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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of John Oxenham > Text of Livingstone's Soliloquy

A poem by John Oxenham

Livingstone's Soliloquy

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Title:     Livingstone's Soliloquy
Author: John Oxenham [More Titles by Oxenham]

"My heart to-day
Is strangely full of home!
How is it
With the dear ones over there?
Five years!
Five long-drawn years!
And one short moment is enough
To alter life's complexion for eternity!
Home! Home! Home!

* * * * *

How is it with you all
At Home?

* * * * *

And you, my dearest one,
Are ever nearer to me than the rest!
Your body lies
Beneath the baobab
In far Shapanga;
But your soul is ever nearest
When I need you most.
Where a man's treasure is
His heart is.
And half my heart is buried there with you,
And half works on for Africa.
Home! Home! Home!

* * * * *

Why should such thought of home
Drag at my heart to-day?
Why should I longer roam?
Why should I not go home?
Five years of toilsome wanderings
May claim a rest!

* * * * *

Nay! God knows best!
When He sees well
He'll take me home and give me well-earned rest.
The work is not yet done.
This land of Night
Is not yet fully opened to the Son
And His fair Light.
But--when the work is done--
Ah--then!--how gladly will I go--
Home!--Home--Home!--
To rest!"


[The end]
John Oxenham's poem: Livingstone's Soliloquy

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