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Home  »  The Little Book of Modern Verse  »  The Frozen Grail

Jessie B. Rittenhouse, ed. (1869–1948). The Little Book of Modern Verse. 1917.

Elsa Barker

The Frozen Grail

WHY sing the legends of the Holy Grail,

The dead crusaders of the Sepulchre,

While these men live? Are the great bards all dumb?

Here is a vision to shake the blood of Song,

And make Fame’s watchman tremble at his post.

What shall prevail against the spirit of man,

When cold, the lean and snarling wolf of hunger,

The threatening spear of ice-mailed Solitude,

Silence, and space, and ghostly-footed Fear

Prevail not? Dante, in his frozen hell

Shivering, endured no bleakness like the void

These men have warmed with their own flaming will,

And peopled with their dreams. The wind from fierce

Arcturus in their faces, at their backs

The whip of the world’s doubt, and in their souls

Courage to die—if death shall be the price

Of that cold cup that will assuage their thirst;

They climb, and fall, and stagger toward the goal.

They lay themselves the road whereby they travel,

And sue God for a franchise. Does He watch

Behind the lattice of the boreal lights?

In that grail-chapel of their stern-vowed quest,

Ninety of God’s long paces toward the North,

Will they behold the splendor of His face?

To conquer the world must man renounce the world?

These have renounced it. Had ye only faith

Ye might move mountains, said the Nazarene.

Why, these have faith to move the zones of man

Out to the point where All and Nothing meet.

They catch the bit of Death between their teeth,

In one wild dash to trample the unknown

And leap the gates of knowledge. They have dared

Even to defy the sentinel that guards

The doors of the forbidden—dared to hurl

Their breathing bodies after the Ideal,

That like the heavenly kingdom must be taken

Only by violence. The star that leads

The leader of this quest has held the world

True to its orbit for a million years.

And shall he fail? They never fail who light

Their lamp of faith at the unwavering flame

Burnt for the altar service of the Race

Since the beginning. He shall find the strange—

The white immaculate Virgin of the North,

Whose steady gaze no mortal ever dared,

Whose icy hand no human ever grasped.

In the dread silence and the solitude

She waits and listens through the centuries

For one indomitable, destined soul,

Born to endure the glory of her eyes,

And lift his warm lips to the frozen Grail.