cry, you roam?
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