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Let Me Arise ~ A Poem by Violet Fane

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Overcoming Modern Isolation: Lessons in Renewal from Violet Fane’s “Let Me Arise”

In a world trapped behind glowing screens and curated walls, when was the last time you actively chose to open the gate and let the world back in?

Let Me Arise

Violet Fane

Let me arise and open the gate,
to breathe the wild warm air of the heath,
And to let in Love, and to let out Hate,
And anger at living and scorn of Fate,
To let in Life, and to let out Death.

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Reflection

Violet Fane’s brief yet potent poem, “Let Me Arise,” serves as a timeless manifesto for emotional and spiritual renewal. Written in the late 19th century, its core desire—to break free from confinement and embrace the raw vitality of the earth—feels remarkably urgent today.

Modern society often traps us in a digital chokehold. We find ourselves locked behind metaphorical gates of chronic stress, algorithms that fuel outrage, and a pervasive “scorn of Fate” born from an obsession with controlling every aspect of our lives. Fane’s speaker demands a deliberate pause. The act of arising and opening the gate is not passive; it is a conscious, radical choice to reject the toxic currency of modern fatigue.

By trading anger for love and cynicism for life, the poem reminds us that healing requires active boundary-setting. We must intentionally choose what we allow into our mental spaces. In a culture plagued by burnout and division, Fane’s words offer a beautiful, grounding blueprint: step outside, breathe deeply, and actively choose love over the ambient noise of a chaotic world.

As you read this poem, ask yourself:

What specific “gate” are you keeping closed in your own life right now, and what would it take for you to finally let in Love and let out Hate?

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