Classic and Contemporary Poetry
AT A MOVIE THEATRE, by CHRISTOPHER DARLINGTON MORLEY Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: How well he spoke who coined the phrase Last Line: Of shadow, cast upon a screen! Alternate Author Name(s): Hall, Galway Subject(s): Motion Pictures; Movies; Cinema | ||||||||
HOW well he spoke who coined the phrase The picture palace! Aye, in sooth A palace, where men's weary days Are crowned with kingliness of youth. Strange palace! Crowded, airless, dim, Where toes are trod and strained eyes smart, We watch a wand of brightness limn The old heroics of the heart. Romance again hath us in thrall And Love is sweet and always true, And in the darkness of the hall Hands clasp -- as they were meant to do. Remote from peevish joys and ills Our souls, pro tem, are purged and free: We see the sun on western hills, The crumbling tumult of the sea. We are the blond that maidens crave, Well balanced at a dozen banks; By sleight of hand we haste to save A brown-eyed life, nor stay for thanks! Alas, perhaps our instinct feels Life is not all it might have been, So we applaud fantastic reels Of shadow, cast upon a screen! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LOST WORLD by RANDALL JARRELL THE MOVIE PICTURE COWBOY by EARL ALONZO BRININSTOOL THE HEREAFTER by AUGUST KLEINZAHLER JOHN WAYNE'S PERFUMES by WAYNE KOESTENBAUM A SERENE HEART AT THE MOVIES by WILLIAM MATTHEWS MOVIE STAR IN THE PROJECTION ROOM by EVE MERRIAM ANIMAL CRACKERS by CHRISTOPHER DARLINGTON MORLEY |
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