THE STING OF DEATH - Duncan Campbell Scott Poems

 
 

Poems » duncan campbell scott » the sting of death

THE STING OF DEATH

`Is Sin, then, fair?'
    Nay, love, come now,
Put back the hair
    From his sunny brow;
See, here, blood-red
Across his head
A brand is set,
The word -- `Regret.'

`Is Sin so fleet
    That while he stays,
Our hands and feet
    May go his ways?'
Nay, love, his breath
Clings round like death,
He slakes desire
With liquid fire.

`Is Sin Death's sting?'
    Ay, sure he is,
His golden wing
    Darkens man's bliss;
And when Death comes,
Sin sits and hums
A chaunt of fears
Into man's ears.

`How slayeth Sin?'
    First, God is hid,
And the heart within
    By its own self chid;
Then the maddened brain
Is scourged by pain
To sin as before
And more and more,
For evermore.