When the long--clouded spirit of Europe drew
Life from Greek springs, frost could no longer bind,
And old truth shone like fresh dawn on the blind,
Our Founder sowed his pregnant seed: he knew
No crabbed rule but rather chose a clue
That should emband us of our historied kind
Comrades, and keep in us a morning mind,
Since to the wise Learning is always New.
In Faith and Letters he enshrined his light;
Faith, the divine adventure that holds on
Through this world's forest into worlds unknown,
And Letters, that since speech on earth began
As one unended sentence burning write
The hope, the triumph, and the tears of Man.
Fide Et Literis
Robert Laurence Binyon
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Poem topics: hope, life, light, truth, world, fresh, earth, wise, frost, long, write, speech, mind, spirit, unknown, morning, triumph, clue, blind, adventure, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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