I stood at the rich man’s door,
Mid a tempest of musical din,
But the vagabond name that I bore
Could find me no footing within.
In a tremulous accent I spoke,
And craved him a pitiful boon,
But the voice of the suppliant broke
Like a jar on the reveler’s tune.
O to be stab’d with scorn,
To bleed at a rich man’s gate
A rose-leaf cut by a thorn
And strewed by the breezes of hate.
With a word that can cruelly kill,
And the side-long sneer of an eye,
And the blood that has leapt like a rill,
Struck to ice by a freezing reply.
But a voice rose up from the stones,
From the heartless stones at my feet,
And I heard its long-echoing tones
Like an angel-flight over the street.
And it struck on the strings of my soul
As it bade me be fearless and free,
And I heard its wild cadences roll,
While it cried, “Thou are greater than he!”
I was mean as a weed on a moor.
Of wealth I had near a plack,
With the shadow of sadness before,
And want, like a wolf, at my back.
But storehouses bursting with gain,
And weltering vessels had he,
Wide acres of pastoral plain,
And isles that are hugged by the sea.
And still as I journey’d along,
The daisy looked up with a smile,
And the lark arose with a song
That haunted me many a mile.
And I walked in a rapture of soul
With the music that stirred in the tree,
For the burden that ended the whole,
Was still, “Thou are greater than he!”
From:
Workers City “The Real Glasgow Stands Up”
Edited By Farquar McLay Clydeside Press
top