The Poet Priest By Abram Joseph Ryan

Not as of one whom multitudes admire,
     I believe they call him great;
    They throng to hear him with a strange desire;
     They, silent, come and wait,
     And wonder when he opens wide the gate
    Of some strange, inner temple, where the fire
    Is lit on many altars of many dreams —
    They wait to catch the gleams —
     And then they say,
    In praiseful words: “‘Tis beautiful and grand.”
     And so his way
    Is strewn with many flowers, sweet and fair;
                        And people say:
    “How happy he must be to win and wear
                        Praise ev’ry day!”
    And all the while he stands far out the crowd,
                        Strangely ~alone~.
    Is it a Stole he wears? — or mayhap a shroud —
    No matter which, his spirit maketh moan;
    And all the while a lonely, lonesome sense
    Creeps thro’ his days — all fame’s incense
     Hath not the fragrance of his altar; and
    He seemeth rather to kneel in lowly prayer
     Than lift his head aloft amid the Grand:
    If all the world would kneel down at his feet
                        And give acclaim —
    He fain would say: “Oh! No! No! No!
    The breath of fame is sweet — but far more sweet
     Is the breath of Him who lives within my heart;
    God’s breath, which e’en, despite of me, will creep
     Along the words of merely human art;
    It cometh from some far-off hidden Deep,
    Far-off and from so far away —
    It filleth night and day.”
Not as of one who ever, ever cares
    For earthly praises, not as of such think thou of me,
    And in the nights and days — I’ll meet with thee
    In Prayers — and thou shalt meet with me.