Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE STREETS OF BALTIMORE, by ELIZABETH DOTEN First Line: Woman weak, and woman mortal Last Line: In the streets of baltimore! Alternate Author Name(s): Doten, Lizzie Subject(s): Baltimore, Maryland; Poetry & Poets; Speeches & Addresses | ||||||||
WOMAN weak, and woman mortal, Through thy spirit's open portal, I would read the Runic record Of mine earthly being o'er I would feel that fire returning, Which within my soul was burning, When my star was quenched in darkness, Set, to rise on earth no more, When I sank beneath life's burden In the streets of Baltimore! O, those memories, sore and saddening! O, that night of anguish maddening! When my lone heart suffered shipwreck On a demon-haunted shore When the fiends grew wild with laughter, And the silence following after, Was more awful and appalling Than the cannon s deadly roar Than the tramp of mighty armies Through the streets of Baltimore! Like a fiery serpent coiling, Like a Maelstrom madly boiling, Did this Phlegethon of fury Sweep my shuddering spirit o'er! Rushing onward, blindly reeling, Tortured by intensest feeling Like Prometheus, when the vultures Through his quivering vitals tore Swift I fled from death and darkness, Through the streets of Baltimore! No one near to save or love me! No kind face to watch above me! Though I heard the sound of footsteps, Like the waves upon the shore, Beating, beating, beating, beating! Now advancing, now retreating With a dull and dreamy rhythm With a long, continuous roar Heard the sound of human footsteps, In the streets of Baltimore! There at length they found me lying, Weak and 'wildered, sick and dying, And my shattered wreck of being To a kindly refuge bore! But my woe was past enduring, And my soul cast off its mooring, Crying, as I floated outward, "I am of the earth no more! I have forfeited life's blessing In the streets of Baltimore!" Where wast thou, O Power Eternal! When the fiery fiend, infernal, Beat me with his burning fasces, Till I sank to rise no more? O, was all my life-long error Crowded in that night of terror? Did my sin find expiation, Which to judgment went before, Summoned to a dread tribunal, In the streets of Baltimore? Nay, with deep, delirious pleasure, I had drained my life's full measure, Till the fatal, fiery serpent, Fed upon my being's core! Then with force and fire volcanic, Summoning a strength Titanic, Did I burst the bonds that bound me Battered down my being's door; Fled, and left my shattered dwelling To the dust of Baltimore! Gazing back without lamenting, With no sorrowful repenting, I can read my life's sad story In a light unknown before! For there is no woe so dismal, Not an evil so abysmal, But a rainbow arch of glory Spans the yawning chasm o'er! And across that Bridge of Beauty Did I pass from Baltimore! In that grand, Eternal City, Where the angel-hearts take pity On the sin which men forgive not, Or inactively deplore, Earth has lost the power to harm me! Death can never more alarm me, And I drink fresh inspiration From the Source which I adore Through my Spirit's apothéosis That new birth in Baltimore! Now no longer sadly yearning Love for love finds sweet returning And there comes no ghostly raven, Tapping at my chamber door! Calmly, in the golden glory, I can sit and read life's story. For my soul from out that shadow Hath been lifted evermore From that deep and dismal shadow, In the streets of Baltimore! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WORDS O' CHEER by ELIZABETH DOTEN SOLE SCHOLAR OF YOUR COLLEGE I APPEAR by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON HE SAID, IN PART' by AMOS RUSSEL WELLS COMPENSATION by ELIZABETH DOTEN FAREWELL TO EARTH by ELIZABETH DOTEN FOR A' THAT by ELIZABETH DOTEN HOPE FOR THE SORROWING by ELIZABETH DOTEN I STILL LIVE by ELIZABETH DOTEN IN A HUNDRED YEARS by ELIZABETH DOTEN |
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